
Text -- Job 1:6 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
A certain time appointed by God.

Wesley: Job 1:6 - -- The holy angels, so called, Job 38:7; Dan 3:25, Dan 3:28, because of their creation by God, for their resemblance of him in power, and dignity, and ho...

Wesley: Job 1:6 - -- Before his throne, to receive his commands, and to give him an account of their negotiations. But you must not think that these things are to be under...
Before his throne, to receive his commands, and to give him an account of their negotiations. But you must not think that these things are to be understood literally; it is only a parabolical representation of that great truth, that God by his wise and holy providence governs all the actions of men and devils: It being usual with the great God to condescend to our shallow capacities, and to express himself, as the Jews phrase it, in the language of the sons of men. And it is likewise intimated, that the affairs of earth are much the subject of the counsels of the unseen world. That world is dark to us: but we lie open to it.
JFB: Job 1:6 - -- Angels (Job 38:7; 1Ki 22:19). They present themselves to render account of their "ministry" in other parts of the universe (Heb 1:14).

JFB: Job 1:6 - -- Hebrew, JEHOVAH, the self-existing God, faithful to His promises. God says (Exo 6:3) that He was not known to the patriarchs by this name. But, as the...
Hebrew, JEHOVAH, the self-existing God, faithful to His promises. God says (Exo 6:3) that He was not known to the patriarchs by this name. But, as the name occurs previously in Gen 2:7-9, &c., what must be meant is, not until the time of delivering Israel by Moses was He known peculiarly and publicly in the character which the name means; namely, "making things to be," fulfilling the promises made to their forefathers. This name, therefore, here, is no objection against the antiquity of the Book of Job.

JFB: Job 1:6 - -- The tradition was widely spread that he had been the agent in Adam's temptation. Hence his name is given without comment. The feeling with which he lo...
The tradition was widely spread that he had been the agent in Adam's temptation. Hence his name is given without comment. The feeling with which he looks on Job is similar to that with which he looked on Adam in Paradise: emboldened by his success in the case of one not yet fallen, he is confident that the piety of Job, one of a fallen race, will not stand the test. He had fallen himself (Job 4:19; Job 15:15; Jud 1:6). In the Book of Job, Satan is first designated by name: "Satan," Hebrew, "one who lies in wait"; an "adversary" in a court of justice (1Ch 21:1; Psa 109:6; Zec 3:1); "accuser" (Rev 12:10). He has the law of God on his side by man's sin, and against man. But Jesus Christ has fulfilled the law for us; justice is once more on man's side against Satan (Isa 42:21); and so Jesus Christ can plead as our Advocate against the adversary. "Devil" is the Greek name--the "slanderer," or "accuser." He is subject to God, who uses his ministry for chastising man. In Arabic, Satan is often applied to a serpent (Gen 3:1). He is called prince of this world (Joh 12:31); the god of this world (2Co 4:4); prince of the power of the air (Eph 2:2). God here questions him, in order to vindicate His own ways before angels.
Clarke: Job 1:6 - -- There was a day when the sons of God - All the versions, and indeed all the critics, are puzzled with the phrase sons of God; בני האלהים b...
There was a day when the sons of God - All the versions, and indeed all the critics, are puzzled with the phrase sons of God;
"The things delivered to us by these two inspired writers are the same in substance, equally high, and above the reach of human sight and knowledge; but the manner of delivering them is different, each as suited best to his particular purpose. This, then is the prophetical way of representing things, as to the manner of doing them, which, whether done exactly in the same manner, concerns us not to know; but which are really done: and God would have them described as done in this manner, to make the more lively and lasting impression on us. At the same time, it must not be forgotten that representations of this kind are founded in a well-known and established truth, viz., the doctrine of good and bad angels, a point revealed from the beginning, and without a previous knowledge of which, the visions of the prophets could scarcely be intelligible."See Gen 28:10-15

