
Text -- Job 2:9 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 2:9 - -- Whom Satan spared, to be a troubler and tempter to him. It is his policy, to send his temptations by the hands of those that are dear to us. We must t...
Whom Satan spared, to be a troubler and tempter to him. It is his policy, to send his temptations by the hands of those that are dear to us. We must therefore carefully watch, that we be not drawn to any evil, by them whom we love and value the most.

Wesley: Job 2:9 - -- I see thou art set upon blessing of God, thou blessest God for giving, and thou blessest God for taking away, and thou art still blessing God for thy ...
I see thou art set upon blessing of God, thou blessest God for giving, and thou blessest God for taking away, and thou art still blessing God for thy loathsome diseases, and he rewards thee accordingly, giving thee more and more of that kind of mercy for which thou blessest him. Go on therefore in thy generous course, and bless God, and die as a fool dieth.
JFB: Job 2:9 - -- Rather, "renounce" God. (See on Job 1:5) [UMBREIT]. However, it was usual among the heathens, when disappointed in their prayers accompanied with offe...
Rather, "renounce" God. (See on Job 1:5) [UMBREIT]. However, it was usual among the heathens, when disappointed in their prayers accompanied with offerings to their gods, to reproach and curse them.

JFB: Job 2:9 - -- That is, take thy farewell of God and so die. For no good is to be got out of religion, either here or hereafter; or, at least, not in this life [GILL...
That is, take thy farewell of God and so die. For no good is to be got out of religion, either here or hereafter; or, at least, not in this life [GILL]; Nothing makes the ungodly so angry as to see the godly under trial not angry.
Clarke -> Job 2:9
Clarke: Job 2:9 - -- Then said his wife - To this verse the Septuagint adds the following words: "Much time having elapsed, his wife said unto him, How long dost thou st...
Then said his wife - To this verse the Septuagint adds the following words: "Much time having elapsed, his wife said unto him, How long dost thou stand steadfast, saying, ‘ Behold, I wait yet a little longer looking for the hope of my Salvation?’ Behold thy memorial is already blotted out from the earth, together with thy sons and thy daughters, the fruits of my pains and labors, for whom with anxiety I have labored in vain. Thyself also sittest in the rottenness of worms night and day, while I am a wanderer from place to place, and from house to house, waiting for the setting of the sun, that I may rest from my labors, and from the griefs which oppress me. Speak therefore some word against God, and die."We translate
Ovid has such an irony as I suppose this to have been: -
Quid vos sacra juvant? quid nunc Aegyptia prosunt
Sistra? -
Cum rapiant mala fata bonos, ignoscite fasso,
Sollicitor nullos esse putare deos
Vive plus, moriere pius; cole sacra, colentem
Mors gravis a templis in cava busta trahet
Amor. lib. iii., Eleg. ix. ver. 33
"In vain to gods (if gods there are) we pray
And needless victims prodigally pay
Worship their sleeping deities: yet deat
Scorns votaries, and stops the praying breath
To hallow’ d shrines intruding fate will come
And drag you from the altar to the tomb.
Stepney.
||&&$
Defender -> Job 2:9
Defender: Job 2:9 - -- Satan had claimed he could make Job curse God (Job 1:11; Job 2:5), and now Job's own wife is used by Satan to urge him to do just that. Job had lost h...
Satan had claimed he could make Job curse God (Job 1:11; Job 2:5), and now Job's own wife is used by Satan to urge him to do just that. Job had lost his wealth, children, health, and respect in the community (Job 2:8), and finally even his wife. Yet "in all this did not Job sin with his lips" (Job 2:10)."
TSK -> Job 2:9

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 2:9
Barnes: Job 2:9 - -- Then said his wife unto him - Some remarkable additions are made by the ancient versions to this passage. The Chaldee renders it, "and "Dinah"(...
Then said his wife unto him - Some remarkable additions are made by the ancient versions to this passage. The Chaldee renders it, "and "Dinah"(
Whence this addition had its origin, it is impossible now to say. Dr. Good says it is found in Theodotion, in the Syriac, and the Arabic (in this he errs, for it is not in the Syriac and Arabic in Waltoh’ s Polyglott), and in the Latin of Ambrose. Dathe suggests that it was probably added by some person who thought it incredible that an angry woman could be content with saying so "little"as is ascribed in the Hebrew to the wife of Job. It may have been originally written by some one in the margin of his Bible by way of paraphrase, and the transcriber, seeing it there, may have supposed it was omitted accidentally from the text, and so inserted it in the place where it now stands. It is one of the many instances, at all events, which show that implicit confidence is not to be placed in the Septuagint. There is not the slightest evidence that this was ever in the Hebrew text. It is not wholly unnatural, and as an exercise of the fancy is not without ingenuity and plausibility, and yet the simple but abrupt statement in the Hebrew seems best to accord with nature. The evident distress of the wife of Job, according to the whole narrative, is not so much that she was subjected to trials, and that she was compelled to wander about without a home, as that Job should be so patient, and that he did not yield to the temptation.
