
Text -- Job 3:1 (NET)

II. Job’s Dialogue With His Friends
(3:1-27:33)



Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Job 3:1
Wesley: Job 3:1 - -- His birth - day, in vain do some endeavour to excuse this and the following speeches of Job, who afterwards is reproved by God, and severely accuseth ...
His birth - day, in vain do some endeavour to excuse this and the following speeches of Job, who afterwards is reproved by God, and severely accuseth himself for them, Job 38:2, Job 40:4, Job 13:3, Job 13:6. And yet he does not proceed so far as to curse God, but makes the devil a liar: but although he does not break forth into direct reproaches of God, yet he makes indirect reflections upon his providence. His curse was sinful, both because it was vain, being applied to a thing, which was not capable of blessing and cursing, and because it cast a blame upon God for bringing that day, and for giving him life on that day.
Clarke: Job 3:1 - -- After this opened Job his mouth - After the seven days’ mourning was over, there being no prospect of relief, Job is represented as thus cursi...
After this opened Job his mouth - After the seven days’ mourning was over, there being no prospect of relief, Job is represented as thus cursing the day of his birth. Here the poetic part of the book begins; for most certainly there is nothing in the preceding chapters either in the form or spirit of Hebrew poetry. It is easy indeed to break the sentences into hemistichs; but this does not constitute them poetry: for, although Hebrew poetry is in general in hemistichs, yet it does not follow that the division of narrative into hemistichs must necessarily constitute it poetry
In many cases the Asiatic poets introduce their compositions with prose narrative; and having in this way prepared the reader for what he is to expect, begin their deevans, cassidehs, gazels, etc. This appears to be the plan followed by the author of this book. Those who still think, after examining the structure of those chapters, and comparing them with the undoubted poetic parts of the book, that they also, and the ten concluding verses, are poetry, have my consent, while I take the liberty to believe most decidedly the opposite

Clarke: Job 3:1 - -- Cursed his day - That is, the day of his birth; and thus he gave vent to the agonies of his soul, and the distractions of his mind. His execrations ...
Cursed his day - That is, the day of his birth; and thus he gave vent to the agonies of his soul, and the distractions of his mind. His execrations have something in them awfully solemn, tremendously deep, and strikingly sublime. But let us not excuse all the things which he said in his haste, and in the bitterness of his soul, because of his former well established character of patience. He bore all his privations with becoming resignation to the Divine will and providence: but now, feeling himself the subject of continual sufferings, being in heaviness through manifold temptation, and probably having the light of God withdrawn from his mind, as his consolations most undoubtedly were, he regrets that ever he was born; and in a very high strain of impassioned poetry curses his day. We find a similar execration to this in Jeremiah, Jer 20:14-18, and in other places; which, by the way, are no proofs that the one borrowed from the other; but that this was the common mode of Asiatic thinking, speaking, and feeling, on such occasions.
Defender -> Job 3:1
Defender: Job 3:1 - -- Job would not curse God, but he did give way and curse the day of his birth, as well as the night of his conception."
Job would not curse God, but he did give way and curse the day of his birth, as well as the night of his conception."
TSK -> Job 3:1
TSK: Job 3:1 - -- After : Job 1:22, Job 2:10
opened : Job 35:16; Psa 39:2, Psa 39:3, Psa 106:33
cursed : Job 3:3, Job 1:11, Job 2:5, Job 2:9; Jer 20:14, Jer 20:15
his d...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 3:1
Barnes: Job 3:1 - -- After this - Dr. Good renders this, "at length."It means after the long silence of his friends, and after he saw that there was no prospect of ...
After this - Dr. Good renders this, "at length."It means after the long silence of his friends, and after he saw that there was no prospect of relief or of consolation.
Opened Job his mouth - The usual formula in Hebrew to denote thc commencement of a speech; see Mat 5:2. Schultens contends that it means boldness and vehemency of speech,
And cursed his day - The word rendered "curse"here,
Wenn nun, aller Kinder beraubt, die verzweifelude Mutter,
Wuthend dem Tag. an dem sie gebahr, und gebohren ward, fluchet .
"When now of all her children robbed, the desperate mother enraged
Curses the day in which she bare, and was borne."
Poole -> Job 3:1
Poole: Job 3:1 - -- and cursed his day to wit, his birthday, as is evident from Job 3:3 , which is called simply a man’ s day , Hos 7:5 ; which also some others, t...
and cursed his day to wit, his birthday, as is evident from Job 3:3 , which is called simply a man’ s day , Hos 7:5 ; which also some others, through the same infirmity, and in the same circumstances, have cursed, as we see, Jer 20:14 . In vain do some men endeavour to excuse this and the following speeches of Job, who afterwards is reproved by God and severely accuseth himself for them, Job 38:2 40:4 42:3,6 . And yet he doth not proceed so far as to curse or blaspheme God, but makes the devil a liar in his prognostics. But although he doth not break forth into direct and downright reproaches of God, yet he makes secret and indirect reflections upon God’ s providence. His curse was sinful, both because it was vain, being applied to an unreasonable thing, which was not capable of blessing and cursing, and to a day that was past, and so out of the reach of all curses; and because it was applied to one of God’ s creatures, all which were and are in themselves very good, and pronounced blessed by God; and so they are, if we do not turn them into curses; and because it casts a blame upon God for bringing that day, and for giving him that life which that day brought into the world. He pronounceth that day an unhappy, woeful, and cursed day, not in itself, but with respect to himself.
Haydock: Job 3:1 - -- Sleep. So death is often styled. Olli dura quies oculos et ferreus urget
Somnus: in æternam clauduntur lumina noctem. (Virgil, Æneid x.)
Sleep. So death is often styled. Olli dura quies oculos et ferreus urget
Somnus: in æternam clauduntur lumina noctem. (Virgil, Æneid x.)

