
Text -- Job 40:4 (NET)




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JFB: Job 40:4 - -- I am (too) vile (to reply). It is a very different thing to vindicate ourselves before God, from what it is before men. Job could do the latter, not t...
I am (too) vile (to reply). It is a very different thing to vindicate ourselves before God, from what it is before men. Job could do the latter, not the former.
Behold, I am vile - I acknowledge my inward defilement. I cannot answer thee

Clarke: Job 40:4 - -- I will lay mine hand upon my mouth - I cannot excuse myself, and I must be dumb before thee.
I will lay mine hand upon my mouth - I cannot excuse myself, and I must be dumb before thee.
TSK -> Job 40:4
TSK: Job 40:4 - -- Behold : Job 42:6; Gen 18:27, Gen 32:10; 2Sa 24:10; 1Ki 19:4; Ezr 9:6, Ezr 9:15; Neh 9:33; Psa 51:4, Psa 51:5; Isa 6:5, Isa 53:6, Isa 64:6; Dan 9:5, D...
Behold : Job 42:6; Gen 18:27, Gen 32:10; 2Sa 24:10; 1Ki 19:4; Ezr 9:6, Ezr 9:15; Neh 9:33; Psa 51:4, Psa 51:5; Isa 6:5, Isa 53:6, Isa 64:6; Dan 9:5, Dan 9:7; Luk 5:8, Luk 15:18, Luk 15:19, Luk 18:13; 1Ti 1:15
what : Job 9:31-35, Job 16:21, Job 23:4-7, Job 31:37
I will : Job 21:5, Job 29:9; Jdg 18:19; Psa 39:9; Pro 30:32; Mic 7:16; Hab 2:20; Zec 2:13

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 40:4
Barnes: Job 40:4 - -- Behold, I am vile: what shall I answer thee? - " Instead of being able to argue my cause, and to vindicate myself as I had expected, I now see t...
Behold, I am vile: what shall I answer thee? - " Instead of being able to argue my cause, and to vindicate myself as I had expected, I now see that I am guilty, and I have nothing to say."He had argued boldly with his friends. He had, before them, maintained his innocence of the charges which they brought against him, and had supposed that he would be able to maintain the same argument before God. But when the opportunity was given, he felt that he was a poor, weak man; a guilty and miserable offender. It is a very different thing to maintain our cause before God, from what it is to maintain it before people; and though we may attempt to vindicate our own righteousness when we argue with our fellow-creatures, yet when we come to maintain it before God we shall be dumb. On earth, people vindicate themselves; what will they do when they come to stand before God in the judgment?
I will lay mine hand upon my mouth - An expression of silence. Catlin, in his account of the Mandan Indians, says that this is a common custom with them when anything wonderful occurs. Some of them laid their hands on their mouths and remained in this posture by the hour, as an expression of astonishment at the wonders produced by the brush in the art of painting; compare Job 21:5, note; Job 29:9, note.
Poole -> Job 40:4
Poole: Job 40:4 - -- I am vile what am I, a mean and contemptible creature that should presume to contend with my Maker and Judge? I confess my fault and folly.
What sha...
I am vile what am I, a mean and contemptible creature that should presume to contend with my Maker and Judge? I confess my fault and folly.
What shall I answer thee? I neither desire nor am able to dispute with thee. I will for the future bridle my tongue, and instead of contesting with thee, do here humbly and willingly submit myself to thee.
Gill -> Job 40:4
Gill: Job 40:4 - -- Behold, I am vile,.... Or "light" a; which may have respect either to his words and arguments, which he thought had force in them, but now he saw they...
Behold, I am vile,.... Or "light" a; which may have respect either to his words and arguments, which he thought had force in them, but now he saw they had none; or to his works and actions, the integrity of his life, and the uprightness of his ways, which he imagined were weighty and of great importance, but now being weighed in the balances of justice were found wanting; or it may refer to his original meanness and distance from God, being dust and ashes, and nothing in comparison of him; and so the Septuagint version is, "I am nothing"; see Isa 40:17; or rather to the original vileness and sinfulness of his nature he had now a sight of, and saw how he had been breaking forth in unbecoming expressions concerning God and his providence: the nature of man is exceeding vile and sinful; his heart desperately wicked; his thoughts, and the imaginations of them, evil, and that continually; his mind and conscience are defiled; his affections inordinate, and his understanding and will sadly depraved; he is vile in soul and body; of all which an enlightened man is convinced, and will acknowledge;
what shall I answer thee? I am not able to answer thee, who am but dust and ashes; what more can I say than to acknowledge my levity, vanity, and vileness? he that talked so big, and in such a blustering manner of answering God, as in Job 13:22; now has nothing to say for himself;
I will lay mine hand upon my mouth; impose silence upon himself, and as it were lay a restraint upon himself from speaking: it looks as if there were some workings in Job's heart; he thought he could say something, and make some reply, but durst not, for fear of offending yet more and more, and therefore curbed it in; see Psa 39:1.

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