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Text -- Job 36:20 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
36:20 Do not long for the cover of night to drag people away from their homes.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Watchfulness | Job | God | GOD, 2 | Elihu | Death | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Job 36:20 - -- The night of death, which Job had often desired, for then, thou art irrecoverably gone: take heed of thy foolish and often repeated desire of death, l...

The night of death, which Job had often desired, for then, thou art irrecoverably gone: take heed of thy foolish and often repeated desire of death, lest God inflict it upon thee in anger.

JFB: Job 36:20 - -- Pant for. Job had wished for death (Job 3:3-9, &c.).

Pant for. Job had wished for death (Job 3:3-9, &c.).

JFB: Job 36:20 - -- (Joh 9:4).

(Joh 9:4).

JFB: Job 36:20 - -- Rather, "whereby."

Rather, "whereby."

JFB: Job 36:20 - -- Literally, "ascend," as the corn cut and lifted upon the wagon or stack (Job 36:26); so "cut off," "disappear."

Literally, "ascend," as the corn cut and lifted upon the wagon or stack (Job 36:26); so "cut off," "disappear."

JFB: Job 36:20 - -- Literally, "under themselves"; so, without moving from their place, on the spot, suddenly (Job 40:12) [MAURER]. UMBREIT'S translation: "To ascend (whi...

Literally, "under themselves"; so, without moving from their place, on the spot, suddenly (Job 40:12) [MAURER]. UMBREIT'S translation: "To ascend (which is really, as thou wilt find to thy cost, to descend) to the people below" (literally, "under themselves"), answers better to the parallelism and the Hebrew. Thou pantest for death as desirable, but it is a "night" or region of darkness; thy fancied ascent (amelioration) will prove a descent (deterioration) (Job 10:22); therefore desire it not.

Clarke: Job 36:20 - -- Desire not the night - Thou hast wished for death; (here called night); desire it not; leave that with God. If he hear thee, and send death, thou ma...

Desire not the night - Thou hast wished for death; (here called night); desire it not; leave that with God. If he hear thee, and send death, thou mayest be cut off in a way at which thy soul would shudder.

TSK: Job 36:20 - -- Desire : Job 3:20, Job 3:21, Job 6:9, Job 7:15, Job 14:13, Job 17:13, Job 17:14 cut : Exo 12:29; 2Ki 19:35; Pro 14:32; Ecc 11:3; Dan 5:30; Luk 12:20; ...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Job 36:20 - -- Desire not the night - That is, evidently, "the night of death."The darkness of the night is an emblem of death, and it is not uncommon to spea...

Desire not the night - That is, evidently, "the night of death."The darkness of the night is an emblem of death, and it is not uncommon to speak of death in this manner; see Joh 9:4, "The night cometh, when no man can work."Elihu seems to have supposed that Job might have looked forward to death as to a time of release; that so far from "dreading"what he had said would come, that God would cut him off at a stroke, it might be the very thing which he desired, and which he anticipated would be an end of his sufferings. Indeed Job had more than once expressed some such sentiment, and Elihu designs to meet that state of mind, and to charge him not to look forward to death as relief. If his present state of mind continued, he says, he would perish under the "wrath"of God; and death in such a manner, great as might be his sufferings here, could not be desirable.

When people are cut off in their place - On this passage, Schultens enumerates no less than "fifteen"different interpretations which have been given, and at the end of this enumeration remarks that he "waits for clearer light to overcome the shades of this night."Rosenmullcr supposes it means,"Long not for the night, in which nations go under themselves;"that is, in which they go down to the inferior regions, or in which they perish. Noyes renders it, "To which nations are taken away to their place."Urnbroil renders it, "Pant not for the night, to go down to the people who dwell under thee;"that is, to the Shades, or to those that dwell in Sheol. Prof. Lee translates it, "Pant not for the night, for the rising of the populace from their places."Coverdale, "Prolong not thou the time, until there come a night for thee to set other people in thy stead."The Septuagint, "Do not draw out the night, that the people may come instead of them;"that is, to their assistance.

