
Text -- Job 27:15 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Who survive that sword and famine.

Wesley: Job 27:15 - -- Because they also, as well as other persons, groaned under their tyranny, and rejoice in their deliverance from it.
Because they also, as well as other persons, groaned under their tyranny, and rejoice in their deliverance from it.
JFB: Job 27:15 - -- "death" (Job 18:13; Jer 15:2; Rev 6:8). The plague of the Middle Ages was called "the black death." Buried by it implies that they would have none els...

JFB: Job 27:15 - -- Rather, "their widows." Transitions from singular to plural are frequent. Polygamy is not implied.
Rather, "their widows." Transitions from singular to plural are frequent. Polygamy is not implied.
Clarke: Job 27:15 - -- Those that remain of him - שרידיו seridaiv , his remains, whether meaning himself personally, or his family
Those that remain of him -

Clarke: Job 27:15 - -- Shall be buried in death - Shall come to utter and remediless destruction. Death shall have his full conquest over them, and the grave its complete ...
Shall be buried in death - Shall come to utter and remediless destruction. Death shall have his full conquest over them, and the grave its complete victory. These are no common dead. All the sting, all the wound, and all the poison of sin, remains: and so evident are God’ s judgments in his and their removal, that even widows shall not weep for them; the public shall not bewail them; for when the wicked perish there is shouting. Mr. Good, following the Chaldee, translates: Entombed in corruption, or in the pestilence. But I see no reason why we should desert the literal reading. Entombed in corruption gives no nervous sense in my judgment; for in corruption are the high and the low, the wicked and the good, entombed: but buried in death is at once nervous and expressive. Death itself is the place where he shall lie; he shall have no redemption, no resurrection to life; death shall ever have dominion over him. The expression is very similar to that in Luk 16:22 (note), as found in several versions and MSS.: The rich man died, and was buried in hell; and, lifting up his eyes, being in torment, he saw, etc. See my note there.
TSK -> Job 27:15

