
Text -- Job 3:18 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Job 3:18
Wesley: Job 3:18 - -- Or, taskmaster, who urges and forces them to work by cruel threatenings and stripes. Job meddles not here with their eternal state after death, of whi...
Or, taskmaster, who urges and forces them to work by cruel threatenings and stripes. Job meddles not here with their eternal state after death, of which he speaks hereafter, but only their freedom from worldly troubles, which is the sole matter of his present discourse.
JFB -> Job 3:18
From their chains.
Clarke -> Job 3:18
Clarke: Job 3:18 - -- The prisoners rest together - Those who were slaves, feeling all the troubles, and scarcely tasting any of the pleasures of life, are quiet in the g...
The prisoners rest together - Those who were slaves, feeling all the troubles, and scarcely tasting any of the pleasures of life, are quiet in the grave together; and the voice of the oppressor, the hard, unrelenting task-master, which was more terrible than death, is heard no more. They are free from his exactions, and his mouth is silent in the dust. This may be a reference to the Egyptian bondage. The children of Israel cried by reason of their oppressors or task-masters.
TSK -> Job 3:18

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 3:18
Barnes: Job 3:18 - -- There the prisoners rest together - Herder translates this, "There the prisoners rejoice in their freedom."The Septuagint strangely enough, "Th...
There the prisoners rest together - Herder translates this, "There the prisoners rejoice in their freedom."The Septuagint strangely enough, "There they of old (
They hear not the voice of the oppressor - Of him who exacted taxes, and who laid on them heavy burdens, and who imprisoned them for imaginary crimes. He who is bound in chains, and who has no other prospect of release, can look for it in the grave and will find it there. Similar sentiments are found respecting death in Seneca, ad Marcian, 20: " Mots omnibus finis, multis remedium, quibusdam votum; haec servitutem invito domino remittit; haec captivorum catenas levat; haec a carcere reducit, quos exire imperium impofens vetuerat; haec exulibus, in pairtam semper animum oculosque tendentibus, ostendit, nibil interesse inter quos quisque jaceat; haec, ubi res communes fortuna male divisit, et aequo jure genitos allure alii donavit, exaequat omnia; haec est, quae nihil quidquam alieno fecit arbitrio; haec est, ea qua nemo humilitatem guam sensit; haec est, quae nuili paruit ."The sense in Job is, that all are at liberty in death. Chains no longer bind; prisons no longer incarccrate; the voice of oppression no longer alarms.
Poole -> Job 3:18
Poole: Job 3:18 - -- The prisoners rest together i.e. one as well as another; they who were kept in the strongest chains and closest prisons, and condemned to the most ha...
The prisoners rest together i.e. one as well as another; they who were kept in the strongest chains and closest prisons, and condemned to the most hard and miserable slavery, rest as well as those who were captives in much better circumstances. Or,
in like manner ( as this word oft signifies,) as those oppressors and oppressed do.
The oppressor or, exacter, or taskmaster , who urgeth and forceth them by cruel threatenings and stripes to greater diligence in the works to which they are condemned. See Exo 3:7 5:6,10,13 . Job meddles not here with their eternal state after death, or the sentence and judgment of God against wicked men, of which he speaks hereafter; but only speaks of their freedom from worldly troubles, which is the only matter of his complaint and present discourse.
Haydock -> Job 3:18
Haydock: Job 3:18 - -- Bound in chains, like incorrigible slaves, (Calmet) or debtors. (Cocceius.) ---
These were formerly treated with great severity, Luke xii. 59. (Ca...
Bound in chains, like incorrigible slaves, (Calmet) or debtors. (Cocceius.) ---
These were formerly treated with great severity, Luke xii. 59. (Calmet)
Gill -> Job 3:18
Gill: Job 3:18 - -- There the prisoners rest together,.... "Are at ease", as Mr. Broughton renders the words; such who while they lived were in prison for debt, or were ...
There the prisoners rest together,.... "Are at ease", as Mr. Broughton renders the words; such who while they lived were in prison for debt, or were condemned to the galleys, to lead a miserable life; or such who suffered bonds and imprisonment for the sake of religion, at death their chains are knocked off, and they are as much at liberty, and enjoy as much ease, as the dead that never were prisoners; and not only rest together with those who were their fellow prisoners, but with those who never were in prison, yea, with those who cast them into it; for there the prisoners and those that imprisoned them are upon a level, enjoying equal ease and liberty:
they hear not the voice of the oppressor; or "exactor" x; neither of their creditors that demanded their debt of them, and threatened them with a prison, or that detained them in it; nor of the jail keeper that gave them hard words as well as stripes; nor of cruel taskmasters, who kept them to hard service in prison, and threatened them severely if they did not perform it, like the taskmasters in Egypt, Exo 5:11; but, in the grave, the blustering, terrifying, voice of such, is not heard.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

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 3:11-19
MHCC: Job 3:11-19 - --Job complained of those present at his birth, for their tender attention to him. No creature comes into the world so helpless as man. God's power and ...
Matthew Henry -> Job 3:11-19
Matthew Henry: Job 3:11-19 - -- Job, perhaps reflecting upon himself for his folly in wishing he had never been born, follows it, and thinks to mend it, with another, little better...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 3:17-19
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 3:17-19 - --
17 There the wicked cease from troubling,
And the weary are at rest.
18 The captives dwell together in tranquillity;
They hear not the voice of t...
Constable -> Job 3:1-26; Job 3:11-19
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...
