
Text -- Job 11:6 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
The unsearchable depths of God's wisdom in dealing with his creatures.

Wesley: Job 11:6 - -- That they are far greater (the word double being used indefinitely for manifold, or plentiful) than that which is manifested. The secret wisdom of God...
That they are far greater (the word double being used indefinitely for manifold, or plentiful) than that which is manifested. The secret wisdom of God is infinitely greater than that which is revealed to us by his word or works: the greatest part of what is known of God, is the least part of those perfections that are in him. And therefore thou dost rashly in judging so harshly of his proceedings with thee, because thou dost not comprehend the reasons of them, and in judging thyself innocent, because thou dost not see thy sins; whereas the all - knowing God sees innumerable sins in thee, for which he may utterly destroy thee.
JFB: Job 11:6 - -- Rather, "they are double to [man's] wisdom" [MICHAELIS]. So the Hebrew is rendered (Pro 2:7). God's ways, which you arraign, if you were shown their s...

Rather, "God consigns to oblivion in thy favor much of thy guilt."
Clarke: Job 11:6 - -- The secrets of wisdom - All the depths of his own counsels; the heights, lengths, and breadths, of holiness. That they are double to that which is, ...
The secrets of wisdom - All the depths of his own counsels; the heights, lengths, and breadths, of holiness. That they are double to that which is,

Clarke: Job 11:6 - -- Less than thine iniquity deserveth - Mr. Good translates, And the knowledge hath withdrawn from thee because of thy sins; and represents Zophar as p...
Less than thine iniquity deserveth - Mr. Good translates, And the knowledge hath withdrawn from thee because of thy sins; and represents Zophar as praying that God would reveal to him the secrets of wisdom, and the knowledge which he had withdrawn from him because of his transgressions. That Zophar intends to insinuate that God afflicted Job because of his iniquities, is evident; and that he thought that God had inflicted less chastisement upon him than his sins deserved, is not less so; and that, therefore, Job’ s complaining of harsh treatment was not at all well founded.
TSK -> Job 11:6
TSK: Job 11:6 - -- show thee : Job 15:8, Job 15:11, Job 28:28; Deu 29:29; Psa 25:14; Dan 2:28, Dan 2:47; Mat 13:35; Rom 16:25, Rom 16:26; 1Co 2:9-11; Eph 3:5
God exactet...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 11:6
Barnes: Job 11:6 - -- And that he would show thee the secrets of wisdom - The hidden things that pertain to wisdom. The reference here is to the wisdom of God himsel...
And that he would show thee the secrets of wisdom - The hidden things that pertain to wisdom. The reference here is to the wisdom of God himself. The sense is this, "you now think yourself pure and holy. You have confidence in your own wisdom and integrity. But this apprehension is based on a short-sighted view of God, and on ignorance of him. If he would speak and show you his wisdom; if he would express his sense of what purity is, you would at once see how far you have come from perfection, and would be overwhelmed with a sense of your comparative vileness and sin."
That they are double to that which is - Noyes renders this,"his wisdom which is unsearchable."Dr. Good, strangely enough, "for they are intricacies to iniquity."The expression, as it stands in our common version, is not very intelligible; and indeed it is difficult, to attach any idea to it. Of the words used in the Hebrew, the sense is not difficult. The word
Know, therefore, that God exacteth of thee less than thine iniquity deserveth - The word here rendered "exacteth"(
Poole -> Job 11:6
Poole: Job 11:6 - -- The secrets of wisdom i.e. the unknown and unsearchable depths of God’ s wisdom and counsels in dealing with his creatures.
That they are doubl...
The secrets of wisdom i.e. the unknown and unsearchable depths of God’ s wisdom and counsels in dealing with his creatures.
That they are double to that which is i.e. that they are far more and greater (the word double being used indefinitely for manifold, or plentiful, as Isa 40:2 61:7 Jer 17:18 Zec 9:12 ) than that which hath a being or existence, i.e. the secret wisdom of God is infinitely greater than that which is revealed to us by his word or works. The greatest part of what is known of God, is the least part of those perfections that are in him. And therefore thou dost rashly and foolishly in passing such a bold censure upon God’ s ways, and judging so harshly of his proceedings with thee, because thou dost not comprehend the reasons of them, and in judging thyself innocent, because thou dost not see thy sins; whereas the all-knowing God sees innumerable sins in thee, for which he may utterly destroy thee, though thou discernest them not. But the words are and must be rendered, either thus, that he hath double , i.e. abundant, wisdom, for so this Hebrew word signifies, Job 6:13 12:16 Pro 2:7 3:21 ; or,
that they are double to or in , that being or essence , to wit, to God, of whom he is here speaking; or, to the being , i.e. to God, who calls himself by the name I am , Exo 3:14 , which signifies being ; and who appropriates being to himself, Isa 45:18 , I am, and there is none else besides me ; as elsewhere he is said to be the only wise , and only Potentate , and only immortal being, 1Ti 1:17 6:15,16 . God exacteth of thee less than thine iniquity deserveth , Heb. God lends , or gives , or forgives , thee part of thine iniquity , or of thy punishment ; so far is he from dealing worse than thou deservest, as thou dost most falsely and wickedly accuse him.
