
Text -- Job 34:31 (NET)




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JFB: Job 34:31 - -- Job accordingly says so (Job 40:3-5; Mic 7:9; Lev 26:41). It was to lead him to this that Elihu was sent. Though no hypocrite, Job, like all, had sin;...
Job accordingly says so (Job 40:3-5; Mic 7:9; Lev 26:41). It was to lead him to this that Elihu was sent. Though no hypocrite, Job, like all, had sin; therefore through affliction he was to be brought to humble himself under God. All sorrow is a proof of the common heritage of sin, in which the godly shares; and therefore he ought to regard it as a merciful correction. UMBREIT and MAURER lose this by translating, as the Hebrew will bear, "Has any a right to say to God, I have borne chastisement and yet have not sinned?" (so Job 34:6).

Clarke -> Job 34:31
Clarke: Job 34:31 - -- Surely it is meet to be said unto God - This is Elihu’ s exhortation to Job: Humble thyself before God, and say, "I have suffered - I will not ...
Surely it is meet to be said unto God - This is Elihu’ s exhortation to Job: Humble thyself before God, and say, "I have suffered - I will not offend."
TSK -> Job 34:31
TSK: Job 34:31 - -- Job 33:27, Job 40:3-5, Job 42:6; Lev 26:41; Ezr 9:13, Ezr 9:14; Neh 9:33-38; Jer 31:18, Jer 31:19; Dan 9:7-14; Mic 7:9

