
Text -- Job 5:2 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 5:2 - -- A man's wrath, and impatience, preys upon his spirit, and so hastens his death; and provokes God to cut him off.
A man's wrath, and impatience, preys upon his spirit, and so hastens his death; and provokes God to cut him off.

The rash and inconsiderate man, who does not weigh things impartially.

Wesley: Job 5:2 - -- I perceive thou art full of envy at wicked men, who seem to be in a happier condition than thou, and of wrath against God; and this shews thee to be a...
I perceive thou art full of envy at wicked men, who seem to be in a happier condition than thou, and of wrath against God; and this shews thee to be a foolish and weak man. For those men, notwithstanding their present prosperity, are doomed to great and certain misery. I have myself seen the proof of this.
JFB -> Job 5:2
JFB: Job 5:2 - -- Fretful and passionate complaints, such as Eliphaz charged Job with (Job 4:5; so Pro 14:30). Not, the wrath of God killeth the foolish, and His envy, ...
Clarke -> Job 5:2
Clarke: Job 5:2 - -- For wrath killeth the foolish man - Foolish, silly, and simple, are epithets given by Solomon to sinners and transgressors of all kinds. Such parall...
For wrath killeth the foolish man - Foolish, silly, and simple, are epithets given by Solomon to sinners and transgressors of all kinds. Such parallelisms have afforded a presumptive argument that Solomon was the author of this book. See the preface. The words of Eliphaz may be considered as a sort of maxim, which the wisdom and experience of ages had served to establish; viz., The wrath of God is manifested only against the wicked and impious; and if thou wert not such, God would not thus contend with thee.
TSK -> Job 5:2
TSK: Job 5:2 - -- wrath : Job 18:4; Jon 4:9
the foolish : Psa 14:1, Psa 75:4, Psa 92:6, Psa 107:17; Pro 1:22, Pro 1:23, Pro 8:5; Ecc 7:9
envy : or, indignation, Gen 30:...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 5:2
Barnes: Job 5:2 - -- For wrath killeth the foolish man - That is, the wrath of God. The word foolish here is used as synonymous with wicked, because wickedness is s...
For wrath killeth the foolish man - That is, the wrath of God. The word foolish here is used as synonymous with wicked, because wickedness is supreme folly. The general proposition here is, that the wicked are cut off, and that they are overtaken with heavy calamities in this life. In proof of this, Eliphaz appeals in the following verses to his own observation: The implied inference is, that Job, having had all his possessions taken away, and having been overwhelmed with unspeakably great personal calamities, was to be regarded as having been a great sinner. Some suppose, however, that the word "wrath"here relates to the indignation or the repining of the individual himself, and that the reference is to the fact that such wrath or repining preys upon the spirit, and draws down the divine vengeance. This is the view of Schultens, and of Noyes. But it seems more probable that Eliphaz means to state the proposition, that the wrath of God burns against the wicked, and that the following verses are an illustration of this sentiment, derived from his own observation.
And envy - Margin, "indignation."Jerome, invidia, envy. Septuagint
Slayeth the silly one - Good and Noyes render this, "the weak man."Jerome, parvulum, the little one. The Septuagint,
Poole -> Job 5:2
Poole: Job 5:2 - -- Either,
1. The wrath of God; or rather,
2. A man’ s own wrath, fretting, and impatience, and indignation; which kills men, partly, naturally,...
Either,
1. The wrath of God; or rather,
2. A man’ s own wrath, fretting, and impatience, and indignation; which kills men, partly, naturally, as it preys upon a man’ s spirit, and wasteth him inwardly, and so hastens his death, of which see Pro 14:30 17:22 ; partly, morally, as it prompts him to those rash, and furious, and wicked actions which may procure his death; and partly, meritoriously, as it provoketh God to cut him off, and to bring upon him those further and severe strokes which he mentions in the following words.
The foolish man either,
1. The rash and inconsiderate man, who doth not ponder things impartially; but, like a man mad, rageth against God, and torments himself and all that hear him. Or,
2. The ungodly man, who is frequently called a fool in Scripture language, and who is here opposed to the saints, Job 5:1 .
