
Text -- Job 11:20 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 11:20 - -- Either with grief and tears for their sore calamities: or with long looking for what they shall never attain.
Either with grief and tears for their sore calamities: or with long looking for what they shall never attain.

Wesley: Job 11:20 - -- They shall never obtain deliverance out of their distresses, but shall perish in them.
They shall never obtain deliverance out of their distresses, but shall perish in them.

Wesley: Job 11:20 - -- Shall be as vain and desperate as the hope of life is in a man, when he is at the very point of death.
Shall be as vain and desperate as the hope of life is in a man, when he is at the very point of death.
A warning to Job, if he would not turn to God.

JFB: Job 11:20 - -- That is, in vain look for relief (Deu 28:65). Zophar implies Job's only hope of relief is in a change of heart.
That is, in vain look for relief (Deu 28:65). Zophar implies Job's only hope of relief is in a change of heart.

Literally, "every refuge shall vanish from them."
Clarke: Job 11:20 - -- The eyes of the wicked shall fail - They shall be continually looking out for help and deliverance; but their expectation shall be cut off
The eyes of the wicked shall fail - They shall be continually looking out for help and deliverance; but their expectation shall be cut off

Clarke: Job 11:20 - -- And they shall not escape - They shall receive the punishment due to their deserts; for God has his eye continually upon them. מנהם ומנוס ...
And they shall not escape - They shall receive the punishment due to their deserts; for God has his eye continually upon them.

Clarke: Job 11:20 - -- And their hope shall be as the giving up of the ghost - ותקותם מפח נפש vethikratham mappach naphesh , "And their hope an exhalation of ...
And their hope shall be as the giving up of the ghost -
TSK -> Job 11:20
TSK: Job 11:20 - -- the eyes : Job 31:16; Lev 26:16; Deu 28:65; Psa 69:3; Lam 4:17
they shall not escape : Heb. flight shall perish from them, Amo 2:14, Amo 5:19, Amo 5:2...
the eyes : Job 31:16; Lev 26:16; Deu 28:65; Psa 69:3; Lam 4:17
they shall not escape : Heb. flight shall perish from them, Amo 2:14, Amo 5:19, Amo 5:20, Amo 9:1-3; Heb 2:3
their hope : Job 8:13, Job 8:14, Job 18:14, Job 27:8; Pro 10:24, Pro 20:20; Luk 16:23-26
the giving up of the ghost : or, a puff of breath

