
Text -- Job 21:7 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB: Job 21:7 - -- The answer is Rom 2:4; 1Ti 1:16; Psa 73:18; Ecc 8:11-13; Luk 2:35end; Pro 16:4; Rom 9:22.
Clarke -> Job 21:7
Clarke: Job 21:7 - -- Wherefore do the wicked live - You have frequently asserted that the wicked are invariably punished in this life; and that the righteous are ever di...
Wherefore do the wicked live - You have frequently asserted that the wicked are invariably punished in this life; and that the righteous are ever distinguished by the strongest marks of God’ s providential kindness; how then does it come that many wicked men live long and prosperously, and at last die in peace, without any evidence whatever of God’ s displeasure? This is a fact that is occurring daily; none can deny it; how then will you reconcile it with your maxims?
TSK -> Job 21:7
TSK: Job 21:7 - -- Wherefore : Job 12:6; Psa 17:10, Psa 73:3-12; Jer 12:1-3; Hab 1:15, Hab 1:16
mighty : Psa 37:35; Dan 4:17; Rev 13:2-7, Rev 17:2-4
Wherefore : Job 12:6; Psa 17:10, Psa 73:3-12; Jer 12:1-3; Hab 1:15, Hab 1:16
mighty : Psa 37:35; Dan 4:17; Rev 13:2-7, Rev 17:2-4

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 21:7
Barnes: Job 21:7 - -- Wherefore do the wicked live? - Job comes now to the main design of his argument in this chapter, to show that it is a fact, that the wicked of...
Wherefore do the wicked live? - Job comes now to the main design of his argument in this chapter, to show that it is a fact, that the wicked often have great prosperity; that they are not treated in this life according to their character; and that it is not a fact that men of eminent wickedness, as his friends maintained, would meet, in this life, with proportionate sufferings. He says, that the fact is, that they enjoy great prosperity; that they live to a great age; and that they are surrounded with the comforts of life in an eminent degree. The meaning is, "If you are positive that the wicked are treated according to their character in this life - that great wickedness is followed by great judgments, how is it to be accounted for that they live, and grow old, and are mighty in power?"Job assumes the fact to be so, and proceeds to argue as if that were indisputable. It is remarkable, that the fact was not adverted to at an earlier period of the debate. It would have done much to settle the controversy. The "question,""Why do the wicked live?"is one of great importance at all times, and one which it is natural to ask, but which it is not even yet always easy to answer. "Some"points are clear, and may be easily suggested. They are such as these - They live
(1) to show the forbearance and long suffering of God;
(2) to furnish a full illustration of the character of the human heart;
(3) to afford them ample space for repentance, so that there shall not be the semblance of a ground of complaint when they are called before God, and are condemned;
(4) because God intends to make some of them the monuments of his mercy, and more fully to display the riches of his grace in their conversion, as he did in the case of Paul, Augustine, John Bunyan, and John Newton;
(5) they may be preserved to be the instruments of his executing some important purpose by them, as was the case with Pharaoh, Sennacherib, and Nebuchadnezzar; or,
(6) he keeps them, that the great interests of society may be carried on; that the affairs of the commercial and the political world may be forwarded by their skill and talent.
For some, or all of these purposes, it may be, the wicked are kept in the land of the living, and are favored with great external prosperity, while many a Christian is oppressed, afflicted, and crushed to the dust. Of the "fact,"there can be no doubt; of the "reasons"for the fact, there will be a fuller development in the future world than there can be now.
Become old - The friends of Job had maintained that the wicked would be cut off. Job, on the other hand, affirms that they live on to old age. The "fact"is, that many of the wicked are cut off for their sins in early life, but that some live on to an extreme old age. The argument of Job is founded on the fact, that "any"should live to old age, as, according to the principles of his friends, "all"were treated in this life according to their character.
