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Text -- Job 1:21 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 1:21 - -- I brought none of these things with me, when I came out of my mother's womb into the world, but I received them from the hand of God, who hath now req...
I brought none of these things with me, when I came out of my mother's womb into the world, but I received them from the hand of God, who hath now required his own again.
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Wesley: Job 1:21 - -- I shall be as rich when I die as I was when I was born, and therefore have reason to be contented with my condition, which also is the common lot of a...
I shall be as rich when I die as I was when I was born, and therefore have reason to be contented with my condition, which also is the common lot of all men. Into the lap of our common mother, the earth, as the weary child lays its head in its mother's bosom. We go out of the world naked; the body doth, tho' the sanctified soul goes clothed. (2Co 5:3.) Death strips us of all our enjoyments: clothing can neither warm nor adorn a dead body.
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Wesley: Job 1:21 - -- He hath taken away nothing but his own, and what he so gave that he reserved the supreme disposal of in his own hand. And what is it to me, by what ha...
He hath taken away nothing but his own, and what he so gave that he reserved the supreme disposal of in his own hand. And what is it to me, by what hand he that gives, resumes what he gave?
JFB -> Job 1:21
JFB: Job 1:21 - -- (1Ti 6:7). "Mother's womb" is poetically the earth, the universal mother (Ecc 5:15; Ecc 12:7; Psa 139:15). Job herein realizes God's assertion (Job 1...
(1Ti 6:7). "Mother's womb" is poetically the earth, the universal mother (Ecc 5:15; Ecc 12:7; Psa 139:15). Job herein realizes God's assertion (Job 1:8) against Satan's (Job 1:11). Instead of cursing, he blesses the name of JEHOVAH (Hebrew). The name of Jehovah, is Jehovah Himself, as manifested to us in His attributes (Isa 9:6).
Clarke: Job 1:21 - -- Naked came I out of my mother’ s womb - I had no earthly possessions when I came into the world; I cannot have less going out of it. What I hav...
Naked came I out of my mother’ s womb - I had no earthly possessions when I came into the world; I cannot have less going out of it. What I have the Lord gave: as it was his free gift, he has a right to resume it when he pleases; and I owe him gratitude for the time he has permitted me to enjoy this gift
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Clarke: Job 1:21 - -- Naked shall I return thither - Whither? Not to his mother’ s womb surely; nor does he call the earth his mother in this place. In the first cla...
Naked shall I return thither - Whither? Not to his mother’ s womb surely; nor does he call the earth his mother in this place. In the first clause of the verse he speaks without a metaphor, and in the latter he speaks in reference to the ground on which he was about to fall. As I came out of my mother’ s womb destitute of the earthly possessions, so shall I return
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Clarke: Job 1:21 - -- The Lord gave - The Chaldee has, "The Word of the Lord, מימרא דיי meymera dayai , gave; and the Word of the Lord and the house of his judgm...
The Lord gave - The Chaldee has, "The Word of the Lord,
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Clarke: Job 1:21 - -- Blessed be the name of the Lord - The following is a fine paraphrase on the sentiment in this verse: -
"Good when he gives, supremely good; Nor less...
Blessed be the name of the Lord - The following is a fine paraphrase on the sentiment in this verse: -
"Good when he gives, supremely good;
Nor less when he denies
Afflictions from his sovereign hand,
Are blessings in disguise.
Seeing I have lost my temporal goods, and all my domestic comforts, may God alone be all my portion! The Vulgate, Septuagint, and Coverdale, add, The Lord hath done as he pleased.
TSK -> Job 1:21
TSK: Job 1:21 - -- Naked came : Gen 3:19; Psa 49:17; Ecc 5:15, Ecc 12:7; 1Ti 6:7
the Lord gave : Job 2:10; Gen 30:2; Ecc 5:19; Lam 3:38; Jam 1:17
taken away : Gen 45:5; ...
Naked came : Gen 3:19; Psa 49:17; Ecc 5:15, Ecc 12:7; 1Ti 6:7
the Lord gave : Job 2:10; Gen 30:2; Ecc 5:19; Lam 3:38; Jam 1:17
taken away : Gen 45:5; 2Sa 16:12; 1Ki 12:15; Psa 39:9; Isa 42:24, Isa 45:7; Amo 3:6; Mat 20:15; Act 4:28
blessed : Job 1:11; 1Sa 3:18; 2Ki 20:19; Psa 34:1, Psa 89:38-52; Isa 24:15; Eph 5:20; 1Th 5:18
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 1:21
Barnes: Job 1:21 - -- And said, Naked came I out - That is, destitute of property, for so the connection demands; compare 1Ti 6:7; "For we brought nothing into this ...
