
Text -- Job 6:9 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Job 6:9
To end my days and calamities together.
Literally, "grind" or "crush" (Isa 3:15).

JFB: Job 6:9 - -- God had put forth His hand only so far as to wound the surface of Job's flesh (Job 1:12; Job 2:6); he wishes that hand to be let loose, so as to wound...
Clarke -> Job 6:9
Clarke: Job 6:9 - -- Let loose his hand - A metaphor taken from an archer drawing his arrow to the head, and then loosing his hold, that the arrow may fly to the mark. S...
Let loose his hand - A metaphor taken from an archer drawing his arrow to the head, and then loosing his hold, that the arrow may fly to the mark. See on Job 6:4 (note).
Defender -> Job 6:9
Defender: Job 6:9 - -- Several times Job expressed his desire to die, but he never considers suicide, recognizing that only God, who gave life, had the right to decide when ...
Several times Job expressed his desire to die, but he never considers suicide, recognizing that only God, who gave life, had the right to decide when it should be ended."
TSK -> Job 6:9
TSK: Job 6:9 - -- that it would : Job 3:20-22, Job 7:15, Job 7:16, Job 14:13; Num 11:14, Num 11:15; 1Ki 19:4; Jon 4:3, Jon 4:8; Rev 9:6
that he would : Job 19:21; Psa 3...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 6:9
Barnes: Job 6:9 - -- Even that it would please God to destroy me - To put me to death, and to release me from my sorrows; compare Job 3:20-21. The word rendered "de...
Even that it would please God to destroy me - To put me to death, and to release me from my sorrows; compare Job 3:20-21. The word rendered "destroy"here (
That he would let loose his hand - Job here represents the hand of God as bound or confined. He wishes that that fettered hand were released, and were so free in its inflictions that he might be permitted to die.
And cut me off - This expression, says Gesenius (Lexicon on the word
Poole -> Job 6:9
Poole: Job 6:9 - -- To destroy me to end my days and calamities together. That he would let loose his hand ; which is now as it were bound up or restrained from giving ...
To destroy me to end my days and calamities together. That he would let loose his hand ; which is now as it were bound up or restrained from giving me that deadly blow which I desire. Oh that he would restrain himself and his hand no longer, but let it fall upon me with all its might, so as to
cut me off as it follows.
Haydock -> Job 6:9
Haydock: Job 6:9 - -- Off, and release me from this state of misery and danger. (Haydock) ---
He is ready to die cheerfully, if it be God's will. (Calmet) ---
Septuagi...
Off, and release me from this state of misery and danger. (Haydock) ---
He is ready to die cheerfully, if it be God's will. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "May the Lord, who has begun, wound me, but not take me away finally. Yea, let my city, over which I have exulted, be my grave. I will not spare, for I have not belied a word of my holy God." (Haydock)
Gill -> Job 6:9
Gill: Job 6:9 - -- Even that it would please God to destroy me,.... Not with an everlasting destruction of body and soul; for destruction from the Almighty was a terror ...
Even that it would please God to destroy me,.... Not with an everlasting destruction of body and soul; for destruction from the Almighty was a terror to him, Job 31:23; but with the destruction of the body only; not with an annihilation of it, but with the dissolution of it, or of that union there was between his soul and body: the word n used signifies to bruise and beat to pieces; his meaning is, that his body, his house of clay in which he dwelt, might be crushed to pieces, and beat to powder, and crumbled into dust; and perhaps he may have regard to his original, the dust of the earth, and his return to it, according to the divine threatening, Gen 3:19; a phrase expressive of death; and so Mr. Broughton renders it, "to bring me to the dust", to "the dust of death", Psa 22:15,
that he would let loose his hand, and cut me off! he had let loose his hand in some degree already; he had given his substance and his body into the hand of Satan; his own hand had touched him, but he had only gone skin deep, as it were; he had smote him in his estate, in his family, and in the outward parts of his body; but now he desires that he would stretch out his hand further, and lift it up, and give a heavier stroke, and pierce him more deeply; strike through his heart and liver, and "make an end" of him, as Mr. Broughton translates the word, and dispatch him at once; cut him off like the flower of the field by the scythe, or like a tree cut down to its root by the axe, or cut off the thread of his life, Isa 38:12.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 6:1-30
TSK Synopsis: Job 6:1-30 - --1 Job shews that his complaints are not causeless.8 He wishes for death, wherein he is assured of comfort.14 He reproves his friends of unkindness.
MHCC -> Job 6:8-13
MHCC: Job 6:8-13 - --Job had desired death as the happy end of his miseries. For this, Eliphaz had reproved him, but he asks for it again with more vehemence than before. ...
Matthew Henry -> Job 6:8-13
Matthew Henry: Job 6:8-13 - -- Ungoverned passion often grows more violent when it meets with some rebuke and check. The troubled sea rages most when it dashes against a rock. Job...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 6:8-10
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 6:8-10 - --
8 Would that my request were fulfilled,
And that Eloah would grant my expectation,
9 That Eloah were willing and would crush me,
Let loose His ha...
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 6:1--7:21 - --2. Job's first reply to Eliphaz chs. 6-7
Job began not with a direct reply to Eliphaz but with a...