Yea, are mighty in power - Or, rather, "in wealth"-
Poole -> Job 21:7
Poole: Job 21:7 - -- He expostulates this matter partly with his friends, If things be as you say, how comes this to pass, &c? partly with God himself, Wherefore doth th...
He expostulates this matter partly with his friends, If things be as you say, how comes this to pass, &c? partly with God himself, Wherefore doth the righteous God distribute things so unequally?
The wicked live to wit, long and happily; as living is oft taken, as Lev 18:5 1Sa 10:24 25:6 Psa 38:19 ; a painful and afflicted life being a kind of death, and oft so called, as Deu 30:15,19 Pr 15:10 19:16 1Co 3:22 15:31 .
Become old to wit, in their prosperous estate.
Haydock -> Job 21:7
Haydock: Job 21:7 - -- Riches. This is what fills me with great anxiety. Yet it quite destroys the force of your argument, (Calmet) since you pretend that the prosperity ...
Riches. This is what fills me with great anxiety. Yet it quite destroys the force of your argument, (Calmet) since you pretend that the prosperity of the wicked is never of long duration. We see them, however, live to an advanced old age, (Haydock) continually offending God, and annoying their neighbours. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "yea, they grow old in riches."
Gill -> Job 21:7
Gill: Job 21:7 - -- Wherefore do the wicked live,.... Which question is put either to God himself, as not knowing ow to account for it, or to reconcile it to his divine p...
Wherefore do the wicked live,.... Which question is put either to God himself, as not knowing ow to account for it, or to reconcile it to his divine perfections; that he, a holy, just, and righteous Being, should suffer such wretches to live upon his earth, who had been, and still were, continually sinning against him, transgressing his law, and trampling under foot his power and authority; when he, a man that feared the Lord, as God himself had borne witness of him, laboured under such heavy affliction, that he seemed rather to die than live: or else it is put to his friends, to whom he appeals for the truth of it, as Zophar had to him, about the short time of the prosperity of the wicked, Job 10:4; and desires them to try how they could make such undeniable facts comport with their own principles, that wicked men are always and only afflicted to any great degree, and not holy and good men; but if so, it is asked, why do they "live", even live at all? why is not their breath stopped at once, that breathe out nothing but sin and wickedness? or why are they "lively?" as Mr. Broughton renders the word; that is, brisk, cheerful, and jocund, live merrily, having an abundance of this world's good things; call upon themselves to eat, drink, and be merry, and indulge themselves in all the gratifications of sensual pleasures and delights; live at ease, in peace and outward comfort, and are not in trouble as other men, having nothing to disturb, disquiet, and distress them; nay, not only live comfortably, but live long: while a righteous man perishes or dies in his righteousness, the wicked man prolongs his life in his wickedness, Ecc 7:15, as it follows:
become old; live to a considerable old age, as Ishmael did, to whom he may have respect, as well as to some others within his knowledge; or are "durable" n, not only in age, as the sinner is supposed to die, and sometimes does die an hundred years old, or more, but in wealth and riches, in outward prosperity; for though spiritual riches are only durable riches, in opposition to temporal ones, yet these sometimes endure with a wicked man, and he endures with them as long as he lives, as may be seen in the instances of wicked rich men in Luk 12:16; with which agrees what follows:
yea, are mighty in power? are in great authority among men, being kings, princes, civil magistrates, see Psa 37:35; are advanced to great dignity and honour, as the twelve princes that sprung from Ishmael, and the race of kings and dukes that came from Esau. Mr. Broughton renders it, "be mighty in riches", greatly increase in them; and so the Targum, possess substance or riches.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 21:7 The verb עָתַק (’ataq) means “to move; to proceed; to advance.” Here it is “to advance in years&...
Geneva Bible -> Job 21:7
Geneva Bible: Job 21:7 Wherefore do the wicked ( d ) live, become old, yea, are mighty in power?
( d ) Job proves against his adversaries that God does not punish the wicke...

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...