Dost thou still retain thine integrity? - Notes Job 2:3. The question implies that, in her view, he ought not to be expected to mantles, patience and resignation in these circumstances. He had endured evils which showed that confidence ought not to be reposed in a God who would thus inflict them. This is all that we know of the wife of Job. Whether this was her general character, or whether "she"yielded to the temptation of Satan and cursed God, and thus heightened the sorrows of Job by her unexpected impropriety of conduct, is unknown. It is not conclusive evidence that her general character was bad; and it may be that the strength of her usual virtue and piety was overcome by accumulated calamities. She expressed, however, the feelings of corrupt human nature everywhere when sorely afflicted. The suggestion "will"cross the mind, often with almost irresistible force, that a God who thus afflicts his creatures is not worthy of confidence; and many a time a child of God is "tempted"to give vent to feelings of rebellion and complaining like this, and to renounce all his religion.
Curse God - See the notes at Job 1:11. The Hebrew word is the same. Dr. Good renders it, "And yet dost thou hold fast thine integrity, blessing God and dying?"Noyes translates it, "Renounce God, and die,"Rosenmuller and Umbreit, "Bid farewell to God, and die."Castellio renders it, "Give thanks to God and die."The response of Job, however Job 2:10, shows that he understood her as exciting him to reject, renounce, or curse God. The sense is, that she regarded him as unworthy of confidence, and submission as unreasonable, and she wished Job to express this and be relieved from his misery. Roberts supposes that this was a pagan sentiment, and says that nothing is more common than for the pagan, under certain circumstances, to curse their gods. "That the man who has made expensive offerings to his deity, in hope of gaining some great blessing, and who has been disappointed, will pour out all his imprecations on the god whose good offices have (as he believes) been prevented by some superior deity. A man in reduced circumstances says, ‘ Yes, yes, my god has lost his eyes; they are put out; he cannot look after my affairs.’ ‘ Yes, ‘ said an extremely rich devotee of the supreme god Siva, after he had lost his property, ‘ Shall I serve him any more? What, make offerings to him! No, no. He is the lowest of all gods? ‘ "
And die - Probably she regarded God as a stern and severe Being, and supposed that by indulging in blasphemy Job would provoke him to cut him off at once. She did not expect him to lay wicked hands on himself. She expected that God would at once interpose and destroy him. The sense is, that nothing but death was to be expected, and the sooner he provoked God to cut him off from the land of the living, the better.
Poole -> Job 2:9
Poole: Job 2:9 - -- The devil spared his wife with cruel intent to be the instrument of his temptations, and the aggravation of Job’ s misery, by unnatural unkin...
The devil spared his wife with cruel intent to be the instrument of his temptations, and the aggravation of Job’ s misery, by unnatural unkindness to him, which is declared Job 19:17 , and elsewhere.
Dost thou still retain thine integrity? art thou yet so weak to persist in the practice of piety, when it is not only unprofitable to thee, but the chief occasion of all these thy insupportable miseries, and when God himself not only forsakes and leaves thee in this helpless and hopeless condition, but is turned to be thy greatest enemy?
Curse God, and die seeing thy blessing of God availeth thee so little, it is time to change thy note, Curse God, and die, i.e. reproach him to his face, and tell him of his injustice and unkindness to thee, and that he loves his enemies, and hates his friends; and that will provoke him to take away thy life, and so end thy torments. Or, Curse God, though though die for it. But although this word sometimes signifies cursing , as Job 1:11 1Ki 21:10 , yet most properly and generally it signifies blessing ; and so it may very well be understood here as a sarcastical or ironical expression, such as there are many in Scripture, as Ecc 11:9 Lam 4:21 , and in all authors. And so the sense may be this, Bless God, and die ; i.e. I see thou art set upon blessing of God; thou blessest God for giving, and thou blessest God for taking away, and thou art still blessing of God for thy loathsome and tormenting diseases, and he rewards thee accordingly, giving thee more and more of that kind of mercy for which thou blessest and praisest him. Go on therefore in this thy pious and generous course, and die as a fool dieth, and carry this reputation to thy grave, that thou hadst not common sense in thee to discern between good and evil, between thy friends and thy foes. Or rather, Awake out of this stupidity and lethargy, and give over this absurd and unreasonable practice; and as God gives thee no help nor comfort, let him lose thy praises and service. And this being her sense, it is not strange he reproveth her so sharply for it. And yet it seems hard to think that Job’ s wife should arrive at that height of impudence and impiety, as in plain terms to bid him curse God.
