
Text -- Job 5:7 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 5:7 - -- He is so commonly exposed to various troubles, as if he were born to no other end: affliction is become natural to man, and is transmitted from parent...
He is so commonly exposed to various troubles, as if he were born to no other end: affliction is become natural to man, and is transmitted from parents, to children, as their constant inheritance; God having allotted this portion to mankind for their sins. And therefore thou takest a wrong course in complaining so bitterly of that which thou shouldest patiently bear, as the common lot of mankind.

Wesley: Job 5:7 - -- As naturally, and as generally, as the sparks of fire fly upward. Why then should we be surprized at our afflictions as strange, or quarrel with them,...
As naturally, and as generally, as the sparks of fire fly upward. Why then should we be surprized at our afflictions as strange, or quarrel with them, as hard?
JFB -> Job 5:7
JFB: Job 5:7 - -- Rather, "Truly," or, But affliction does not come from chance, but is the appointment of God for sin; that is, the original birth-sin of man. Eliphaz ...
Rather, "Truly," or, But affliction does not come from chance, but is the appointment of God for sin; that is, the original birth-sin of man. Eliphaz passes from the particular sin and consequent suffering of Job to the universal sin and suffering of mankind. Troubles spring from man's common sin by as necessary a law of natural consequences as sparks (Hebrew, "sons of coal") fly upward. Troubles are many and fiery, as sparks (1Pe 4:12; Isa 43:2). UMBREIT for "sparks" has "birds of prey;" literally, "sons of lightning," not so well.
Clarke: Job 5:7 - -- Yet man is born unto trouble - לעמל leamal , to labor. He must toil and be careful; and if in the course of his labor he meet with trials and d...
Yet man is born unto trouble -

Clarke: Job 5:7 - -- As the sparks By upward - ובני רשף יגביהי עוף ubeney resheph yagbihu uph ; And the sons of the coal lift up their flight, or dart ...
As the sparks By upward -
Defender -> Job 5:7
TSK -> Job 5:7
TSK: Job 5:7 - -- man : Job 14:1; Gen 3:17-19; Psa 90:8, Psa 90:9; 1Co 10:13
trouble : or, labour, Ecc 1:8, Ecc 2:22, Ecc 5:15-17
sparks fly upward : Heb. sons of the b...
man : Job 14:1; Gen 3:17-19; Psa 90:8, Psa 90:9; 1Co 10:13
trouble : or, labour, Ecc 1:8, Ecc 2:22, Ecc 5:15-17
sparks fly upward : Heb. sons of the burning coal lift up to fly