Clarke: Job 1:6 - -- And Satan came also - This word also is emphatic in the original, השטן hassatan , the Satan, or the adversary; translated by the Septuagint ο...
And Satan came also - This word also is emphatic in the original,
It is now fashionable to deny the existence of this evil spirit; and this is one of what St. John (Rev 2:24) calls
Defender: Job 1:6 - -- This remarkable vision can only have been given to Job (or the author of Job's record) by special revelation after his sufferings and subsequent resto...
This remarkable vision can only have been given to Job (or the author of Job's record) by special revelation after his sufferings and subsequent restoration. The angels are called "sons of God" (Hebrew

Defender: Job 1:6 - -- This is the Bible's earliest identification of Satan by name, assuming the traditional antiquity of the book of Job (compare 1Ch 21:1). The name Satan...
This is the Bible's earliest identification of Satan by name, assuming the traditional antiquity of the book of Job (compare 1Ch 21:1). The name Satan means "accuser" or "adversary," and he is "the accuser of our brethren" (Rev 12:10); this recorded attack on Job is typical of Satan's attacks. Note also that, despite his primeval rebellion and fall (Eze 28:13-17), he was still able to go among the other sons of God, to make his accusations before God."
TSK -> Job 1:6
TSK: Job 1:6 - -- Now : Job 2:1
the sons : Job 38:7; Dan 3:25; Luk 3:38
came to : Psa 103:20; Mat 18:10
Satan : Heb. the adversary, 1Ki 22:19; 1Ch 21:1; Zec 3:1; Rev 12...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 1:6
Barnes: Job 1:6 - -- Now there was a day - Dr. Good renders this, "And the day came."Tindal."Now upon a time."The Chaldee paraphrasist has presumed to specify the t...
Now there was a day - Dr. Good renders this, "And the day came."Tindal."Now upon a time."The Chaldee paraphrasist has presumed to specify the time, and renders it, "Now it happened in the day of judgment (or scrutiny,
(1) That it is no more so than the parables of the Savior, who often supposes cases, and states them as real occurrences, in order to illustrate some important truth. Yet no one was ever led into error by this.
(2) It is in accordance with the language in the Scripture everywhere to describe God as a monarch seated on his throne, surrounded by his ministers, and sending them forth to accomplish important purposes in different parts of his vast empire.
It is not absolutely necessary, therefore, to regard this as designed to represent an actual occurrence. It is one of the admissible ornaments of poetry; - as admissible as any other poetic ornament. To represent God as a king is not improper; and if so, it is not improper to represent him with the usual accompaniments of royalty, - surrounded by ministers, and employing angels and messengers for important purposes in his kingdom. This supposition being admitted, all that follows is merely in "keeping,"and is designed to preserve the verisimilitude of the conception. - This idea, however, by no means militates against the supposition that angels are in fact really employed by God in important purposes in the government of his kingdom, nor that Satan has a real existence, and is permitted by God to employ an important agency in the accomplishment of his purposes toward his people. On this verse, however, see the Introduction, Section 1, (4).
The sons of God - Angels; compare Job 38:7. The whole narrative supposes that they were celestial beings.
Came to present themselves - As having returned from their embassy, and to give an account of what they had observed and done.
Before the Lord - Before
And Satan came also among them - Margin, "The adversary"came "in the midst of them."On the general meaning of this passage, and the reasons why Satan is introduced here, and the argument thence derived respecting the age and authorship of the book of Job, see the Introduction, Section 4, (4). The Vulgate renders this by the name "Satan."The Septuagint:
It is then used by way of eminence, to denote the "adversary,"and assumes the form of a proper name, and is applied to the great foe of God and man - the malignant spirit who seduces people to evil, and who accuses them before God. Thus, in Zec 3:1-2, "And he showed me Joshua the priest standing before the angel of the Lord, and Satan standing at his right hand to resist him. And the Loan said unto Satan, The Lord rebuke thee, O Satan;"compare Rev 12:10, "Now is come salvation - for the accuser
It was a word, therefore, early used in the sense of an adversary or accuser, and was applied to anyone who sustained this character, until it finally came to be used as a proper name, to denote, by way of eminence, the prince of evil spirits, as the adversary or accuser of people. An opinion has been adopted in modern times by Herder, Eichhorn, Dathe, Ilgen, and some others, that the being here referred to by the name of Satan is not the malignant spirit, the enemy of God, the Devil, but is one of the sons of God, "a faithful, but too suspicious servant of yahweh."According to this, God is represented as holding a council to determine the state of his dominions. In this council, Satan, a zealous servant of yahweh, to whom had been assigned the honorable office of visiting different parts of the earth, for the purpose of observing the conduct of the subjects of yahweh, makes his appearance on his return with others.
Such was the piety of Job, that it had attracted the special attention of yahweh, and he puts the question to Satan, whether in his journey be had remarked this illustrious example of virtue. Satan, who, from what he has observed on earth, is supposed to have lost all confidence in the reality and genuineness of the virtue which man may exhibit, suggests that he doubts whether even Job serves God from a disinterested motive; that God had encompassed him with blessings, and that his virtue is the mere result of circumstances; and that if his comforts were removed he would be found as destitute of principle as any other man. Satan, according to this, is a suspicious minister of yahweh, not a malignant spirit; he inflicts on Job only what he is ordered to by God, and nothing because he is himself malignant. Of this opinion Gesenius remarks (Lexicon), that it "is now universally exploded."
