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Text -- Job 5:4 (NET)

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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 5:4 - -- Whose greatness he designed in all his enterprizes, supposing his family would be established for ever.
Whose greatness he designed in all his enterprizes, supposing his family would be established for ever.

Wesley: Job 5:4 - -- Are exposed to dangers and calamities, and can neither preserve themselves, nor the inheritance which their fathers left them. There is no question bu...
Are exposed to dangers and calamities, and can neither preserve themselves, nor the inheritance which their fathers left them. There is no question but he glances here, at the death of Job's children.
JFB -> Job 5:4
JFB: Job 5:4 - -- A judicial formula. The gate was the place of judgment and of other public proceedings (Psa 127:5; Pro 22:22; Gen 23:10; Deu 21:19). Such propylæa ha...
Clarke: Job 5:4 - -- His children are far from safety - His posterity shall not continue in prosperity. Ill gotten, ill spent; whatever is got by wrong must have GodR...
His children are far from safety - His posterity shall not continue in prosperity. Ill gotten, ill spent; whatever is got by wrong must have God’ s curse on it

Clarke: Job 5:4 - -- They are crushed in the gate - The Targum says, They shall be bruised in the gate of hell, in the day of the great judgment. There is reference here...
They are crushed in the gate - The Targum says, They shall be bruised in the gate of hell, in the day of the great judgment. There is reference here to a custom which I have often had occasion to notice: viz., that in the Eastern countries the court-house, or tribunal of justice, was at the Gate of the city; here the magistrates attended, and hither the plaintiff and defendant came for justice.
TSK -> Job 5:4
TSK: Job 5:4 - -- children : Job 4:10, Job 4:11, Job 8:4, Job 18:16-19, Job 27:14; Exo 20:5; Psa 109:9-15, Psa 119:155, Psa 127:5
they are crushed : Job 1:19; Luk 13:4,...
children : Job 4:10, Job 4:11, Job 8:4, Job 18:16-19, Job 27:14; Exo 20:5; Psa 109:9-15, Psa 119:155, Psa 127:5

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 5:4
Barnes: Job 5:4 - -- His children are far from safety - That is, this is soon manifest by their being cut off or subjected to calamity. The object of Eliphaz is, to...
His children are far from safety - That is, this is soon manifest by their being cut off or subjected to calamity. The object of Eliphaz is, to state the result of his own observation, and to show how calamity overtook the wicked though they even prospered for a time. He begins with that which a man would feel most - the calamity which comes upon his children, and says that God would punish him in them. Every word of this would go to the heart of Job; for he could not but feel that it was aimed at him, and that the design was to prove that the calamities that had come upon his children were a proof of his own wickedness and of the divine displeasure. It is remarkable that Job listens to this with the utmost patience. There is no interruption of the speaker; no breaking in upon the argument of his friend; no mark of uneasiness. Oriental politeness required that a speaker should be heard attentively through whatever he might say. See the Introduction, Section 7. Cutting and severe, therefore, as this strain of remark must have been, the sufferer sat meekly and heard it all, and waited for the appropriate time when an answer might be returned.
And they are crushed in the gate - The gate of a city in ancient times was the chief place of concourse, and was the place where public business was usually transacted, and where courts of justice were held; see Gen 23:10; Deu 21:19; Deu 25:6-7; Rth 4:1 ff: Psa 127:5; Pro 22:22. The Greeks also held their courts in some public place of business. Hence, the forum,
Poole -> Job 5:4
Poole: Job 5:4 - -- His children whose greatness and happiness he designed in all his enterprises, supposing that his family was and would be established for ever.
Are ...
His children whose greatness and happiness he designed in all his enterprises, supposing that his family was and would be established for ever.
Are far from safety i.e. are exposed to great dangers and calamities in this life, and can neither preserve themselves, nor the great inheritance which their fathers got and left for them. Thus to be far from peace, Lam 3:17 , is to be involved in desperate troubles.
In the gate i.e. in the place of judicature; to which they are brought for their offences, and where they will find severe judges, and few or no friends; partly because, being wickedly educated, and trusting to their own greatness, they were insolent and injurious to all their neighbours; and partly because those many persons whom their powerful fathers defrauded or oppressed do seek for justice, and the recovery of their rights, which they easily obtain against such persons as plainly declared by their actions that they neither feared God nor reverenced him, and therefore were hated by all sorts of men.
Neither is there any to deliver them they can find no advocates nor assistants, who are either able or willing to help them; but, like Ishmael, as their hand was formerly against every man , so now every man’ s hand is against them .
Haydock -> Job 5:4
Gate, in judgment. (Menochius)
Gill -> Job 5:4
Gill: Job 5:4 - -- His children are far from safety,.... From outward safety, from evils and dangers, to which they are liable and exposed, not only from men, who hate t...
His children are far from safety,.... From outward safety, from evils and dangers, to which they are liable and exposed, not only from men, who hate them for their father's sake, who have been oppressors of them, or from God, who visits the iniquity of the fathers upon the children; and from spiritual and eternal safety or "salvation", or from salvation in the world to come, as the Targum, they treading in their fathers steps, and imitating their actions:
and they are crushed in the gate; or openly, publicly, as Aben Ezra and others; or in the courts of judicature whither they are brought by those their parents had oppressed, and where they are cast, and have no favour shown them; or literally by the falling of the gate upon them; and perhaps some reference is had to Job's children being crushed in the gate or door of the house, through which they endeavoured to get when it fell upon them and destroyed them; the Targum is,"and are crushed in the gates of hell, in the day of the great judgment:"
neither is there any to deliver them; neither God nor man, they having no interest in either, or favour with, partly on account of their father's ill behaviour, and partly on account of their own; and sad is the case of men when it is such, see Psa 50:21.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 5:4 The text simply says “and there is no deliverer.” The entire clause could be subordinated to the preceding clause, and rendered simply ...
Geneva Bible -> Job 5:4
Geneva Bible: Job 5:4 His ( e ) children are far from safety, and they are crushed in the ( f ) gate, neither [is there] any to deliver [them].
( e ) Though God sometimes ...

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...