Dr. Good "Neither long thou for the night, for the vaults of the nations underneath them;"and supposes that the reference is to the "catacombs,"or mummy-pits that were employed for burial-places. These are but specimens of the interpretations which have been proposed for this passage, and it is easy to see that there is little prospect of being able to explain it in a satisfactory manner. The principal difficulty in the passage is in the word rendered "cut off,"( עלה ‛âlâh ) which means "to go up, to ascend,"and in the incongruity between that and the word rendered in their place ( תחתם tachthâm ), which literally means "under them."A literal translation of the passage is, "Do not desire the night to ascend to the people under them;"but I confess I cannot understand the passage, after all the attempts made to explain it. The trauslation given by Umbreit, seems best to agree with the connection, but I am unable to see that the Hebrew would bear this. See, however, his Note on the passage. The word עלה ‛âlâh he understands here in the sense of "going away,"or "bearing away,"and the pbrase the "people under them,"as denoting the "Shades"in the world beneath us. The whole expression then would be equivalent to a wish "to die"- with the expectation that there would be a change for the better, or a release from present sufferings. Elihu admonishes Job not to indulge such a wish, for it would be no gain for a man to die in the state of mind in which he then was.

Poole: Job 36:20 - -- Desire not the night either, 1. Properly, that in it thou mayst find some ease or rest, as men usually do. But this Job did not much desire, for he ...

Desire not the night either,

1. Properly, that in it thou mayst find some ease or rest, as men usually do. But this Job did not much desire, for he complains that his nights were as restless as his days. Or rather,

2. Metaphorically, the night of death, which is called the night both in Scripture, as Joh 9:4 , and in other writers; and which Job had oft and earnestly desired, and even thirsted after, as this verb notes. See Job 7:15 . And this seems best to agree with the foregoing counsel, Job 36:18 , beware lest he take thee away with his stroke ; for then, saith he, thou art irrecoverably lost and gone; and therefore take heed of thy foolish and oft-repeated desire of death, lest God inflict it upon thee in great anger. When ; or, by which; which words are oft understood in divers texts of Scripture. People ; even whole nations and bodies of people, which are all God’ s creatures as well as thou, and yet are not spared by him, but cut off in wrath, and many of them sent from one death to another; take heed therefore thou be not added to the number.

Are cut off Heb. are made to ascend , i.e. to vanish, or perish, or die, as this verb is oft used, as Job 18:16 Psa 102:24 .

In their place in their several places where they are; or suddenly, before they can remove out of the place where the hand and stroke of God finds them; or in the place where they are settled and surrounded with all manner of comforts, and supports, and friends, all which could not prevent their being cut off. Possibly this phrase may allude to that expression of Job’ s, Job 29:18 , I shall die in my nest .

Haydock: Job 36:20 - -- Prolong not the night, &c. Prolong not causes that are brought before thee, but dispatch, by early rising, the business of them that come up to thee...

Prolong not the night, &c. Prolong not causes that are brought before thee, but dispatch, by early rising, the business of them that come up to thee. (Challoner) ---

Septuagint, "and all the men of power do not withdraw in the night," from just punishment. Theodotion adds, "that the people may come up against them," to demand vengeance. Do strict justice both to the rich and to the poor, without pity or fear. (Haydock) ---

This text is very obscure; and the Hebrew may have different meanings, which do not, however, seem well connected with the rest. "Plant not after night, when people retire home;" (Calmet) or Protestants, "are cut off in their place." (Haydock) ---

Delay not to banish temptations, or they will increase. (St. Gregory xxvi. 38.) (Worthington)

Gill: Job 36:20 - -- Desire not the night,.... Either in a literal sense, which Job might do; not for secrecy to commit sin, as the thief, murderer, and adulterer do; Elih...

Desire not the night,.... Either in a literal sense, which Job might do; not for secrecy to commit sin, as the thief, murderer, and adulterer do; Elihu had no such suspicion of Job; nor for ease and rest, which he expected not; nor would his sores admit thereof; his nights were wearisome, and when come he wished they were gone, Job 7:2; but either for retirement, that he might muse and consider, and endeavour to search and find out the reason of God's dealing with men, in cutting off sometimes such great numbers together. Elihu suggests, that such a search was altogether vain and to no purpose; he would never be able to find out the reason of these things: or rather for shelter from the eye and hand of God; as nothing before mentioned could ward off his stroke, so neither could the night or darkness preserve from it; see Psa 139:11. Or else the words may be taken in a figurative sense; either of the night of calamity and distress, he might be tempted to desire and wish for, to come upon his enemies; or rather of the night of death, he wished for himself, as he often had done; in doing which Elihu suggests he was wrong; not considering that if God should take him away with a stroke, and he not be humbled and brought to repentance, what would be the consequence of it;

when people are cut off in their place; as sometimes they are in the night, literally taken; just in the place where they stood or lay down, without moving elsewhere, or stirring hand or foot as it were. So Amraphel, and the kings with him, as Jarchi observes, were cut off in the night, the firstborn of Egypt, the Midianites and Sennacherib's army, Gen 14:15; and so in the night of death, figuratively, the common passage of all men, as Mr. Broughton observes, who renders the words, "for people's passage to their place".

