
Text -- Job 2:6 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Job 2:6
Wesley: Job 2:6 - -- If God did not chain up the roaring lion, how soon would he devour us! As far as he permits the wrath of Satan and wicked men, to proceed against his ...
If God did not chain up the roaring lion, how soon would he devour us! As far as he permits the wrath of Satan and wicked men, to proceed against his people, he will make it turn to his praise and theirs, and the remainder thereof he will restrain. Job, in being thus maligned of Satan, was a type of Christ. He had permission to bruise his heel, to touch his bone and his flesh; yea, and his life also; because by dying he was to do what Job could not do, to destroy him that had the power of death.
JFB -> Job 2:6
JFB: Job 2:6 - -- Rather, "only spare his life." Satan shows his ingenuity in inflicting pain, and also his knowledge of what man's body can bear without vital injury.
Rather, "only spare his life." Satan shows his ingenuity in inflicting pain, and also his knowledge of what man's body can bear without vital injury.
Clarke -> Job 2:6
Clarke: Job 2:6 - -- But save his life - His body thou shalt have permission to afflict, but against his life thou shalt have no power; therefore take care of his life. ...
But save his life - His body thou shalt have permission to afflict, but against his life thou shalt have no power; therefore take care of his life. The original,
TSK -> Job 2:6
TSK: Job 2:6 - -- Behold : Job 1:12
but : or, only
save : Job 38:10, Job 38:11; Psa 65:7; Luk 8:29-33, Luk 22:31, Luk 22:32; 1Co 10:13; Rev 2:10; Rev 20:1, Rev 20:2, Re...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 2:6
Barnes: Job 2:6 - -- Behold, he is in thine hand - He is at thy disposal; see Job 1:12, Margin. But save his life - Margin, "only."This was to be the only lim...
Behold, he is in thine hand - He is at thy disposal; see Job 1:12, Margin.
But save his life - Margin, "only."This was to be the only limitation. It would seem that he had the power to make any selection of disease, and to afflict him in any manner, provided it did not terminate fatally. The keen sorrows which Job afterward endured showed the malignancy of the tempter; evinced his ingenuity in inflicting pain, and his knowledge of what thc human frame could be made to bear.
Poole -> Job 2:6
Do not attempt to take away his life, which I will not suffer thee to do.
Haydock -> Job 2:6
Haydock: Job 2:6 - -- Life. Afflict him with any species of illness; but do not kill him, (Calmet) nor inspire him directly with wicked thoughts. (Grotius)
Life. Afflict him with any species of illness; but do not kill him, (Calmet) nor inspire him directly with wicked thoughts. (Grotius)
Gill -> Job 2:6
Gill: Job 2:6 - -- And the Lord said unto Satan, behold, he is in thine hand,.... Well may a behold be prefixed to this, it being matter of wonder and astonishment that...
And the Lord said unto Satan, behold, he is in thine hand,.... Well may a behold be prefixed to this, it being matter of wonder and astonishment that a saint and servant of God should be permitted to be in the hand of Satan; which yet must not be so understood; as if he was off of, and no more upon the heart of God; or as if he was out of the hands of God, and out of the hands of Christ; or as if he was become Satan's property, and a child of his; for neither of these can be true of a good man: nothing can separate him from the love of God; not Satan and all his principalities and powers; nor can men or devils pluck them out of his hands, nor out of the hands of his son; nor can those who are the children of God be any more the servants of sin, or the vassals of Satan; or in other words, nor can any of them be a child of God one day, and a child of the devil the next, which is the divinity of some men: nor is the sense of this passage, that Satan had leave to do with Job as he pleased, for then he would have utterly destroyed him; but the power granted him was a limited one, as follows:
but save his life: or "soul" y; which some understand of his rational soul, that which remains after death, and which, Maimonides z observes, Satan has no power over; and according to some the meaning is, do not disturb his mind to distraction, so as to deprive him of his senses, and of the exercise of his rational powers, which through the influence of Satan men have sometimes lost; see Mar 5:4; this is barred against in the permission granted; for otherwise it would not have been a proper trial of Job's integrity; for, should he have been deprived of his reason, and uttered ever such bad things, it would have been no proof of his insincerity; as may be observed in good men in a delirium, they will utter bad words, and do or attempt to do bad things, which is not to be ascribed to their want of grace, but to their want of reason: but rather "life" is meant; not Job's spiritual life, for that was in no danger of being lost; all the devils in hell cannot deprive a truly good man of his spiritual life; grace in him is a well of living water, springing: up to eternal life; he can never die the second death; his life is hid with Christ in God, and is bound up in the bundle of life with the Lord his God, who so is out of the reach of Satan; but corporeal life, which the devil by permission may take away, and is said to have the power of death, which by leave he exercised over men, but here he is restrained from it: Job's life must be spared, that it might fully appear he got the victory over Satan, and stood in his integrity; and that he might still glorify God in a course of afflictions he was yet to endure, in the exercise of his faith, hope, love, patience, humility, submission, and resignation of his will to God; and besides, his appointed time was not come, he had many more days, months, and years, the number of which were with God, to live in the world, as he accordingly did.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 2:6 The irony of the passage comes through with this choice of words. The verb שָׁמַר (shamar) means “to keep; t...
Geneva Bible -> Job 2:6
Geneva Bible: Job 2:6 And the LORD said unto Satan, Behold, he [is] in thine hand; but save ( g ) his life.
( g ) Thus Satan can go no further in punishing than God has li...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 2:1-13
TSK Synopsis: Job 2:1-13 - --1 Satan appearing again before God, obtains further leave to tempt Job.7 He smites him with sore boils.9 Job reproves his wife, who moved him to curse...
MHCC -> Job 2:1-6
MHCC: Job 2:1-6 - --How well is it for us, that neither men nor devils are to be our judges! but all our judgment comes from the Lord, who never errs. Job holds fast his ...
Matthew Henry -> Job 2:1-6
Matthew Henry: Job 2:1-6 - -- Satan, that sworn enemy to God and all good men, is here pushing forward his malicious prosecution of Job, whom he hated because God loved him, and ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 2:6
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 2:6 - --
The Grant of New Power:
6 And Jehovah said to Satan, Behold, he is in thy hand; only take care of his life.
Job has not forfeited his life; permis...
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...