And said, Naked came I out - That is, destitute of property, for so the connection demands; compare 1Ti 6:7; "For we brought nothing into this world, and it is certain we can carry nothing out."A similar expression also occurs in Pliny, "Hominem natura tanturn nudism."Nat. Hist. proem. L. vii. Job felt that he was stripped of all, and that he must leave the world as destitute as he entered it.
My mother’ s womb - The earth - the universal mother. That he refers to the earth is apparent, because he speaks of returning there again. The Chaldee adds
Linquitur, ut merito materhum nomen adepta
Terra sit, e terra quoniam sunt cuneta creata.
v. 793.
- "Whence justly earth
Claims the dear name of mother, since alone
Flowed from herself whate’ er the sight enjoys."
For a full account of the views of the ancients in regard to the "marriage"(
And naked - Stripped of all, I shall go to the common mother of the race. This is exceedingly beautiful language; and in the mouth of Job it was expressive of the most submissive piety. It is not the language of complaint; but was in him connected with the deep feeling that the loss of his property was to be traced to God, and that he had a right to do as he had done.
The Lord gave - Hebrew
And the Lord hath taken away - It is not by accident; it is not the result of haphazard; it is not to be traced to storms and winds and the bad passions of people. It is the result of intelligent design, and whoever has been the agent or instrument in it, it is to be referred to the overruling providence of God. Why did not Job vent his wrath on the Sabeans? Why did he not blame the Chaldeans? Why did he not curse the tempest and the storm? Why did he not blame his sons for exposing themselves? Why not suspect the malice of Satan? Why not suggest that the calamity was to be traced to bad fortune, to ill-luck, or or to an evil administration of human affairs? None of these things occurred to Job. He traced the removal of his property and his loss of children at once to God, and found consolation in the belief that an intelligent and holy Sovereign presided over his affairs, and that he had removed only what he gave.
Blessed be the name of the Lord - That is, blessed be yahweh - the "name"of anyone in Hebrew being often used to denote the person himself. The Syriac, Arabic, and some manuscripts of the Septuagint here adds "forever."- "Here,"says Schmid, "the contrast is observable between the object of Satan, which was to induce Job to renounce God, and the result of the temptation which was to lead Job to bless God."Thus, far Satan had been foiled, and Job had sustained the shock of the calamity, and showed that he did not serve God on account of the benefits which be had received from him.
Poole -> Job 1:21
Poole: Job 1:21 - -- I brought none of these things which I have now lost with me, when I came out of my mother’ s womb into the world but I received them from the ...
I brought none of these things which I have now lost with me, when I came out of my mother’ s womb into the world but I received them from the hand and favour of that God who hath now required his own again. I still have all that substance wherewith I was born, and have lost only things without and beside myself.
Naked shall I return thither I shall be as rich when I die as I was when I was born, and therefore have reason to be contented with my condition, which also is the common lot of all men.
Thither i.e. into my mother’ s womb, which in the former clause is understood properly, but in this figuratively, of the earth, which is our common mother, as it is called by many authors, out of whose belly we were taken, and into which we must return again, Gen 3:19 Ecc 12:7 . And as our mother’ s womb is called
the lower parts of the earth Psa 139:15 , so it is not harsh if reciprocally the lower parts of the earth be called our mother’ s womb. Nor is it strange that the same phrase should be taken both properly and metaphorically in the same verse; for so it is Mat 8:22 , let the dead spiritually bury the dead corporally. See also Lev 26:21,24 Ps 18:26 , &c.
The Lord hath taken away he hath taken away nothing but his own, and what he so gave to me that he reserved the supreme dominion and disposal of in his own hand. So I have no cause to murmur or complain of him. Nor have I reason to fret and rage against the Chaldeans, and Sabeans, and other creatures, who were only God’ s instruments to execute his wise and holy counsel.