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 34:31
Barnes: Job 34:31 - -- Surely it is meet to be said unto God - It is evident that this verse commences a new strain of remark, and that it is designed particularly to...
Surely it is meet to be said unto God - It is evident that this verse commences a new strain of remark, and that it is designed particularly to bring Job to proper reflections in view of what had occurred. There has been, however, much diversity of opinion about the meaning of this and the following verses. Schultens enumerates no less than "fifteen"different interpretations which have been given of this verse. The "general"meaning seems to be, that a man who is afflicted ought to submit to God, and not to murmur or complain. He ought to suppose that there is some good reason for what God does, and to be resigned to his will, even where he cannot "see"the reason of his dispensations. The drift of all the remarks of Elihu is, that God is a great and inscrutable Severeign; that he has a right to reign, and that man should submit unqualifiedly to him. In this passage he does not reproach Job harshly.
He does not say that he had been guilty of great crimes. He does not affirm that the sentiments of the three friends of Job were correct, or maintain that Job was a hypocrite. He states a "general"truth, which he considers applicable to all, and says that it becomes all who are afflicted to submit to God, and to resolve to offend no more; to go to God with the language of humble confession, and when everything is dark and gloomy in the divine dealings to implore "his"teachings, and to entreat him to shed light on the path. Hence, he says, "It is meet or proper to use this language before God. It becomes man. He should presume that God is right, and that he has some good reasons for his dealings, though they are inscrutable. Even when a sufferer is not to be reckoned among the most vile and wicked; when he is conscious that his general aim has been to do right: and when his external character has been fair, it is to be "presumed to be possible"that he may have sinned. He may not have wholly known himself. He may have indulged in things that were wrong without having been scarcely conscious of it. He may have loved the world too much; may have fixed his affections with idolatrous attachment on his property or friends; may have had a temper such as ought not to be indulged; or he may have relied on what he possessed, and thus failed to recognize his dependence on God. In such cases, it becomes man to have so much confidence in God as to go and acknowledge "his right"to inflict chastisement, and to entreat him to teach the sufferer "why"he is thus afflicted."
I have borne chastisement - The word "chastisement"is not in the Hebrew. The Hebrew is simply -
I will not offend any more -
Poole -> Job 34:31
Poole: Job 34:31 - -- Certainly it is but fit and reasonable that man should say thus to his Maker and supreme Lord, and that instead of contending with God, he should su...
Certainly it is but fit and reasonable that man should say thus to his Maker and supreme Lord, and that instead of contending with God, he should submit to him. Or, (which comes to the same thing,) But hath he said ? so the sense is, I have showed the absolute power which God hath over all his creatures, and that he may justly, and doth ofttimes severely, punish all sorts of men as he sees fit. And this Job should have applied to his own case. But , I appeal to all of you, hath he , i.e. Job, (who is the principal subject of this whole discourse, and to whom he now begins to direct his discourse,) said, that which here follows? which is a kind of form of confession or humiliation, which Elihu puts into Job’ s mouth, as fit to have been used by him. Nay, hath not his speech and carriage been of a directly contrary nature and tendency? Instead of humbling himself under God’ s hand, which was his duty, hath he not been full of murmurings and complaints against God?
Unto God unto one so much thy superior, so mighty and so righteous in all his ways; with such a one a weak and sinful creature (as thou art) should not presume to contest.
I have borne chastisement or, I do or shall bear it , to wit, quietly and contentedly; I will bear the Lord’ s indignation, and accept of the punishment of my own iniquity, and not accuse God falsely and foolishly, as I have done.
I will not offend any more Heb. I will not corrupt , to wit, myself or my ways; which is oft understood in like cases. Or, I will take or demand no pledge ; for so this verb is oft used. So the sense may possibly be, I confess I have been too bold with God, in desiring that he would come with me into judgment, and that I could have a pledge or surety that he would do so; but I will no longer desire it, but submit myself wholly to him.
Haydock -> Job 34:31
Haydock: Job 34:31 - -- Seeing. Hebrew, "Thou shouldst have said to the Lord, I have suffered enough: (Calmet) I will not offend." (Protestants) (Haydock) (Ver. 32.) ---...
Seeing. Hebrew, "Thou shouldst have said to the Lord, I have suffered enough: (Calmet) I will not offend." (Protestants) (Haydock) (Ver. 32.) ---
Turn. He had undertaken to plead God's cause. (Calmet)
Gill -> Job 34:31
Gill: Job 34:31 - -- Surely it is meet to be said unto God,.... By any afflicted person under his chastising hand, and particularly by Job, for whom the advice and instruc...
Surely it is meet to be said unto God,.... By any afflicted person under his chastising hand, and particularly by Job, for whom the advice and instructions in this verse and Job 34:32 are designed:
I have borne chastisement; the word "chastisement" is not in the text, but is very properly supplied, as it is by Jarchi and others; the affliction of God's people is a fatherly chastisement, and should be considered and borne as such; and it becomes an afflicted good man to say,
"I have borne and still do bear, and I am content yet to bear, the chastisement of the Lord; I am desirous to bear it willingly, cheerfully, and patiently, until he is pleased to remove it from me.''
See Mic 7:9;
I will not offend any more; that is, sin any more; sin is an offence to God, being contrary to his nature, and a breach of his law; Job had sinned as every good man does, no man is without sin, in many things we all offend; and on account of sin God chastens his people, and the design of it is to bring them to a sense and acknowledgment of it; and it becomes them under chastening providences to confess it, and humble themselves under the mighty hand of God, and in the strength of divine grace determine to be careful not to offend more. Some render the words "I will not corrupt" g; that is, myself or others, my ways and works, by sinning; and others, "I will not break", or "break through" h; the commands of God; and so the sense of this and the former version is much the same with ours; or I will not endeavour to break through the afflictive providence in which I am shut up, or break off the fetters and cords of affliction, but bear all patiently, until it is the Lord's time and will to set me at liberty. Some, as Ben Gersom, interpret this and the preceding clause, "I pardon, I will not destroy"; or "will not retain a pledge", as others i; and so take them to be the words of God himself; and thus Mr. Broughton renders the whole verse,
"now unto the Omnipotent, which saith, I pardon, I will not destroy, "this should" be said,''
namely, what follows in Job 34:32 k; it is the prerogative of God, and it is his grace to pardon, and such whom he pardons he never destroys, but accepts, discharges, and remits the surety's bond or pledge; and nothing more effectually engages to a careful abstinence from sin for the future, than a sense of pardoning grace; and it highly becomes such persons to say what they are next directed to.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Job 34:31
NET Notes: Job 34:31 The Hebrew text has only “I lift up” or “I bear” (= I endure). The reading “I have been led astray” is obtained by...
Geneva Bible -> Job 34:31
Geneva Bible: Job 34:31 Surely it is meet ( z ) to be said unto God, I have borne [chastisement], I will not offend [any more]:
( z ) It only belongs to God to moderate his ...

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 34:31-37
MHCC: Job 34:31-37 - --When we reprove for what is amiss, we must direct to what is good. Job's friends would have had him own himself a wicked man. Let will only oblige him...
Matthew Henry -> Job 34:31-37
Matthew Henry: Job 34:31-37 - -- In these verses, I. Elihu instructs Job what he should say under his affliction, Job 34:31, Job 34:32. Having reproved him for his peevish passionat...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 34:29-32
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 34:29-32 - --
29 If He, however, maketh peace, who will then condemn?
And if He hideth His countenance - who then can behold Him? -
Both concerning numbers and...
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 ...
