
Text -- Job 19:4 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Job 19:4
Wesley: Job 19:4 - -- If I have sinned, I myself suffer for my sins, and therefore deserve your pity rather than reproaches.
If I have sinned, I myself suffer for my sins, and therefore deserve your pity rather than reproaches.
The Hebrew expresses unconscious error. Job was unconscious of wilful sin.

JFB: Job 19:4 - -- Literally, "passeth the night." An image from harboring an unpleasant guest for the night. I bear the consequences.
Literally, "passeth the night." An image from harboring an unpleasant guest for the night. I bear the consequences.
Clarke -> Job 19:4
Clarke: Job 19:4 - -- And be it indeed that I have erred - Suppose indeed that I have been mistaken in any thing, that in the simplicity of my heart I have gone astray, a...
And be it indeed that I have erred - Suppose indeed that I have been mistaken in any thing, that in the simplicity of my heart I have gone astray, and that this matter remains with myself, (for most certainly there is no public stain on my life), you must grant that this error, whatsoever it is, has hurt no person except myself. Why then do ye treat me as a person whose life has been a general blot, and whose example must be a public curse?
TSK -> Job 19:4

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 19:4
Barnes: Job 19:4 - -- And be it indeed that I have erred - Admitting that I have erred, it is my own concern. You have a right to reproach and revile me in this mann...
And be it indeed that I have erred - Admitting that I have erred, it is my own concern. You have a right to reproach and revile me in this manner.
Mine error abideth with myself - I must abide the consequences of the error."The design of this seems to be to reprove what he regarded as an improper and meddlesome interference with his concerns. Or it may be an expression of a willingness to bear all the consequences himself. He was willing to meet all the fair results of his own conduct.
Poole -> Job 19:4
Poole: Job 19:4 - -- If my opinion in this point be faulty and erroneous, as you pretend it is. Or, if I have sinned, (for sin is oft called error in Scripture,) and am ...
If my opinion in this point be faulty and erroneous, as you pretend it is. Or, if I have sinned, (for sin is oft called error in Scripture,) and am therefore punished.
Mine error remaineth with myself either,
1. It is likely to continue, I see no cause from your reasons to change my judgment. Or,
2. I suffer deeply for my sins, and therefore deserve your pity and help, rather than your reproaches, whereby you add affliction to the afflicted.
Haydock -> Job 19:4
Haydock: Job 19:4 - -- With me. I alone am answerable for it. But I am no wiser for your remarks. If I have sinned, have I not been sufficiently punished? (Calmet) ---
...
With me. I alone am answerable for it. But I am no wiser for your remarks. If I have sinned, have I not been sufficiently punished? (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "Yea, truly, I was under a mistake; and the mistake still remains with me, to have spoken a word which was not becoming. But my speeches are erroneous and importunate." He talks thus ironically. (Haydock)
Gill -> Job 19:4
Gill: Job 19:4 - -- And be it indeed that I have erred,.... Which is a concession for argument's sake, but not an acknowledgment that he had erred; though it is possible...
And be it indeed that I have erred,.... Which is a concession for argument's sake, but not an acknowledgment that he had erred; though it is possible he might have erred, and it is certain he did in some things, though not in that respect with which he was charged; "humanum est errare", all men are subject to mistakes, good men may err; they may err in judgment, or from the truth in some respect, and be carried away for a while and to some degree with the error the wicked, though they shall be turned from it again; they may err in practice, and wander from the way of God's commandments; and indeed their strayings and aberrations of this sort are so many, that David says, "who can understand his errors?" Psa 19:12; and they may err in words, or make a mistake in speech; but then no man should be made an offender for a word for he must be a perfect man that is free from mistakes of this kind: now Job argues that supposing this to be his case in any of the above instances; yet, says he,
mine error remaineth with myself; I only am chargeable with it, and answerable for it; it is nothing to you, and why should you trouble yourselves about it? it will not be imputed to you, nor will you suffer on account of it; or, admitting I have imbibed an error, I do not publish it abroad; I keep it to myself; it lies and lodges in my own breast, and nobody is the worse for it: or "let it remain", or "lodge with me" k; Why should my mistakes be published abroad, and all the world be made acquainted with them? or else this expresses his resolution to abide by what his friends called an error; and then the so is, if this is an error which I have asserted, that God afflicts both good and bad men, and that afflictions are no argument of a man's being an hypocrite and a wicked man, I am determined to continue in it; I will not give it up, I will hold it fast; it shall remain with me as a principle never to be departed from; or it may be rather his meaning is, that this notion he had imbibed would remain with him, and was likely to do so, for anything they had said, or could say to the contrary.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 19:1-29
TSK Synopsis: Job 19:1-29 - --1 Job, complaining of his friends' cruelty, shews there is misery enough in him to feed their cruelty.21 He craves pity.23 He believes the resurrectio...
MHCC -> Job 19:1-7
MHCC: Job 19:1-7 - --Job's friends blamed him as a wicked man, because he was so afflicted; here he describes their unkindness, showing that what they condemned was capabl...
Matthew Henry -> Job 19:1-7
Matthew Henry: Job 19:1-7 - -- Job's friends had passed a very severe censure upon him as a wicked man because he was so grievously afflicted; now here he tells them how ill he to...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 19:1-6
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 19:1-6 - --
1 Then began Job, and said:
2 How long will ye vex my soul,
And crush me with your words?
3 These ten times have ye reproached me;
Without being...
Constable: Job 15:1--21:34 - --C. The Second Cycle of Speeches between Job and His Three Friends chs. 15-21
In the second cycle of spee...

Constable: Job 19:1-29 - --4. Job's second reply to Bildad ch. 19
This speech is one of the more important ones in the book...
