
Text -- Job 7:4 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Job 7:4
JFB: Job 7:4 - -- Literally, "When shall be the flight of the night?" [GESENIUS]. UMBREIT, not so well, "The night is long extended"; literally, "measured out" (so Marg...
Literally, "When shall be the flight of the night?" [GESENIUS]. UMBREIT, not so well, "The night is long extended"; literally, "measured out" (so Margin).
Clarke -> Job 7:4
Clarke: Job 7:4 - -- When I lie down - I have so little rest, that when I do lie down I long for the return of the light, that I may rise. Nothing can better depict the ...
When I lie down - I have so little rest, that when I do lie down I long for the return of the light, that I may rise. Nothing can better depict the state of a man under continual afflictions, which afford him no respite, his days and his nights being spent in constant anguish, utterly unable to be in any one posture, so that he is continually changing his position in his bed, finding ease nowhere: thus, as himself expresses it, he is full of tossings.
TSK -> Job 7:4
TSK: Job 7:4 - -- When : Job 7:13, Job 7:14, Job 17:12, Job 30:17; Deu 28:67; Psa 6:6, Psa 77:4, Psa 130:6
night : etc. Heb. evening be measured
tossings : Psa 109:23; ...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 7:4
Barnes: Job 7:4 - -- When I lie down - I find no comfort and no rest on my bed. My nights are long, and I am impatient to have them passed, and equally so is it wit...
When I lie down - I find no comfort and no rest on my bed. My nights are long, and I am impatient to have them passed, and equally so is it with the day. This is a description which all can understand who have been laid on a bed of pain.
And the night be gone - Margin, evening be measured. Herder renders this, "the night is irksome to me."The word rendered night (
I am full of tossings to and fro - (
Unto the dawning -
Poole -> Job 7:4
Poole: Job 7:4 - -- When I lie down to get some rest and sleep. The night , Heb. the evening ; the part put for the whole, as it is Gen 1:5 .
To and fro from side to...
When I lie down to get some rest and sleep. The night , Heb. the evening ; the part put for the whole, as it is Gen 1:5 .
To and fro from side to side in the bed, as men in grievous pains of body or anxiety of mind use to be.
Unto the dawning of the day so this Hebrew word is used also 1Sa 30:17 ; Psa 119:147.
Haydock -> Job 7:4
Haydock: Job 7:4 - -- And again. Hebrew, "and the night be completed, I toss to and fro," (Haydock) or "I am disturbed with dreams, (Calmet) till day break." Vulgate ins...
And again. Hebrew, "and the night be completed, I toss to and fro," (Haydock) or "I am disturbed with dreams, (Calmet) till day break." Vulgate insinuates that night and day are equally restless to a man in extreme pain. (Haydock) ---
As I find no comfort, why may I not desire to die? (Menochius) ---
I desire to be dissolved, as being much better, said St. Paul. [Philippians i. 23.]
Gill -> Job 7:4
Gill: Job 7:4 - -- When I lie down, I say, when shall I arise,.... Or, "then I say", &c. t; that is, as soon as he laid himself down in his bed, and endeavoured to compo...
When I lie down, I say, when shall I arise,.... Or, "then I say", &c. t; that is, as soon as he laid himself down in his bed, and endeavoured to compose himself to sleep, in order to get rest and refreshment; then he said within himself, or with an articulate voice, to those about him, that sat up with him; oh that it was time to rise; when will it be morning, that I may rise from my bed, which is of no manner of service to me, but rather increases weariness?
and the night be gone? and the day dawn and break; or "night" or "evening be measured", as in the margin, or "measures itself" u; or that "he", that is, God, or "it", my heart, "measures the evening" w, or "night"; lengthens it out to its full time: to a discomposed person, that cannot sleep, the night seems long; such count every hour, tell every clock that strikes, and long to see peep of day; these are they that watch for the morning, Psa 130:6,
and I am full of tossings to and fro unto the dawning of the day; or, "unto the twilight"; the morning twilight; though some understand it of the twilight or evening of the next day, see 1Sa 30:17; and interpret "the tossings to and fro" of the toils and labours of the day, and of the sorrows and miseries of it, lengthened out to the eve of the following day; but rather they are to be understood either of the tosses of his mind, his distressed and perplexed thoughts within him he was full of; or of the tosses of his body, his frequent turning himself upon his bed, from side to side, to ease him; and with these he was "filled", or "satiated" x; he had enough and too much of them; he was glutted and sated with them, as a man is with overmuch eating, as the word signifies.

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 7:1-6
MHCC: Job 7:1-6 - --Job here excuses what he could not justify, his desire of death. Observe man's present place: he is upon earth. He is yet on earth, not in hell. Is th...
Matthew Henry -> Job 7:1-6
Matthew Henry: Job 7:1-6 - -- Job is here excusing what he could not justify, even his inordinate desire of death. Why should he not wish for the termination of life, which would...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 7:4-6
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 7:4-6 - --
4 If I lie down, I think:
When shall I arise and the evening break away?
And I become weary with tossing to and fro unto the morning dawn.
5 My f...
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...
