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Text -- Job 5:14 (NET)

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Context
5:14 They meet with darkness in the daytime, and grope about in the noontime as if it were night.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Wicked | Righteous | Presumption | Philosophy | Job | God | Faith | Eliphaz | DARK; DARKNESS | Afflictions and Adversities | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

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

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Job 5:14 - -- In plain things they run into gross mistakes, and chuse those courses which are worst for themselves. Darkness often notes misery, but here ignorance ...

In plain things they run into gross mistakes, and chuse those courses which are worst for themselves. Darkness often notes misery, but here ignorance or error.

Wesley: Job 5:14 - -- Like blind men to find their way, not knowing what to do.

Like blind men to find their way, not knowing what to do.

JFB: Job 5:14 - -- Judicial blindness often is sent upon keen men of the world (Deu 28:29; Isa 59:10; Joh 9:39).

Judicial blindness often is sent upon keen men of the world (Deu 28:29; Isa 59:10; Joh 9:39).

Clarke: Job 5:14 - -- They meet with darkness in the daytime - God confounds them and their measures; and, with all their cunning and dexterity, they are outwitted, and o...

They meet with darkness in the daytime - God confounds them and their measures; and, with all their cunning and dexterity, they are outwitted, and often act on their own projects, planned with care and skill, as if they had been the crudest conceptions of the most disordered minds. They act in noonday as if the sun were extinct, and their eyes put out. Thus does God "abate their pride, assuage their malice, and confound their devices."

TSK: Job 5:14 - -- meet with : or, run into darkness : Job 12:25; Deu 28:29; Pro 4:19; Isa 59:10; Amo 8:9

meet with : or, run into

darkness : Job 12:25; Deu 28:29; Pro 4:19; Isa 59:10; Amo 8:9

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Job 5:14 - -- They meet with darkness in the day-time - Margin, "run into;"compare the notes at Isa 59:10. The sense is, that where there is really no obstac...

They meet with darkness in the day-time - Margin, "run into;"compare the notes at Isa 59:10. The sense is, that where there is really no obstacle to the accomplishment of an honest plan - any more than there is for a man to walk in the day-time - they become perplexed and embarrassed, as much as a man would be, should sudden darkness come around him at mid-day. The same sentiment occurs in Job 12:25. A life of honesty and uprightness will be attended with prosperity, but a man who attempts to carry his plans by trick and art, will meet with unexpected embarrassments. The sentiment in all these expressions is, that God embarrasses the cunning, the crafty, and the artful, but gives success to those who are upright; and that, therefore, he is worthy of confidence.

Poole: Job 5:14 - -- i.e. In plain things they run into gross mistakes and errors, and commonly choose those counsels and courses which are worst for themselves. Darkne...

i.e. In plain things they run into gross mistakes and errors, and commonly choose those counsels and courses which are worst for themselves.

Darkness oft notes misery, but here ignorance or error, as it is also used Job 12:25 37:19 , and elsewhere.

Grope like blind men to find their way, not knowing what to do.

Gill: Job 5:14 - -- They meet with darkness in the daytime,.... Which may denote their infatuation in things the most plain and clear, and which are obvious to everyone's...

They meet with darkness in the daytime,.... Which may denote their infatuation in things the most plain and clear, and which are obvious to everyone's view, even to such as are of much meaner capacities the themselves; and so it sometimes is, that the greatest politicians, men of the greatest sagacity and penetration, capable of forming and conducting the wisest counsels, yet blunder in things plain and easy to everyone; which must be imputed to their being given up to a judicial blindness of mind by the Lord, who destroys the wisdom of the wise, and brings to nothing the understanding of the prudent; or this may signify the defeat of their counsels, when they are in the highest pitch of esteem among men, as Ahithophel's counsel was as the oracle of God; or the destruction of such persons and their schemes when they are in the meridian of their glory, who being in high and slippery places, come to desolation in a moment:

and grope in the noon day as in the night; which intends the same as before; this was threatened to the Jews in case of disobedience, and was fulfilled in them, Deu 28:29; a learned man renders it, "as the night they grope", or "feel, at noon day" t; as the Egyptians felt darkness when it was noon, and when light was in all the dwellings of the Israelites, Exo 10:22; this may be applied to the case of many in a land of Gospel light, who are in darkness, walk in darkness, and are darkness itself; though the light of the glorious Gospel shines all around them on others, and know no more of divine and spiritual things than the Gentiles, but grope or feel about like persons blind, and in the dark as much as they, Act 17:27; nay, they not only have the great things of the Gospel hid from them, and Satan blinds their minds lest this light should shine into them, but "they run into darkness" u, as the words of the first clause may be rendered; those "lucifugae", such as the Jews were, and the Deists now are run from the light of divine revelation, and love darkness, and which is the aggravation of their condemnation, Joh 3:19.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 5:14 The verse provides a picture of the frustration and bewilderment in the crafty who cannot accomplish their ends because God thwarts them.

Geneva Bible: Job 5:14 They meet with ( n ) darkness in the daytime, and ( o ) grope in the noonday as in the night. ( n ) In things plain and evident they show themselves ...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Job 5:1-27 - --1 Eliphaz shews that the end of the wicked is misery;6 that man is born to trouble;8 that God is to be regarded in affliction;17 the happy end of God'...

Maclaren: Job 5:7-27 - --The Peaceable Fruits Of Sorrows Rightly Borne Behold, happy is the man whom God correcteth: therefore despise not then the chastening of the Almighty...

MHCC: Job 5:6-16 - --Eliphaz reminds Job, that no affliction comes by chance, nor is to be placed to second causes. The difference between prosperity and adversity is not ...

Matthew Henry: Job 5:6-16 - -- Eliphaz, having touched Job in a very tender part, in mentioning both the loss of his estate and the death of his children as the just punishment of...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 5:12-16 - -- 12 Who bringeth to nought the devices of the crafty, So that their hands cannot accomplish anything; 13 Who catcheth the wise in their craftiness;...

Constable: Job 4:1--14:22 - --B. The First Cycle of Speeches between Job and His Three Friends chs. 4-14 The two soliloquies of Job (c...

Constable: Job 4:1--5:27 - --1. Eliphaz's first speech chs. 4-5 Eliphaz's first speech has a symmetrical introverted (chiasti...

Constable: Job 5:1-16 - --Eliphaz's counsel to Job 5:1-16 Job's friend did not deny that the wicked fool (cf. Ps. ...

Guzik: Job 5:1-27 - --Job 4 and 5 - The First Speech of Eliphaz 4. (5:1-7) The fate of the foolish man. "Call out now; Is there anyone who will answer you? And ...

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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 5 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Job 5:1, Eliphaz shews that the end of the wicked is misery; Job 5:6, that man is born to trouble; Job 5:8, that God is to be regarded in...

Poole: Job 5 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 5 Wrath foolish: the wicked miserable, Job 5:1-5 . Evil cometh not by chance; it is natural to our condition, Job 5:6,7 . This is our motiv...

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 5 (Chapter Introduction) (Job 5:1-5) Eliphaz urges that the sin of sinners in their ruin. (Job 5:6-16) God is to be regarded in affliction. (Job 5:17-27) The happy end of Go...

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 5 (Chapter Introduction) Eliphaz, in the foregoing chapter, for the making good of his charge against Job, had vouched a word from heaven, sent him in a vision. In this cha...

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 5 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JOB 5 In this chapter Eliphaz goes on to prove, and further confirm and establish, what he had before asserted, that not good men, ...

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