PBC -> Job 11:6
PBC: Job 11:6 - -- " that he would shew thee the secrets of wisdom"
HENRY:
Zophar despairs to convince Job himself, and therefore desires God would convince him of two...
" that he would shew thee the secrets of wisdom"
HENRY:
Zophar despairs to convince Job himself, and therefore desires God would convince him of two things which it is good for every one of us duly to consider, and under all our afflictions cheerfully to confess:—
1. The unsearchable depth of God’s counsels. Zophar cannot pretend to do it, but he desires that God himself would show Job so much of the secrets of the divine wisdom as might convince him that they are at least double to that which is, Job 11:6. Note,
2. There are secrets in the divine wisdom, arcana imperii—state- secrets. God’s way is in the sea. Clouds and darkness are round about him. He has reasons of state which we cannot fathom and must not pry into.
3. By employing ourselves in adoring the depth of those divine counsels of which we cannot find the bottom we shall very much tranquillize our minds under the afflicting hand of God. GILL:
…as he that teacheth man knowledge, must have knowledge himself; so he that gives wisdom to the wise, must have infinite wisdom himself; for such is the wisdom of God, it is unsearchable; there is no tracing it; it has a bayov, "a depth", which is unfathomable,
Ro 11:33; Job 11:6-9. No, says Job, "secret things belong not to us, but things revealed," De 29:29.
GILL:
...there are "secrets" or mysteries in this wisdom of God, 1Co 2:6-7; Mt 13:11
JFB:
God’s ways, which you arraign, if you were shown their secret wisdom, would be seen vastly to exceed that of men, including yours (1Co 1:25).
PINK:
It is through faith "that He would show thee the secrets of wisdom, that they are double to that which is" (Job 11:6). By the "secrets of wisdom" is meant the hidden ways of God’s providence. Divine providence has two faces: the one of rigor, the other of clemency; sense looks upon the former only, faith enjoys the latter.
Faith not only looks beneath the surface of things and sees the sweet orange beneath the bitter rind, but it looks beyond the present and anticipates the blessed sequel.
" double to that which is"
HENRY:
What we know of God is nothing to what we cannot know. What is hidden is more than double to what appears, Eph 3:9.
PINK:
Compare Hab 3:3-4
The operations of his power, compared with what he could have done, were rather the hiding of it than the discovery of it; the secrets of his power, as well as of his wisdom, are double to that which is, Job 11:6.
" God exacteth of thee less than thine iniquity deserveth."
HENRY:
God knows a great deal more evil of us than we do of ourselves; so some understand it. When God gave David a sight and sense of sin he said that he had in the hidden part made him to know wisdom, Ps 51:6.
Haydock -> Job 11:6
Haydock: Job 11:6 - -- Law. Hebrew Thushiya, (Haydock) "the essence" of any thing. Hence it is explained, "law, strength, comfort," &c. We might translate, "and that t...
Law. Hebrew Thushiya, (Haydock) "the essence" of any thing. Hence it is explained, "law, strength, comfort," &c. We might translate, "and that the reality of thy crimes deserved double punishment," &c. The obligations of the natural, and also of the written law of Moses, with which Job was (Calmet) perhaps (Haydock) acquainted, (chap. xxii. 22.) are very numerous and difficult. The ways of Providence are not easily understood, though some are obvious enough. He rewards and punishes. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "for it is double of what has come against thee, and then thou wouldst know that thy sins are justly requited." Protestants, "that they are double to that which is: Know, therefore, that God exacteth of thee less than thine iniquity deserveth, " 1 Esdras ix. 13. (Haydock)
Gill -> Job 11:6
Gill: Job 11:6 - -- And that he would show thee the secrets of wisdom,.... Either of sound doctrine, in opposition to his own doctrine he had such a vain opinion of; and ...
