
Text -- Job 7:15 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Job 7:15
JFB: Job 7:15 - -- Dead by my own hands." He softens this idea of Job's harboring the thought of suicide, by representing it as entertained only in agonizing dreams, and...
Dead by my own hands." He softens this idea of Job's harboring the thought of suicide, by representing it as entertained only in agonizing dreams, and immediately repudiated with horror in Job 7:16, "Yet that (self-strangling) I loathe." This is forcible and graphic. Perhaps the meaning is simply, "My soul chooses (even) strangling (or any violent death) rather than my life," literally, "my bones" (Psa 35:10); that is, rather than the wasted and diseased skeleton, left to him. In this view, "I loathe it" (Job 7:16) refers to his life.
Clarke -> Job 7:15
Clarke: Job 7:15 - -- Chooseth strangling - It is very likely that he felt, in those interrupted and dismal slumbers, an oppression and difficulty of breathing something ...
Chooseth strangling - It is very likely that he felt, in those interrupted and dismal slumbers, an oppression and difficulty of breathing something like the incubus or nightmare; and, distressing as this was, he would prefer death by this means to any longer life in such miseries.
TSK -> Job 7:15

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 7:15
Barnes: Job 7:15 - -- So that my soul - So that I; the soul being put for himself. Chooseth strangling - Dr. Good renders it "suffocation,"and supposes that Jo...
So that my soul - So that I; the soul being put for himself.
Chooseth strangling - Dr. Good renders it "suffocation,"and supposes that Job alludes to the oppression of breathing, produced by what is commonly called the night-mare, and that he means that he would prefer the sense of suffocation excited at such a time to the terrible images before his mind. Herder renders it, death. Jerome, suspendium . The Septuagint, "Thou separatest (
And death rather than my life - Margin, as in Hebrew, bones. There has been great variety in the exposition of this part of the verse. Herder renders it, "death rather than this frail body."Rosenmuller and Noyes, "death rather than my bones;"that is, he preferred death to such an emaciated body as he then had, to the wasted skeleton which was then all that he had left to him. This is probably the true sense. Job was a sufferer in body and in soul. His flesh was wasting away, his body was covered with ulcers, and his mind was harassed with apprehensions. By day he had no peace, and at night he was terrified by alarming visions and spectres; and he preferred death in any form to such a condition.
Poole -> Job 7:15
Poole: Job 7:15 - -- Chooseth not simply and in itself, but comparatively, rather than such a wretched life.
Strangling the most violent, so it be but a certain and sud...
Chooseth not simply and in itself, but comparatively, rather than such a wretched life.
Strangling the most violent, so it be but a certain and sudden death.
Rather than my life Heb. than my bones , i.e. than my body, formerly the soul’ s dear and desired companion; or than to be in the body, which commonly consists of skin, and flesh, and bones, but in Job was in a manner nothing but a bundle of boiles; for his skin was every where broken, and his flesh was quite consumed, as he oft complains, and his bones also were not free from pain and torment; for as Satan’ s commission reached to Job’ s bones , Job 2:5 , so doubtless his malice and wicked design would engage him to execute it to the utmost.
Haydock -> Job 7:15
Haydock: Job 7:15 - -- Hanging. Protestants, "strangling and death, rather than my life," or Marginal note, "bones." (Haydock) ---
Any species of Death would be preferab...
Hanging. Protestants, "strangling and death, rather than my life," or Marginal note, "bones." (Haydock) ---
Any species of Death would be preferable to this misery. (Calmet) ---
Who would not entertain the same sentiments, if the fear of worse in the other world did not withhold him? But Job had reason to hope that his sorrows would end with his life. (Haydock) ---
It is thought that he was dreadfully tempted to despair. (Calmet) ---
Yet he resisted manfully, and overcame all attempts of the wicked one.
Gill -> Job 7:15
Gill: Job 7:15 - -- So that my soul chooseth strangling,.... Not to strangle himself, as Ahithophel did, or to be strangled by others, this being a kind of death inflicte...
So that my soul chooseth strangling,.... Not to strangle himself, as Ahithophel did, or to be strangled by others, this being a kind of death inflicted on capital offenders; but rather, as Mr. Broughton renders it, "to be choked to death" by any distemper and disease, as some are of a suffocating nature, as a catarrh, quinsy, &c. and kill in that way; and indeed death in whatsoever way is the stopping of a man's breath; and it was death that Job chose, let it be in what way it would, whether natural or violent; so weary was he of life through his sore and heavy afflictions:
and death rather than my life; or, "than my bones" i; which are the more solid parts of the body, and the support of it, and are put for the whole and the life thereof; or than these bones of his, which were full of strong pain, and which had nothing but skin upon them, and that was broken and covered with worms, rottenness, and dust; the Vulgate Latin version renders it, "and my bones death"; that is, desired and chose death, being so full of pain, see Psa 35:10.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 7:1-21
TSK Synopsis: Job 7:1-21 - --1 Job excuses his desire of death.12 He complains of his own restlessness, and expostulates with God.
MHCC -> Job 7:7-16
MHCC: Job 7:7-16 - --Plain truths as to the shortness and vanity of man's life, and the certainty of death, do us good, when we think and speak of them with application to...
Matthew Henry -> Job 7:7-16
Matthew Henry: Job 7:7-16 - -- Job, observing perhaps that his friends, though they would not interrupt him in his discourse, yet began to grow weary, and not to heed much what he...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 7:12-16
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 7:12-16 - --
12 Am I a sea or a sea-monster,
That thou settest a watch over me?
13 For I said, My bed shall comfort me;
My couch shall help me to bear my comp...
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...
