
Text -- Job 21:11 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB: Job 21:11 - -- Namely, out of doors, to their happy sports under the skies, like a joyful flock sent to the pastures.
Namely, out of doors, to their happy sports under the skies, like a joyful flock sent to the pastures.

Not formal dances; but skip, like lambs, in joyous and healthful play.
Clarke -> Job 21:11
Clarke: Job 21:11 - -- They send forth their little ones - It is not very clear whether this refers to the young of the flocks or to their children. The first clause may m...
They send forth their little ones - It is not very clear whether this refers to the young of the flocks or to their children. The first clause may mean the former, the next clause the latter; while the young of their cattle are in flocks, their numerous children are healthy and vigorous, and dance for joy.
TSK -> Job 21:11

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 21:11
Barnes: Job 21:11 - -- They send forth their little ones - Their numerous and happy children they send forth to plays and pastimes. Like a flock - In great numb...
They send forth their little ones - Their numerous and happy children they send forth to plays and pastimes.
Like a flock - In great numbers. This is an exquisitely beautiful image of prosperity. What can be more so than a group of happy children around a man’ s dwelling?
And their children dance - Dance for joy. They are playful and sportive, like the lambs of the flock. It is the skip of playfulness and exultation that is referred to here, and not the set and formal dance where children are instructed in the art; the sportiveness of children in the fields, the woods, and on the lawn, and not the set step taught in the dancing-school. The word used here (
The image is one simply of health, abundance, exuberance of feeling, cheerfulness, prosperity. The houses were free from alarms; the fields were filled with herds and flocks, and their families of happy and playful children were around them. The object of Job was not to say that all this was in itself wrong, but that it was a plain matter of fact that God did not take away the comforts of all the wicked and overwhelm them with calamity. Of the impropriety of training children in a dancing-school, there ought to be but one opinion among the friends of religion (see National Preacher for January 1844), but there is no evidence that Job referred to any such training here, "and"this passage should not be adduced to prove that dancing is wrong. It refers to the playfulness and the cheerful sports of children, and God has made them so that they "will"find pleasure in such sports, and so that they are benefited by them. There is not a more lovely picture of happiness and of the benevolence of God any where on earth than in such groups of children, and in their sportiveness and playfulness there is no more that is wrong than there is in the gambols of the lambs of the flock.
Poole -> Job 21:11
Poole: Job 21:11 - -- Like a flock of sheep or goats, as the word signifies; in great numbers, and with sweet concord; which is a singular delight to them and to their par...
Like a flock of sheep or goats, as the word signifies; in great numbers, and with sweet concord; which is a singular delight to them and to their parents.
Haydock -> Job 21:11
Haydock: Job 21:11 - -- Their. Septuagint, "They continue like eternal sheep, as if they and their flocks would never die. (Calmet) ---
And play, is to shew the nature o...
Their. Septuagint, "They continue like eternal sheep, as if they and their flocks would never die. (Calmet) ---
And play, is to shew the nature of the dance. It is not in Hebrew. (Haydock) ---
The children are healthy and sportive. (Menochius) ---
Septuagint, "they play before them." (Haydock)
Gill -> Job 21:11
Gill: Job 21:11 - -- They send forth their little ones like a flock,.... Of sheep, which are creatures very increasing, and become very numerous, Psa 144:13; to which a la...
They send forth their little ones like a flock,.... Of sheep, which are creatures very increasing, and become very numerous, Psa 144:13; to which a large increase of families may be compared, Psa 107:41, for this is not to be interpreted of their kine sending or bringing forth such numbers as to be like a flock of sheep; but of the families of wicked men being increased in like manner; and the sending them forth to be understood either of the birth of their children being sent out or proceeding from them as plants out of the earth, or branches from a tree; or of their being sent out not to school to be instructed in useful learning, but into the streets to play, and pipe, and dance; and it may denote, as their number, so their being left to themselves, and being at liberty to do as they please, being under no restriction, nor any care taken of their education; at least in such a manner as to have a tendency to make them sober, virtuous, and useful in life:
and their children dance; either in a natural way, skip and frisk, and play like calves and lambs, and so are very diverting to their parents, as well as shows them to be in good health; which adds to their parents happiness and pleasure: or in an artificial way, being taught to dance; and it should be observed, it is "their" children, the children of the wicked, and not of the godly, that are thus brought up; so Abraham did not train up his children, nor Job his; no instance can be given of the children of good men being trained up in this manner, or of their dancing in an irreligious way; however, this proves in what a jovial way, and in what outward prosperity and pleasure, wicked men and their families live; which is the thing Job has in view, and is endeavouring to prove and establish.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Job 21:11
NET Notes: Job 21:11 The verb שָׁלַח (shalakh) means “to send forth,” but in the Piel “to release; to allow to run fr...
Geneva Bible -> Job 21:11
Geneva Bible: Job 21:11 They send forth their little ones ( e ) like a flock, and their children dance.
( e ) They have healthy children and in those points he answers to th...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 21:1-34
TSK Synopsis: Job 21:1-34 - --1 Job shews that even in the judgment of man he has reason to be grieved.7 Sometimes the wicked prosper, though they despise God.16 Sometimes their de...
MHCC -> Job 21:7-16
MHCC: Job 21:7-16 - --Job says, Remarkable judgments are sometimes brought upon notorious sinners, but not always. Wherefore is it so? This is the day of God's patience; an...
Matthew Henry -> Job 21:7-16
Matthew Henry: Job 21:7-16 - -- All Job's three friends, in their last discourses, had been very copious in describing the miserable condition of a wicked man in this world. "It is...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 21:7-11
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 21:7-11 - --
7 Wherefore do the wicked live,
Become old, yea, become mighty in power?
8 Their posterity is established before them about them,
And their offsp...
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 21:1-34 - --6. Job's second reply to Zophar ch. 21
After the first cycle of speeches, Job responded to a poi...