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 11:20
Barnes: Job 11:20 - -- But the eyes of the wicked shall fail - That is, they shall be wearied out by anxiously looking for relief from their miseries. "Noyes."Their e...
But the eyes of the wicked shall fail - That is, they shall be wearied out by anxiously looking for relief from their miseries. "Noyes."Their expectation shall be vain, and they shall find no relief. Perhaps Zophar here means to apply this to Job, and to say to him that with his present views and character, his hope of relief would fail. His only hope of relief was in a change - in turning to God - since it was a settled maxim that the wicked would look for relief in vain. This assumption that he was a wicked man, must have been among the most trying things that Job had to endure. Indeed nothing could he more provoking than to have others take it for granted as a matter that did not admit of argument, that he was a hypocrite, and that God was dealing with him as an incorrigible sinner.
And they shall not escape - Margin, "Flight shall perish from them."The margin is a literal translation of the Hebrew. The sense is, escape for the wicked is out of the question. They must be arrested and punished.
And their hope shall be as the giving up of the ghost - literally, "the breathing out of the life or soul."Their hope shall leave them as the breath or life does the body. It is like death. The expression does not mean that their hope would always expire at death, but that it would certainly expire as life leaves the body. The meaning is, that whatever hope a wicked man has of future happiness and salvation, must fail. The time must come when it will cease to comfort and support him. The hope of the pious man lives until it is lost in fruition in heaven. It attends him in health; supports him in sickness; is with him at home; accompanies him abroad; cheers him in solitude; is his companion in society; is with him as he goes down into the shades of adversity, and it brightens as he travels along the valley of the shadow of death. It stands as a bright star over his grave - and is lost only in the glories of heaven, as the morning star is lost in the superior brightness of the rising sun. Not so the hypocrite and the sinner. His hope dies - and he leaves the world in despair. Sooner or later the last ray of his delusive hopes shall take its departure from the soul, and leave it to darkness. No matter how bright it may have been; no matter how long he has cherished it; no matter on what it is founded - whether on his morals, his prayers, his accomplishments, his learning; if it be not based on true conversion, and the promised mercy of God through a Redeemer, it must; soon cease to shine, and will leave the soul to the gloom of black despair.
Poole -> Job 11:20
Poole: Job 11:20 - -- Fail or be consumed ; either with grief and fears for their sore calamities; or with long looking for what they shall never attain, as this phrase i...
Fail or be consumed ; either with grief and fears for their sore calamities; or with long looking for what they shall never attain, as this phrase is taken, Psa 69:3 Jer 14:6 Lam 4:17 . And this shall be thy condition, O Job, if thou persistest in thine impiety.
They shall not escape they shall never obtain deliverance out of their distresses, but shall perish in them.
As the giving up of the ghost i.e. shall be as vain and desperate as the hope of life is in a man, when he is at the very point of death. Or, as a puff of breath , which is gone in a moment without all hopes of recovery.
Haydock -> Job 11:20
Haydock: Job 11:20 - -- Soul, because hope deferred causeth pain to the soul, Proverbs xiii. 12. (Menochius) ---
Hebrew, "their hope shall be the sorrow, or the breath...
Soul, because hope deferred causeth pain to the soul, Proverbs xiii. 12. (Menochius) ---
Hebrew, "their hope shall be the sorrow, or the breathing out of the soul." (Calmet) ---
Protestants, "the giving up of the ghost." Marginal note, "a puff of breath," chap. xviii. 14. (Haydock)
Gill -> Job 11:20
Gill: Job 11:20 - -- But the eyes of the wicked shall fail,.... Either through grief and envy at Job's prosperity, and with looking for his fall into troubles again; or ra...
But the eyes of the wicked shall fail,.... Either through grief and envy at Job's prosperity, and with looking for his fall into troubles again; or rather through expectation of good things for themselves, and for deliverance out of trouble, but all in vain; see Lam 4:17;
and they shall not escape; afflictions and calamities in this life, nor the righteous judgment, nor wrath to come: or, "refuge shall perish from them" a; there will be none to betake themselves unto for safety; in vain will they seek it from men; refuge will fail them, and no man care for them; and in vain will they fly to rocks and mountains to fall upon them:
and their hope shall be as the giving up of the ghost; it is with them as when a man is just expiring, and it is all over with him, and there is no hope of his reviving; so the hope of wicked men is a dying hope, a lost hope; it is not hope, but despair; their hope is gone, and they are lost and undone; and if they retain their hope in life, when they come to die they have none; though the righteous has hope in his death, their hope dies with them, if not before them: or, "their hope is the giving up of the ghost" b; all they have to hope and wish for is death, to relieve them from their present troubles and agonies they are in; and sometimes are left amidst their guilt, despair, and horror, to destroy themselves: now Zophar by all this would suggest, that should not Job take his advice, he would appear to be such a wicked man, whose eyes would fail for his own help, and would not escape the judgments of God here and hereafter, and would die without hope, in black despair; or at least without any hope that would be of any avail.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 11:20 Heb “the breathing out of the soul”; cf. KJV, ASV “the giving up of the ghost.” The line is simply saying that the brightest h...
Geneva Bible -> Job 11:20
Geneva Bible: Job 11:20 But the eyes ( k ) of the wicked shall fail, and they shall not escape, and their hope [shall be as] the giving up of the ghost.
( k ) He shows that ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 11:1-20
TSK Synopsis: Job 11:1-20 - --1 Zophar reproves Job for justifying himself.5 God's wisdom is unsearchable.13 The assured blessing of repentance.
MHCC -> Job 11:13-20
MHCC: Job 11:13-20 - --Zophar exhorts Job to repentance, and gives him encouragement, yet mixed with hard thoughts of him. He thought that worldly prosperity was always the ...
Matthew Henry -> Job 11:13-20
Matthew Henry: Job 11:13-20 - -- Zophar, as the other two, here encourages Job to hope for better times if he would but come to a better temper. I. He gives him good counsel (Job 11...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 11:16-20
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 11:16-20 - --
16 For thou shalt forget thy grief,
Shalt remember it as waters that flow by.
17 And thy path of life shall be brighter than mid-day;
If it be da...
Constable: Job 4:1--14:22 - --B. The First Cycle of Speeches between Job and His Three Friends chs. 4-14
The two soliloquies of Job (c...

Constable: Job 11:1-20 - --5. Zophar's first speech ch. 11
Zophar took great offense at what Job had said. He responded vic...