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 5:7
Barnes: Job 5:7 - -- Yet man is born unto trouble - All this is connected with the sentiment in Job 5:8 ff. The meaning is, that "since afflictions are ordered by a...
Yet man is born unto trouble - All this is connected with the sentiment in Job 5:8 ff. The meaning is, that "since afflictions are ordered by an intelligent Being, and since man is born unto trouble as the sparks fly upward, therefore it is wise to commit our cause to God, and not to complain against him."Margin, or labor. The word here (
As the sparks fly upward - The Hebrew expression here is very beautiful - "as
Poole -> Job 5:7
Poole: Job 5:7 - -- i.e. He is so commonly exposed to many and various troubles, as if he were born to no other end. Affliction is become in some sort natural and prope...
i.e. He is so commonly exposed to many and various troubles, as if he were born to no other end. Affliction is become in some sort natural and proper to man, and it is, together with sin, transmitted from parents to children, as their most certain and constant inheritance; God having allotted this portion to mankind for their sins. And therefore thou takest a wrong course in complaining so bitterly of that which thou shouldst patiently bear, as the common lot of mankind; and thy right method is to seek unto God, who inflicts it, and who only can remove it.
As the sparks fly upward i.e. as naturally and as generally as the sparks of fire fly upward , which do so universally and constantly. Heb. and the sparks , &c. But the particle and is oft used comparatively for as , as Job 12:11 14:11 34:3 Pro 25:21 Mar 9:49 .
Haydock -> Job 5:7
Haydock: Job 5:7 - -- Bird. Hebrew, "sparks fly up." (Haydock) ---
You can no more then expect to pass unpunished, since it is impossible for man to be innocent! (Calme...
Bird. Hebrew, "sparks fly up." (Haydock) ---
You can no more then expect to pass unpunished, since it is impossible for man to be innocent! (Calmet) and, at any rate, labour is inevitable. (Menochius) ---
We must gain our bread by the sweat of our brow. [Genesis iii. 19.] (Worthington)
Gill -> Job 5:7
Gill: Job 5:7 - -- Yet man is born unto trouble,.... Or but b, after the negative follows the positive part of the assertion; before we have what is denied as the cause ...
Yet man is born unto trouble,.... Or but b, after the negative follows the positive part of the assertion; before we have what is denied as the cause of affliction, here what it is affirmed to be, or what it is to be ascribed unto, even to the appointment of God for sin: to be born to it is to be appointed to it, as all men are appointed to death, and to everything previous and that leads on to it; and it signifies that affliction or trouble springs from the birth sin of man, from original sin, the sin of the first parent, and of his nature; as all sins arise from hence, and are streams from this fountain of pollution, so all disorders and diseases of body, all distresses and anguish of mind, and death in every sense, corporeal, spiritual, and eternal; and these are the lot and portion, the estate and inheritance, of the sons of men by nature, what they are born unto, and are full of, see Job 14:1; the same word is here used as in Job 5:6, and signifies labour, mischief, the mischief of sin, improbity, wickedness, moral evil; and man may be said to be born to sin, inasmuch as he is conceived, shapen, and born in it; and as he is born at once into a sinful state, and sins as soon as born, goes astray from the womb, is a transgressor from thence, and the imagination of his heart evil from his infancy and youth upwards, he becomes a slave to sin, and is a homeborn one; not that he is laid under a necessity of force to sin, or his will compelled to it; for he sins most freely, is a voluntary slave to it; he serves various lusts as pleasures, and gives himself up to work all iniquity with greediness; but there is such a connection between his birth, the circumstances of it, and sin, that sin is the certain consequence of it, and immediately, naturally, and necessarily follows upon it; that is, by a necessity of consequence, though not of coaction or force; it is as natural for man to sin as it is for a thirsty man to covet and drink water; or as for an Ethiopian to be born black, and a leopard with spots; or, as it follows:
as the sparks fly upward; which they do naturally and necessarily when coals are blown, and which are here called "the sons of coals" c; and to these, troubles and afflictions, the fruits and effects of sin, may be aptly compared; not only for the necessity of them, it is if needs be they are, but for the nature of them, being fiery and troublesome, hence called fiery trials, and signified by fires and flames of fire, 1Pe 4:12; and also for the number of them, being many, and very grievous: some interpret this of flying fowls, of young vultures, as the Septuagint; of young eagles, as others; Aben Ezra makes mention of this sense, as if it was, as a fowl is born to fly, so man is born to labour; to labour in the law, according to the Targum; or to labour for his bread; or rather, to labour and sorrow; that is, to affliction and trouble: a learned man d thinks the phrase, according to the use of it in the Arabic language, designs the more rapid cast of a dart, of the vibration of it, which is very quick.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 5:7 The LXX has the name of a bird here: “the vulture’s young seek the high places.” The Targum to Job has “sons of demons” ...
Geneva Bible -> Job 5:7
Geneva Bible: Job 5:7 Yet man is born unto ( i ) trouble, as the sparks fly upward.
( i ) Which declares that sin is always in our corrupt nature: for before sin it was no...

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'...
Maclaren -> Job 5:7-27
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
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
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 5:6-11
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 5:6-11 - --
6 For evil cometh not forth from the dust,
And sorrow sprouteth not from the earth;
7 For man is born to sorrow,
As the sparks fly upward.
8 On ...
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...