Haydock -> Job 2:9
Haydock: Job 2:9 - -- Bless. She speaks with cruel irony. (Calmet) ---
Curse God, that he may take away (St. Basil) thy miserable life; or, after taking this revenge on...
Bless. She speaks with cruel irony. (Calmet) ---
Curse God, that he may take away (St. Basil) thy miserable life; or, after taking this revenge on such unjust treatment, put an end to thy own existence. Beza and Amama excuse this woman, though condemned by Job. They pretend that she only meant to insinuate, like the rest of his friends, that he must be guilty of some grievous crime, which she urges him to confess, giving glory to God, before it be too late. (Haydock)
Gill -> Job 2:9
Gill: Job 2:9 - -- Then said his wife to him,.... The Jews g, who affect to know everything, say, that Job's wife was Dinah, the daughter of Jacob, as the Targum, but th...
Then said his wife to him,.... The Jews g, who affect to know everything, say, that Job's wife was Dinah, the daughter of Jacob, as the Targum, but this is not very likely; however, we may observe that polygamy had not obtained in these early times; Job had but one wife, and very probably she is the same that after all this bore him ten children more; since we never read of her death, nor of his having any other wife, and might be a good woman for anything that appears to the contrary; and Job himself seems to intimate the same, though she was in the dark about this providence, and under a sore temptation on that account; and therefore says to her husband:
dost thou still retain thine integrity? not as blaming him for insisting and leaning on his integrity, and justifying, and not humbling himself before God, when he should rather confess his sins and prepare for death; for this is contrary to the sense of the phrase used, Job 2:3; where Job is applauded by the Lord himself for holding fast his integrity; nor will Job's answer comport with this sense of her words; nor did she speak as wondering that he should still retain it among so many sore temptations and afflictions; though indeed persevering grace is a marvellous thing; but then he would never have blamed her for such an expression: nor said she this as upbraiding and reproaching him for his religion and continuance in it, and mocking at him, and despising him on that account, as Michal did David; but as suggesting to him there was nothing in religion, and advising him to throw up the profession of it; for he might easily see, by his own case and circumstances, that God had no more regard to good men than to bad men, and therefore it was in vain to serve him; the temptation she laboured under was the same with that good man's, Asaph, Psa 73:11,
curse God, and die: which is usually interpreted, curse God and then destroy thyself; or utter some such blasphemous words, as will either provoke him to destroy thee, or will make thee liable to be taken notice of by the civil magistrate and put to death for it; or do this in revenge for his hand upon thee, and then die; or, though thou diest; but these are all too harsh and wicked to be said by one that had been trained up in a religious manner, and had been so many years the consort of so holy and good a man: the words may be rendered, "bless God and die" h; and may be understood either sarcastically, go on blessing God till thou diest; if thou hast not had enough of it, take thy fill of it, and see what will be the issue of it; nothing but death; wilt thou still continue "blessing God and dying?" so some i render the words, referring to what he had said in Job 1:21; or else really and sincerely, as advising him to humble himself before God, confess his sins, and "pray" k unto him that he would take him out of this world, and free him from all his pains and sorrow; or rather the sense is, "bless God": take thy farewell of him l; bid adieu to him and all religion, and so die; for there is no good to be hoped for on the score of that, here or hereafter; or at least not in this life: and so it amounts to much the same as before; and this sense is confirmed by Job's answer, which follows.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 2:9 The imperative with the conjunction in this expression serves to express the certainty that will follow as the result or consequence of the previous i...
Geneva Bible -> Job 2:9
Geneva Bible: Job 2:9 Then said his ( k ) wife unto him, Dost thou ( l ) still retain thine integrity? ( m ) curse God, and die.
( k ) Satan uses the same instrument again...

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 2:7-10
MHCC: Job 2:7-10 - --The devil tempts his own children, and draws them to sin, and afterwards torments, when he has brought them to ruin; but this child of God he tormente...
Matthew Henry -> Job 2:7-10
Matthew Henry: Job 2:7-10 - -- The devil, having got leave to tear and worry poor Job, presently fell to work with him, as a tormentor first and then as a tempter. His own childre...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 2:9
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 2:9 - --
First Job's Wife (who is only mentioned in one other passage (Job 19:17), where Job complains that his breath is offensive to her) Comes to Him:
9 ...
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...