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 27:15
Barnes: Job 27:15 - -- Those that remain of him - Those that survive him. Shall be buried in death - Hebrew "shall be buried BY death"( במות bamâveth ...
Those that remain of him - Those that survive him.
Shall be buried in death - Hebrew "shall be buried BY death"(
"They shall not lament for him, saying,
Ah! my brother! or, Ah! sister!
They shall not lament for him, saying,
Ah! lord! or, Ah! his glory!
With the burial of an ass shall he be buried,
Drawn out and east beyond the gates of Jerusalem."
And his widows shall not weep - The plural here - "widows"- is a proof that polygamy was then practiced. It is probable that Job here alludes to the shrieks of domestic grief which in the East are heard in every part of the house among the females on the death of the master of the family, or to the train of women that usually followed the corpse to the grave. The standing of a man in society was indicated by the length of the train of mourners, and particularly by the number of wives and concubines that followed him as weepers. Job refers to this as the sentiment of his friends, that when a wicked man died, he would die with such evident marks of the divine displeasure, that even his own family would not mourn for him, or that they would be cut off before his death, and none would be left to grieve.
Poole -> Job 27:15
Poole: Job 27:15 - -- Those that remain of him who survive and escape that sword and famine.
Shall be buried in death either,
1. Shall die, and so be buried. Or,
2. Sh...
Those that remain of him who survive and escape that sword and famine.
Shall be buried in death either,
1. Shall die, and so be buried. Or,
2. Shall be buried as soon as ever they are dead, either because their relations or dependents feared lest they shored come to themselves again, and trouble them and others longer; or because they were not able to bestow any funeral pomp upon them, or thought them unworthy of it. Or,
3. Shall be in a manner utterly extinct in or by death; all their hope, and glory, and name, and memory (which they designed to perpetuate to all ages) shall be buried with them, and they shall never rise again to a blessed life: whereas a good man hath hope in his death, and leaves his good name alive and flourishing in the world, and rests in his grave in assurance of redemption from it, and of a glorious resurrection to a happy and eternal life.
His widows for they had many wives, either to gratify their lust, or to increase and strengthen their family and interest.
Shall not weep either because they durst not lament their death, which was entertained with public joy; or because they were overwhelmed and astonished with the greatness and strangeness of the calamity, and therefore could not weep; or because they also, as well as other persons, groaned under their tyranny and cruelty, and rejoiced in their deliverance from it.
Haydock -> Job 27:15
Haydock: Job 27:15 - -- In death; without honour. (Sanctius) ---
Weep for him. Septuagint, "his widows no one shall lament, or pity." (Haydock) (Psalm lxxvii. 63.) ...
In death; without honour. (Sanctius) ---
Weep for him. Septuagint, "his widows no one shall lament, or pity." (Haydock) (Psalm lxxvii. 63.) (Menochius)
Gill -> Job 27:15
Gill: Job 27:15 - -- Those that remain of him,.... Of the wicked man after his death; or such that remain, and have escaped the sword and famine:
shall be buried in dea...
Those that remain of him,.... Of the wicked man after his death; or such that remain, and have escaped the sword and famine:
shall be buried in death: the pestilence, emphatically called death by the Hebrews, as by us the mortality, see Rev 6:8. This is another of God's sore public judgments wicked men, and is such a kind of death, by reason of the contagion of it, that a person is buried as soon as dead almost, being infectious to keep him; and so Mr. Broughton translates the words,
"his remnant shall be buried as soon as they are dead;''
or the disease of which such die being so very infectious sometimes, no one dares to bury them for fear of catching it, and so they lie unburied; which some take to be the sense of the phrase, either that they shall be hurried away to the grave, and so not be embalmed and lie in state, and have an honourable and pompous funeral, or that they shall have none at all, their death will be all the burial they shall have: or else the sense is, they shall die such a death as that death shall be their grave; and they shall have no other, as the men of the old world that were drowned in the flood, Gen 7:23; and Pharaoh and his host in the Red sea, Exo 15:4; and Korah, Dathan, and Abiram, who were swallowed up in the earth, Num 16:27; and such as are devoured by wild beasts; and if this last could be thought to be meant, we have all the four sore judgments of God in this verse and Job 27:14, sword, famine, pestilence, and evil beasts, see Eze 14:21,
and his widows shall not weep; leaving more than one behind him, polygamy being frequent in those times; or else these are his sons' wives, left widows by them, as Bar Tzemach thinks, they being the persons immediately spoken of, dying by various deaths before mentioned; but whether they be his widows, or theirs, they shall weep for neither of them; either because they themselves will be cut off with them; or their husbands dying shameful deaths, lamentation would be forbidden; or they would not be able to weep through the astonishment and stupor they should be seized with at their death; or having lived such miserable and uncomfortable lives with them, they should be so far from lamenting their death, that they should, as Jarchi interprets it, rejoice at it; the Septuagint version is,
"no one shall have mercy on their widows.''

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 27:1-23
TSK Synopsis: Job 27:1-23 - --1 Job protests his sincerity.8 The hypocrite is without hope.11 The blessings which the wicked have are turned into curses.
MHCC -> Job 27:11-23
MHCC: Job 27:11-23 - --Job's friends, on the same subject, spoke of the misery of wicked men before death as proportioned to their crimes; Job considered that if it were not...
Matthew Henry -> Job 27:11-23
Matthew Henry: Job 27:11-23 - -- Job's friends had seen a great deal of the misery and destruction that attend wicked people, especially oppressors; and Job, while the heat of dispu...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 27:13-18
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 27:13-18 - --
13 This is the lot of the wicked man with God,
And the heritage of the violent which they receive from the Almighty:
14 If his children multiply, ...
Constable: Job 22:1--27:23 - --D. The Third cycle of Speeches between Job and His Three Friends chs. 22-27
In round one of the debate J...

Constable: Job 26:1--27:23 - --4. Job's third reply to Bildad chs. 26-27
Job's long speech here contrasts strikingly with Bilda...
