
Text -- Job 34:24 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Job 34:24
Clarke -> Job 34:24
Clarke: Job 34:24 - -- He shall break in pieces - In multitudes of cases God depresses the proud, and raises up the humble and meek. Neither their strength nor number can ...
He shall break in pieces - In multitudes of cases God depresses the proud, and raises up the humble and meek. Neither their strength nor number can afford them security.
TSK -> Job 34:24
TSK: Job 34:24 - -- break : Job 19:2; Psa 2:9, Psa 72:4, Psa 94:5; Jer 51:20-23; Dan 2:21, Dan 2:34, Dan 2:35, Dan 2:44, Dan 2:45
number : Heb. searching out
set : 1Sa 2:...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 34:24
Barnes: Job 34:24 - -- He shall break in pieces - He crushes or destroys the great. He is not intimidated by their wealth, their rank, or their number. Without n...
He shall break in pieces - He crushes or destroys the great. He is not intimidated by their wealth, their rank, or their number.
Without number - Margin, more correctly, "searching out."That is, he does it without the protracted process of a judicial investigation. The Hebrew word used here (
And set others in their stead - Place others in the situation which they now occupy. That is, he can with the utmost case make entire revolutions among people.
Poole -> Job 34:24
Poole: Job 34:24 - -- Mighty men without number neither their greatness nor their numbers can secure them from the stroke of God’ s justice.
Set others in their stea...
Mighty men without number neither their greatness nor their numbers can secure them from the stroke of God’ s justice.
Set others in their stead i.e. give away their power and dignity to others who shall come in their place.
Haydock -> Job 34:24
Haydock: Job 34:24 - -- Stead. Where are not the ancient Assyrians, Carthaginians, &c., who once made such a figure in the world? (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "glorious and s...
Stead. Where are not the ancient Assyrians, Carthaginians, &c., who once made such a figure in the world? (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "glorious and sudden, and unnumbered." The next eight verses are taken from Theodotion. (Haydock)
Gill -> Job 34:24
Gill: Job 34:24 - -- He shall break in pieces mighty men without number,.... Such as are mighty in bodily strength, as the giants of the old world, and such as were inhabi...
He shall break in pieces mighty men without number,.... Such as are mighty in bodily strength, as the giants of the old world, and such as were inhabitants of some parts of the land of Canaan; or mighty in power and authority, being kings, princes, rulers, and governors, over nations and cities; or mighty in wealth and riches, which give men power and strength; these God can and sometimes does break in pieces like potters' vessels, and even mighty kingdoms and nations themselves he will make like the chaff of the summer threshing floor: and even without number; or there have been and will be numberless instances of this kind; who can tell how many of these mighty men, men of gigantic stature, were drowned in the flood, or cut off by the sword of the Israelites in the land of Canaan? or "without search" d as it may be rendered; either on the part of God, who needs not any, with whom are unnecessary any formal inquiries into a cause, or examination of witnesses, in order to a judicial process against delinquents, all being naked and open before him at once; or on the part of man, with whom the ways and judgments of God are unsearchable and who ought not closely and curiously to inquire into any of his proceedings, and the causes and reasons of them, who does all things after the counsel of his own will. Mr. Broughton renders it "without end", for ever; with an everlasting destruction, an utter and irretrievable one; he so breaks them as that they never can be made whole again, like an earthen vessel that is broke to pieces and cannot be put together again;
and set others in their stead; God always provides for a succession in the world, that as when one generation goes off another comes on; when he destroyed the world with a flood, he preserved a family to replenish the earth; when the fathers of the Jewish nation, their carcasses fell in the wilderness, their children were raised up in their room to enter the good land and possess it; and particularly he provides for the civil government of the world and when he pulls down or removes one king he sets up another, and will not suffer kingdoms and states to fall into anarchy and confusion: and sometimes, when he casts down the mighty from their seats, he exalts men of low degree, as when he rejected Saul he took David from the sheepfold, 1Sa 16:11; and makes such kings and kingdoms to "stand" e stable and firm, as the kingdom of David, and as the word here used signifies.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 34:1-37
TSK Synopsis: Job 34:1-37 - --1 Elihu accuses Job for charging God with injustice.10 God omnipotent cannot be unjust.31 Man must humble himself unto God.34 Elihu reproves Job.
MHCC -> Job 34:16-30
MHCC: Job 34:16-30 - --Elihu appeals directly to Job himself. Could he suppose that God was like those earthly princes, who hate right, who are unfit to rule, and prove the ...
Matthew Henry -> Job 34:16-30
Matthew Henry: Job 34:16-30 - -- Elihu here addresses himself more directly to Job. He had spoken to the rest (Job 34:10) as men of understanding; now, speaking to Job; he puts an...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 34:24-28
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 34:24-28 - --
24 He breaketh the mighty in pieces without investigation
And setteth others in their place.
25 Thus He seeth through their works,
And causeth th...
Constable: Job 32:1--37:24 - --F. Elihu's Speeches chs. 32-37
Many critical scholars believe that a later editor inserted chapters 32-3...

Constable: Job 34:1-37 - --3. Elihu's second speech ch. 34
Elihu sought to refute Job's charge that God was unjust in this ...