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 36:20 The meaning of this line is difficult. There are numerous suggestions for emending the text. Kissane takes the first verb in the sense of “oppre...

Geneva Bible: Job 36:20 ( o ) Desire not the night, when people are cut off in their place. ( o ) Do not be curious in seeking the cause of God's judgments, when he destroys...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Job 36:1-33 - --1 Elihu shews how God is just in his ways.16 How Job's sins hinder God's blessings.24 God's works are to be magnified.

MHCC: Job 36:15-23 - --Elihu shows that Job caused the continuance of his own trouble. He cautions him not to persist in frowardness. Even good men need to be kept to their ...

Matthew Henry: Job 36:15-23 - -- Elihu here comes more closely to Job; and, I. He tells him what God would have done for him before this if he had been duly humbled under his afflic...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 36:19-21 - -- 19 Shall thy crying place thee beyond distress, And all the efforts of strength? 20 Long not for the night to come, Which shall remove people fro...

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 36:1--37:24 - --5. Elihu's fourth speech chs. 36-37 Of all Elihu's discourses this one is the most impressive be...

Constable: Job 36:1-26 - --God's dealings with man 36:1-26 The first four verses of chapter 36 introduce this speec...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Job (Book Introduction) JOB A REAL PERSON.--It has been supposed by some that the book of Job is an allegory, not a real narrative, on account of the artificial character of ...

JFB: Job (Outline) THE HOLINESS OF JOB, HIS WEALTH, &c. (Job 1:1-5) SATAN, APPEARING BEFORE GOD, FALSELY ACCUSES JOB. (Job 1:6-12) SATAN FURTHER TEMPTS JOB. (Job 2:1-8)...

TSK: Job (Book Introduction) A large aquatic animal, perhaps the extinct dinosaur, plesiosaurus, the exact meaning is unknown. Some think this to be a crocodile but from the desc...

TSK: Job 36 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Job 36:1, Elihu shews how God is just in his ways; Job 36:16, How Job’s sins hinder God’s blessings; Job 36:24, God’s works are to ...

Poole: Job 36 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 36 God is first in all his ways; towards the wicked, Job 36:1-6 , the godly, Job 36:7-11 , the hypocrite, Job 36:12-14 , the poor, Job 36:1...

MHCC: Job (Book Introduction) This book is so called from Job, whose prosperity, afflictions, and restoration, are here recorded. He lived soon after Abraham, or perhaps before tha...

MHCC: Job 36 (Chapter Introduction) (Job 36:1-4) Elihu desires Job's attention. (Job 36:5-14) The methods in which God deals with men. (Job 36:15-23) Elihu counsels Job. (Job 36:24-33...

Matthew Henry: Job (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Job This book of Job stands by itself, is not connected with any other, and is therefore to...

Matthew Henry: Job 36 (Chapter Introduction) Elihu, having largely reproved Job for some of his unadvised speeches, which Job had nothing to say in the vindication of, here comes more generall...

Constable: Job (Book Introduction) Introduction Title This book, like many others in the Old Testament, got its name from...

Constable: Job (Outline) Outline I. Prologue chs. 1-2 A. Job's character 1:1-5 B. Job's calamitie...

Constable: Job Job Bibliography Andersen, Francis I. Job. Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries series. Leicester, Eng. and Downe...

Haydock: Job (Book Introduction) THE BOOK OF JOB. INTRODUCTION. This Book takes its name from the holy man, of whom it treats; who, according to the more probable opinion, was ...

Gill: Job (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JOB This book, in the Hebrew copies, generally goes by this name, from Job, who is however the subject, if not the writer of it. In...

Gill: Job 36 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JOB 36 This chapter, with the following, contains Elihu's fourth and last discourse, the principal view of which is to vindicate th...

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