An insuperable objection to this view is, that it does not accord with the character usually ascribed to Satan in the Bible, and especially that the disposition attributed to him in the narrative before us is wholly inconsistent with this view. He is a malignant being; an accuser; one delighting in the opportunity of charging a holy man with hypocrisy, and in the permission to inflict tortures on him, and who goes as far in producing misery as he is allowed - restrained from destroying him only by the express command of God. - In Arabic the word Satan is often applied to a serpent. Thus, Gjauhari, as quoted by Schultens, says, "The Arabs call a serpent Satan, especially one that is conspicuous by its crest, head, and odious appearance."It is applied also to any object or being that is evil. Thus, the Scholiast on Hariri, as quoted by Schultens also, says, "Everything that is obstinately rebellious, opposed, and removed from good, of genii, human beings, and beasts, is called Satan."- The general notion of an adversary and an opponent is found everywhere in the meaning of the word. - Dr. Good remarks on this verse, "We have here another proof that, in the system of patriarchal theology, the evil spirits, as well as the good, were equally amenable to the Almighty, and were equally cited, at definite periods, to answer for their conduct at his bar."
Rosenmuller remarks well on this verse, "It is to be observed, that Satan, no less than the other celestial spirits, is subject to the government of God, and dependent on his commands (compare Job 2:1) where Satan equally with the sons of God (
Poole -> Job 1:6
Poole: Job 1:6 - -- There was a day i.e. a certain time appointed by God.
The sons of God i.e. the holy angels, so called Job 38:7 Dan 3:25,28 , because of their creat...
There was a day i.e. a certain time appointed by God.
The sons of God i.e. the holy angels, so called Job 38:7 Dan 3:25,28 , because of their creation by God, as Adam also was, Luk 3:38 , and for their great resemblance of him in power, and dignity, and holiness, and for their filial affection and obedience to him.
Before the Lord i.e. before his throne, to receive his commands, and to give him an account of their negotiations. Compare 1Ki 22:19 Zec 4:14 Luk 1:19 . But you must not think that these things were really done, and that Satan was mixed with the holy angels, or admitted into the presence of God in heaven, to maintain such discourses as this with the blessed God, or that he had formal commission and leave to do what follows; but it is only a parabolical representation of that great truth, that God by his wise and holy providence doth govern all the actions of men and devils to his own ends; it being usual with the great God to condescend to our shallow capacities, and to express himself, as the Jews phrase it, in the language of the sons of men, i.e. in such manner as men use to speak and may understand.
Satan came also among them being forced to come, and give up his account.
Haydock -> Job 1:6
Haydock: Job 1:6 - -- The sons of God. The angels, (Challoner) as the Septuagint express it. (Calmet) ---
Satan also, &c. This passage represents to us in a figure, a...
The sons of God. The angels, (Challoner) as the Septuagint express it. (Calmet) ---
Satan also, &c. This passage represents to us in a figure, accommodated to the ways and understandings of men, 1. The restless endeavours of satan against the servants of God. 2. That he can do nothing without God's permission. 3. That God doth not permit him to tempt them above their strength: but assists them by his divine grace in such manner, that the vain efforts of the enemy only serve to illustrate their virtue and increase their merit. (Challoner) ---
A similar prosopopeia occurs, 3 Kings xxii. 19., and Zacharias i. 10. (Calmet) ---
Devils appear not in God's sight, but sometimes in presence of angels, who represent God. (St. Athanasius, q. 8. ad Antioc, (Worthington) or some ancient author.) ---
The good angels can make known their orders to them, Zacharias iii. 1., and Jude 9. Both good and bad spirits may be considered as the ministers of God. (Calmet) ---
They appear in judgment; though the latter could not see the Lord.
Gill -> Job 1:6
Gill: Job 1:6 - -- Now there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord,.... This is generally understood of the angels, as in Job 38:7 wh...
Now there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord,.... This is generally understood of the angels, as in Job 38:7 who may be thought to be so called, because of their creation by the father of spirits, and their likeness to God in holiness, knowledge, and wisdom, and being affectionate and obedient to him; as also on account of the grace of election, and confirmation in Christ bestowed upon them, as well as because, in their embassies and messages to men, they represent God, and so may be called gods, and children of the Most High, for a like reason the civil magistrates are, Psa 82:6 to which may be added, their constituting with the saints the family of God in heaven and earth: these, as they stand before God, and at his right hand and left, as the host of heaven, in which posture Micaiah saw them in vision, 1Ki 22:19, so they may be said to go forth from standing before the Lord of all the earth into the several parts of all the world, to do the will and work of God assigned them, Zec 6:5 and then, having done their work, return again, and present themselves before the Lord, to give an account of what they have done, and to receive fresh orders from him, being ready to do his pleasure in everything he shall command them, which is what is here supposed; though some think these were only the company or band of angels which were set as a guard about Job, his person, family, and substance, who now appeared before the Lord, to give an account of him, his affairs, and circumstances, as required of them:
and Satan came also among them; which word signifies an "adversary", as in 1Ki 11:14 but does not design here a man adversary, as there, or one that envied Job's prosperity, as Saadiah Gaon thinks, but an evil spirit, the old serpent, the devil, as in Rev 12:9 who is an implacable and bitter enemy to men, especially to Christ and his people; and so has this name from his hatred of them, and opposition to them: Origen k observes, that this word, translated into the Greek language, is

