
Text -- Job 29:12 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Job 29:12-17
JFB: Job 29:12-17 - -- The grounds on which Job was praised (Job 29:11), his helping the afflicted (Psa 72:12) who cried to him for help, as a judge, or as one possessed of ...
Clarke -> Job 29:12
Clarke: Job 29:12 - -- Because I delivered the poor that cried - This appears to be intended as a refutation of the charges produced by Eliphaz, Job 22:5-10, to confute wh...
Because I delivered the poor that cried - This appears to be intended as a refutation of the charges produced by Eliphaz, Job 22:5-10, to confute which Job appeals to facts, and to public testimony.
TSK -> Job 29:12
TSK: Job 29:12 - -- I delivered : Job 22:5-9; Neh 5:2-13; Psa 72:12, Psa 82:2-4; Pro 21:13, Pro 24:11, Pro 24:12; Jer 22:16
the fatherless : Exo 22:22-24; Deu 10:18; Psa ...
I delivered : Job 22:5-9; Neh 5:2-13; Psa 72:12, Psa 82:2-4; Pro 21:13, Pro 24:11, Pro 24:12; Jer 22:16
the fatherless : Exo 22:22-24; Deu 10:18; Psa 68:5; Jam 1:27

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 29:12
Barnes: Job 29:12 - -- Because I delivered the poor that cried - This is spoken of himself as a magistrate or judge - for the whole description relates to that. The m...
Because I delivered the poor that cried - This is spoken of himself as a magistrate or judge - for the whole description relates to that. The meaning is, that when the poor man, who had no means of employing counsel, brought his cause before him, he heard him and delivered him from the grasp of the oppressor. He never made an appeal to him in vain; compare Pro 21:13; Pro 24:11-12.
And the fatherless - The orphan who brought his cause before him. He became the patron and protector of those whose natural protectors - their parents - had been removed by death; compare the notes at Isa 1:17.
And him that had none to help him - The poor man who had no powerful patron. Job says that, as a magistrate, he particularly regarded the cause of such persons, and saw that justice was done them - a beautiful image of the administration of justice in patriarchal times. This is the sense in which our translators understood this. But the parallelism seems rather to require that this should be applied to the fatherless who had no one to aid him, and the Hebrew, by understanding the
Poole -> Job 29:12
Poole: Job 29:12 - -- I delivered from his potent oppressor They did not honour me for my great wealth or power, but for my impartial justice and pity to the afflicted, an...
I delivered from his potent oppressor They did not honour me for my great wealth or power, but for my impartial justice and pity to the afflicted, and courage in maintaining their cause and right against their mighty adversaries.
None to help him none that would own or help them, partly because they were poor, and unable to recompense them for it; and partly because their enemies were great, and likely to crush both them and their helpers; which made Job’ s virtue more glorious.
Gill -> Job 29:12
Gill: Job 29:12 - -- Because I delivered the poor that cried,.... This honour and esteem he had not because of his grandeur and riches, because of his worldly wealth and s...
Because I delivered the poor that cried,.... This honour and esteem he had not because of his grandeur and riches, because of his worldly wealth and substance, but because of the goodness of his disposition, and because of the good he did to men, his acts of pity and compassion to the poor, and of the justice he did to all men; the poor and the afflicted, when they cried to him for help, he delivered them out of the hands of their oppressors:
and the fatherless; the care and defence of which belongs to judges and civil magistrates, see Psa 82:1;
and him that had none to help him; as the poor and fatherless seldom have; there is power on the side of the oppressors of them, but they have few or none to take their parts, and to be their comforters, Ecc 4:1; in these instances Job imitated God, and was a follower of him, as a dear child of his; who, when this and the other poor man cries unto him, he hears, saves, and delivers out of all their troubles; he is the helper, yea, the father of the fatherless, and the judge of the widow; and, when there is no help from men, he is a present help in times of need.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Job 29:12
NET Notes: Job 29:12 The negative introduces a clause that serves as a negative attribute; literally the following clause says, “and had no helper” (see GKC 48...
Geneva Bible -> Job 29:12
Geneva Bible: Job 29:12 Because I delivered the ( i ) poor that cried, and the fatherless, and [him that had] none to help him.
( i ) Because his adversaries did so much cha...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 29:1-25
MHCC -> Job 29:7-17
MHCC: Job 29:7-17 - --All sorts of people paid respect to Job, not only for the dignity of his rank, but for his personal merit, his prudence, integrity, and good managemen...
Matthew Henry -> Job 29:7-17
Matthew Henry: Job 29:7-17 - -- We have here Job in a post of honour and power. Though he had comfort enough in his own house, yet he did not confine himself to that. We are not bo...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 29:11-14
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 29:11-14 - --
11 For an ear heard, and called me happy;
And an eye saw, and bear witness to me:
12 For I rescued the sufferer who cried for help,
And the orpha...
Constable -> Job 29:1--31:40; Job 29:1-25
Constable: Job 29:1--31:40 - --2. Job's defense of his innocence ch. 29-31
Job gave a soliloquy before his dialogue with his th...