Envy: he taxeth Job, who spoke with great envy at those that were never born, or were in their graves, Job 3:10,12 , &c.
The silly one properly, the man who, for want of true wisdom, is soon deceived with false opinions, and appearances, and present things; which is thy case, O Job. The sense of the verse may be this, I perceive, O Job, that thou art full of envy at wicked men, who at present are, or seem to be, in a happier condition than thou; and of wrath against God, who denies thee that mercy, and loads thee with afflictions; and this shows thee to be a foolish and weak man. For those men, notwithstanding their present prosperity, are doomed to great and certain misery, as it here follows. And so this verse coheres with the following as well as the foregoing verses.
Haydock -> Job 5:2
Haydock: Job 5:2 - -- Foolish and....little, here denote the wicked, as in the book of Proverbs. (Calmet) ---
He accuses Job of anger (Menochius) and folly. (Calmet)
Foolish and....little, here denote the wicked, as in the book of Proverbs. (Calmet) ---
He accuses Job of anger (Menochius) and folly. (Calmet)
Gill -> Job 5:2
Gill: Job 5:2 - -- For wrath killeth the foolish man,.... Not one that is an idiot, and destitute of common sense, and has no understanding in things natural and civil; ...
For wrath killeth the foolish man,.... Not one that is an idiot, and destitute of common sense, and has no understanding in things natural and civil; but a wicked man, who has no knowledge of things divine and spiritual, and so foolish; which is the character of every natural man, and of God's people before conversion; and even of some professors, who are foolish virgins, and carry the lamp of a religious profession without the oil of grace; and such an one Eliphaz took Job to be, whom sooner or later the wrath of the Lord, as the Targum interprets it, which is revealed from heaven, and comes down upon the children of disobedience, would consume like devouring fire: or this may be understood of the wrath and passion of such men themselves, which sometimes rises in them to such an height, as that they die in a fit of it; or do those things which bring them to death, either by the hand of God, or by the civil magistrate:
and envy slayeth the silly one; one that is simple and void of understanding, and is easily persuaded and drawn into sin, either by his own heart, or by evil men, or by the temptations of Satan; and in whose heart envy at the prosperity of others dwells, and which insensibly preys upon him, eats up his own spirits, and is rottenness to his bones, and crumbles them into dust, Pro 14:30; or the word may be rendered "jealousy", or "zeal" q, as it sometimes is, and may signify the jealousy of the Lord, zeal for his own glory, which he sometimes stirs up as a man of war, and which smokes against wicked men, and consumes them as fire, see Isa 42:13; Eliphaz by all this would represent and insinuate that Job was such a man, hot, passionate, and angry with God and his providence, and envious at the prosperity of others, particularly his friends; and so was a foolish and silly man, in whose breast wrath and envy rested, and would be his ruin and destruction, as he was already under slaying and killing providences.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 5:2 The two parallel nouns are similar; their related verbs are also paralleled in Deut 32:16 with the idea of “vex” and “irritate.̶...
Geneva Bible -> Job 5:2
Geneva Bible: Job 5:2 For ( b ) wrath killeth the foolish man, and envy slayeth the silly one.
( b ) Murmuring against God in afflictions increases the pain, and uttered m...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 5:1-27
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'...
MHCC -> Job 5:1-5
MHCC: Job 5:1-5 - --Eliphaz here calls upon Job to answer his arguments. Were any of the saints or servants of God visited with such Divine judgments as Job, or did they ...
Matthew Henry -> Job 5:1-5
Matthew Henry: Job 5:1-5 - -- A very warm dispute being begun between Job and his friends, Eliphaz here makes a fair motion to put the matter to a reference. In all debates perha...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 5:1-5
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 5:1-5 - --
1 Call now, - is there any one who will answer thee?
And to whom of the holy ones wilt thou turn?
2 For he is a fool who is destroyed by complaini...
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...