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 1:6 The word means “adversary” or with the article “the adversary” – here the superhuman adversary or Satan. The word with t...
Geneva Bible -> Job 1:6
Geneva Bible: Job 1:6 Now there was a day when the ( k ) sons of God came to present themselves ( l ) before the LORD, and Satan ( m ) came also among them.
( k ) Meaning ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 1:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Job 1:1-22 - --1 The holiness, riches, and religious care of Job for his children.6 Satan, appearing before God, by calumniation obtains leave to afflict Job.13 Unde...
MHCC -> Job 1:6-12
MHCC: Job 1:6-12 - --Job's afflictions began from the malice of Satan, by the Lord's permission, for wise and holy purposes. There is an evil spirit, the enemy of God, and...
Matthew Henry -> Job 1:6-12
Matthew Henry: Job 1:6-12 - -- Job was not only so rich and great, but withal so wise and good, and had such an interest both in heaven and earth, that one would think the mountai...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 1:6
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 1:6 - --
6 Now there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before Jehovah; and Satan came also in the midst of them.
The translation "it...
Constable: Job 1:1--2:13 - --I. PROLOGUE chs. 1--2
The writer composed the prologue and epilogue of this book in prose narrative and the main...

Constable: Job 1:6--2:11 - --B. Job's Calamities 1:6-2:10
God permitted Satan to test Job twice.23 The first test touched his possess...
