
Text -- Job 3:20 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
The light of life.

Wesley: Job 3:20 - -- Unto those to whom life itself is bitter and burdensome. Life is called light, because it is pleasant and serviceable for walking and working; and thi...
Unto those to whom life itself is bitter and burdensome. Life is called light, because it is pleasant and serviceable for walking and working; and this light is said to be given us, because it would be lost, if it were not daily renewed to us by a fresh gift.
JFB -> Job 3:20
JFB: Job 3:20 - -- Namely, God; often omitted reverentially (Job 24:23; Ecc 9:9). Light, that is, life. The joyful light ill suits the mourners. The grave is most in uni...
Clarke -> Job 3:20
Clarke: Job 3:20 - -- Wherefore is light given - Why is life granted to him who is incapable of enjoying it, or of performing its functions?
Wherefore is light given - Why is life granted to him who is incapable of enjoying it, or of performing its functions?
TSK -> Job 3:20
TSK: Job 3:20 - -- Wherefore : Job 6:9, Job 7:15, Job 7:16; Jer 20:18
light : Job 3:16, Job 33:28, Job 33:30
the bitter : Job 7:15, Job 7:16; 1Sa 1:10; 2Ki 4:27; Pro 31:...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 3:20
Barnes: Job 3:20 - -- Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery? - The word "light"here is used undoubtedly to denote "life."This verse commences a new part ...
Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery? - The word "light"here is used undoubtedly to denote "life."This verse commences a new part of Job’ s complaint. It is that God keeps people alive who would prefer to die; that he furnishes them with the means of sustaining existence, and actually preserves them, when they would consider it an inestimable blessing to expire. Schultens remarks, on this part of the chapter, that the tone of Job’ s complaint is considerably modified. He has given vent to his strong feelings, and the language here is more mild and gentle. Still it implies a reflection on God. It is not the language of humble submission. It contains an implied charge of cruelty and injustice; and it laid the foundation for some of the just reproofs which follow.
And life unto the bitter in soul - Who are suffering bitter grief. We use the word "bitter"yet to denote great grief and pain.
Poole -> Job 3:20
Poole: Job 3:20 - -- Heb. Wherefore (for what cause, or use, or good) doth he (i.e. God, though he forbear to name him, out of that holy fear and reverence which sti...
Heb. Wherefore (for what cause, or use, or good) doth he (i.e. God, though he forbear to name him, out of that holy fear and reverence which still he retained towards him) give light? either the light of the sun, which the living only behold, Ecc 6:5 7:11 ; or the light of life, as may seem both by the next words, and by comparing Psa 56:13 , and because death is off set forth by the name of darkness, as life by the name of light. These are strong expostulations with God, and quarrelling with his providence and with his blessings; but we must consider that Job was but a man, and a man of like passions and infirmities with other men, and now in grievous agonies, being not only under most violent, and yet continual, torments of body, but also under great disquietments of mind, and the deep sense of God’ s displeasure, and was also left to himself, that he might see what was in his heart, and that all succeeding ages might have in him an illustrious example of man’ s infirmity, and the necessity of God’ s grace to help them in time of need. And therefore it is no wonder if his passions boil up and break forth in same indecent and sinful expressions.
Unto the bitter in soul unto such to whom life itself is very bitter and burdensome. Why doth he obtrude his favours upon those who abhor them?
Gill -> Job 3:20
Gill: Job 3:20 - -- Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery,.... That labours under various calamities and afflictions, as Job did, being stripped of his substa...
Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery,.... That labours under various calamities and afflictions, as Job did, being stripped of his substance, deprived of his children, and now in great pain of body and distress of mind; who, since he died not so soon as he wished he had, expostulates why his life is protracted; for that is what he means by light, as appears from the following clause, even the light of the living, or the light of the world; which though sweet and pleasant to behold to a man in health, yet not to one in pain of body and anguish of mind, as he was, who chose rather to be in the dark and silent grave; this he represents as a gift, as indeed life is, and the gift of God: the words may be rendered, "wherefore does he give light?" y that is, God, as some z supply it, who is undoubtedly meant, though not mentioned, through reverence of him, and that he might not seem to quarrel with him; the principle of life is from him, and the continuance and protraction of it, and all the means and mercies by which it is supported; and Job asks the reasons, which he seems to be at a loss for, why it should be continued to a person in such uncomfortable circumstances as he was in; though these, with respect to a good man as he was, are plain and obvious: such are continued in the world under afflictions, both for their own good, and for the glory of God, that their graces may be tried, their sins purged away or prevented, and they made more partakers of divine holiness; and be weaned from this world, and fitted for another, and not be condemned with the world of the ungodly:
and life unto the bitter in soul; whose lives are embittered to them by afflictions, comparable to the waters of Marah, and to wormwood and gall, which occasion bitterness of spirit in them, and bitter complaints from them; see Job 13:26.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 3:20 The second colon now refers to people in general because of the plural construct מָרֵי נָפֶ...
Geneva Bible -> Job 3:20
Geneva Bible: Job 3:20 Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery, and ( n ) life unto the bitter [in] soul;
( n ) He shows that the benefits of God are not comforta...

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 3:20-26
MHCC: Job 3:20-26 - --Job was like a man who had lost his way, and had no prospect of escape, or hope of better times. But surely he was in an ill frame for death when so u...
Matthew Henry -> Job 3:20-26
Matthew Henry: Job 3:20-26 - -- Job, finding it to no purpose to wish either that he had not been born or had died as soon as he was born, here complains that his life was now cont...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 3:20-23
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 3:20-23 - --
20 Why is light given to the wretched,
And life to the sorrowful in soul?
21 Who wait for death, and he comes not,
Who dig after him more than fo...
Constable -> Job 3:1-26; Job 3:20-26
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...