Haydock: Job 3:1 - -- Cursed his day. Job cursed the day of his birth, not by way of wishing evil to any thing of God's creation; but only to express in a stronger mann...
Cursed his day. Job cursed the day of his birth, not by way of wishing evil to any thing of God's creation; but only to express in a stronger manner his sense of human miseries in general, and of his own calamities in particular. (Challoner) ---
He has these only in view: though, in another light, it is better for a man to be born, and to undergo any misery, that he may obtain eternal rewards. (Haydock) ---
Some allowances must be made for extreme pain, and for the style of the Eastern (Calmet) poetry. (Haydock) ---
Jeremias, (xx. 14.) Habacuc, (i. 2.) the psalmist, and even our Saviour in his agony, made use of such strong expressions, Matthew xxvi. 39., and xxvii. 46. Some heretics accuse Job of impatience and blasphemy. The devil, therefore came off with victory; and the praises given to Job's patience are false. He might offend by some degree of exaggeration. (Calmet) ---
But even that is by no means clear. Time past could not be recalled, nor receive any injury by the maledictions. (Haydock)
Gill -> Job 3:1
Gill: Job 3:1 - -- After this opened Job his mouth,.... order to speak, and began to speak of his troubles and afflictions, and the sense he had of them; for though, thi...
After this opened Job his mouth,.... order to speak, and began to speak of his troubles and afflictions, and the sense he had of them; for though, this phrase may sometimes signify to speak aloud, clearly and distinctly, and with great freedom and boldness, yet here it seems to design no more than beginning to speak, or breaking silence after it had been long kept: be spake after his first trial and blessed the name of the Lord, and upon his second, and reproved his wife for her foolish speaking; but upon the visit of his three friends, and during the space of seven days, a profound silence was kept by him and them; and when he perceived that they chose not to speak to him, and perhaps his distemper also decreased, and his pain somewhat abated, he broke out into the following expressions:
and cursed his day: he did not curse his God, as Satan said he would, and his wife advised him to: nor did he curse his fellow creatures, or his friends, as wicked men in passion are apt to do, nor did he curse himself, as profane persons often do, when any evil befalls them; but he cursed his day; not the day on which his troubles came upon him, for there were more than one, and they were still continued, but the day of his birth, as appears from Job 3:3; and so the Syriac and Arabic versions add here, "in which he was born"; and what is meant by cursing it may be learnt from his own words in the following verses, the substance of which is, that he wished either it had never been, or he had never been born; but since that was impossible, that it might be forgotten, and never observed or had in esteem, but be buried oblivion and obscurity, and be branded with a black mark, as an unhappy day, for ever: the word s signifies, he made light of it, and spoke slightly and contemptibly of it; he disesteemed it, yea, detested it, and could not bear to think of it, and desired that it might be disrespected by God and men; so that there is no need of such questions, whether it is in the power of man to curse? and whether it is lawful to curse the creature? and whether a day is capable of a curse? The frame of mind in which Job was when he uttered these words is differently represented; some of the Jewish writers will have it that he denied the providence of God, and thought that all things depended upon the stars, or planets which rule on the day a man is born, and therefore cursed his stars; whereas nothing is more evident than that Job ascribes all that befell him to the purpose and providence of God, Job 23:14; some say he was in the utmost despair, and had no hope of eternal life and salvation, but the contrary to this is clear from Job 13:15; and many think he had lost all patience, for which he was so famous; but if he had, he would not have been so highly spoken of as he is in Jam 5:11; it is true indeed there may be a mixture of weakness with respect to the exercise of that grace at this time, and which may appear in some after expressions of his; yet were it not for these and the like, as we could not have such an idea of his sorrows and afflictions, and of that quick sense and perception he had of them, so neither of his exceeding great patience in enduring them as he did; and, besides, what impatience he was guilty of was not only graciously forgiven, but he through the grace of God was enabled to conquer; and patience had its perfect work in him, and he persevered therein to the end; though after all he is not to be excused of weakness and infirmity, since he is blamed not only by Elihu, but by the Lord himself; yea, Job himself owned his sin and folly, and repented of it, Job 40:4.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 3:1 Heb “his day” (so KJV, ASV, NAB). The Syriac has “the day on which he was born.” The context makes it clear that Job meant the...
Geneva Bible -> Job 3:1
Geneva Bible: Job 3:1 After this opened ( a ) Job his mouth, and ( b ) cursed his day.
( a ) The seven days ended, (Job 2:13).
( b ) Here Job begins to feel his great imp...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 3:1-26
TSK Synopsis: Job 3:1-26 - --1 Job curses the day and services of his birth.13 The ease of death.20 He complains of life, because of his anguish.
MHCC -> Job 3:1-10
MHCC: Job 3:1-10 - --For seven days Job's friends sat by him in silence, without offering consolidation: at the same time Satan assaulted his mind to shake his confidence,...
Matthew Henry -> Job 3:1-10
Matthew Henry: Job 3:1-10 - -- Long was Job's heart hot within him; and, while he was musing, the fire burned, and the more for being stifled and suppressed. At length he spoke wi...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 3:1-2
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 3:1-2 - --
Job's first longer utterance now commences, by which he involved himself in the conflict, which is his seventh temptation or trial.
1, 2 After this...
Constable -> Job 3:1-26; Job 3:1-10
Constable: Job 3:1-26 - --A. Job's Personal Lament ch. 3
The poetic body to the book begins with a soliloquy in which Job cursed t...