And that he would show thee the secrets of wisdom,.... Either of sound doctrine, in opposition to his own doctrine he had such a vain opinion of; and then he would see, as he thought, that it was not so pure as he imagined it to be: the Gospel, and the doctrines of it, are the wisdom of God, the produce of it, and in which it is displayed; as in the doctrines of election to grace and glory, of redemption by Christ, of justification by his righteousness, and pardon by his blood; by which all the divine perfections are glorified, the justice and holiness of God, as well as his grace and mercy: and there are "secrets" or mysteries in this wisdom of God, 1Co 2:6; of mysterious doctrines, which, though revealed, yet the "modus", or manner of them, is not to be searched out and understood; such is the trinity of Persons in the Godhead, the union of the two natures in Christ, the saint's union to God and communion with him, the resurrection of the dead, &c. and these and such like them are only shown by the Lord; men cannot come at them of themselves, by their own natural reason and understanding; it is God that reveals them, in his word, and by his spirit, and gives his people an increasing knowledge of them, 1Co 2:9; or it may be rather the secrets of the wisdom of Divine Providence, in the government of the world, and the ordering of all things in it according to the counsel of God, may be here meant; there is a great display of the wisdom of God in Providence, and there are secrets in it undiscoverable by creatures; his ways are past finding out, they are in the deep waters, and his footsteps are not known, nor to be traced; though sometimes he makes his judgments manifest, and his mind in them; and what he does now, which men know not, he shows them hereafter; especially his own people, and particularly when in the sanctuary of the Lord, and in the way of their duty, when everything appears right and beautiful they before were ready to complain of; see Rom 11:33; and then it is seen:
that they are double to that which is! or to "wisdom" b; as the word is rendered in Pro 2:7; that is, to human wisdom; and then the sense is, that the secrets of divine wisdom displayed, whether in the doctrines of grace or in the methods of Providence, being shown and made manifest, would appear to be "double"; that is, vastly, yea, infinitely to exceed the wisdom of men; and that these, which men are apt to arraign as weak and wrong, are the effects of the highest wisdom, or they then appear so "to a man of wisdom" c; so the supply may be made, as is in Mic 6:9; or else the sense is, were Job let in to the secret wisdom of God more, and into the purity and holiness of his law, which some understand by "that which is", or "wisdom", and render it "according to the law" d and see what that requires, and how much short he comes of it, and what and how many were his transgressions and violations of it; it then would be plain to him, that the punishment that God, in wisdom, and according to his righteous law, might inflict upon him, would be double; or, greatly, yea, infinitely exceed those afflictions he was now exercised with, and therefore he had no reason to complain; to which agrees what follows:
know therefore that God exacteth of thee less than thine iniquities deserve; or punishes, afflicts, or chastises, less than the deserts of sin; see Ezr 9:13; some render it, "God exacteth of thee something of thine iniquity"; so Junius and Tremellius; according to which version the sense is, that sins are debts, and these many; and that payment of part of the debt of punishment for them is only required, which is not truth; for, though there is a debt of punishment due to justice for sin, yet it is not part of it only that is required of the sinner, but the whole, if any; for indeed no part of it is exacted of God's people, since the whole has been exacted of Christ, and he has answered and paid the whole debt, and blotted out the handwriting against them; wherefore the word used has rather the signification of forgetfulness, and may be rendered, either "God hath caused", or "suffered thee to forget part of thine iniquity" e; or thou couldest never say that thou wert clean in his eye, and free from sin; or, "God himself has forgot part of thine iniquity" f; in that he has afflicted thee so mildly, and with so much lenity; or, "hath forgotten thee for thine iniquity" g; forsook him, hid his face from him, laid his hand on him, and sorely chastised him, so that he seemed to be forgotten by him, or he to forget to be gracious to him; all which were owing to his sins, these were the causes of it; or, "will condemn thee for thine iniquity" h.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 11:6 Heb “God causes to be forgotten for you part of your iniquity.” The meaning is that God was exacting less punishment from Job than Job des...
Geneva Bible -> Job 11:6
Geneva Bible: Job 11:6 And that he would shew thee the ( c ) secrets of wisdom, that [they are] double to that which is! Know therefore that God exacteth of thee [less] than...

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 11:1-6
MHCC: Job 11:1-6 - --Zophar attacked Job with great vehemence. He represented him as a man that loved to hear himself speak, though he could say nothing to the purpose, an...
Matthew Henry -> Job 11:1-6
Matthew Henry: Job 11:1-6 - -- It is sad to see what intemperate passions even wise and good men are sometimes betrayed into by the heat of disputation, of which Zophar here is an...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 11:1-6
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 11:1-6 - --
1 Then began Zophar the Naamathite, and said:
2 Shall the torrent of words remain unanswered,
And shall the prater be in the right?
3 Shall thy v...
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...