The name of the Lord i.e. the Lord; God’ s name being often put for God himself, as Psa 44:5 48:10 Psa 72:18,19 Da 2:19,20 ; as names are put for men, Act 1:15 Rev 3:4 . The sense is, I have no cause to quarrel with God, but much cause to bless and praise him that he did give me such blessings, and suffered me to enjoy them more and longer than I deserved; and that he hath vouchsafed to afflict me, which I greatly needed for my soul’ s good, and which I take as a token of his love and faithfulness to me, and therefore ministering more matter of comfort than grief to me; and that he hath left me the comfort of my wife, and yet is pleased to continue to me the health of my body, and a composed mind, and a heart to submit to his good pleasure; and that he hath reserved and prepared such a felicity for me, whom no Chaldeans or Sabeans, no men nor devils, can take away from me; of which see Job 19:25 .
Haydock -> Job 1:21
Haydock: Job 1:21 - -- Thither. To that earth from which all are taken. (Haydock) ---
Ista terra gentes omnes peperit & resumet demum. (Varro.) ---
Ut ater operiens. ...
Thither. To that earth from which all are taken. (Haydock) ---
Ista terra gentes omnes peperit & resumet demum. (Varro.) ---
Ut ater operiens. (Pliny, [Natural History?] ii. 63.) See 1 Timothy vi. 7. ---
As....done. Some copies of St. Jerome omit this, which is borrowed from the Septuagint. (Calmet)
Gill -> Job 1:21
Gill: Job 1:21 - -- And said, naked came I out of my mother's womb,.... Either literally, where he was conceived and lay, and from whence he came into the world, though h...
And said, naked came I out of my mother's womb,.... Either literally, where he was conceived and lay, and from whence he came into the world, though he afterwards wishes he never had, or had died as soon as he did, Job 3:10, and so it is expressive of his birth, and the circumstance of it; or figuratively, his mother earth, from whence the first man sprang, and so all his posterity with him, being as he of the earth, earthly, see Ecc 12:7, which sense is mentioned by Jarchi and Aben Ezra; but the first sense seems best: the nakedness referred to is not of the mind or soul, being destitute of righteousness and holiness, with which the following clause will by no means agree, but nakedness of body; and therefore as soon as a child is born, one of the first things done to it is to wrap it in clothes provided for it, see Eze 16:4 and also a being without the things of this life; the apostle's words are a proper comment on these, and explain them, and perhaps these are referred to by him, "we brought nothing into this world", 1Ti 6:7, this shows the necessity of the early care of Providence over us, and what reason we have to be thankful for unknown mercies at the time of birth, and in the state of infancy, Psa 22:9 and what obligations children lie under to parents, and what benefits they receive from them at their first entrance into the world, and which they should religiously requite when through old age they stand in need of their assistance, 1Ti 5:4, and this may also serve to abate the pride of man, who will have no reason to boast of his riches, nor of his fine clothes, when he considers his original nakedness; and more especially the use of it may be, and which seems to be the use Job made of it, to make the mind easy under the greatest losses. Job considered he did not bring his substance, his servants, and his children into the world with him; and now they were taken from him, he was but as he was when he came into the world, and not at all the worse; he knew how to be abased, and to abound, and in both was content:
and naked shall I return thither; not into his mother's womb in a literal sense, which was impossible, Joh 3:4, but to the earth, and to the dust of it, Gen 3:19, pointing to it with his finger, on which he now lay; meaning that he should go to the place appointed for him, the grave, the house of all living, Job 30:23, and so the Targum here has it,
to the house of the grave, where he should lie unseen, as in his mother's womb, till the resurrection morn; which would be a kind of a regeneration of him, when he should be delivered up from thence, and enjoy a state of happiness and glory: he should descend into the grave as naked as he was born, respecting not so much the nakedness of his body, as being stripped of all worldly enjoyments, see Ecc 5:15 and he says this in his present view of things; he thought once he should have died in his nest, Job 29:18, in the midst of all his prosperity, and left a large substance to his children; but now all was taken away, and for the present had no hope or expectation of a restoration, as afterwards was; but whereas he was now naked and bare of all, he expected he should continue and die so: or this is said with respect to the common case of men, who it is certain cannot carry anything out of the world with them, either riches or honour, but must leave all behind them, 1Ti 6:7 which may serve to loosen the minds of men from worldly things, not to set their eyes and hearts upon them, nor to put their trust and confidence in them; and good men may part with them, especially at death with pleasure, since they will have no further use of them, and will have a better and a more enduring substance in their stead:
the Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; all outward enjoyments, all the good things of this world, are the Lord's, and at his dispose; the earth, and the fulness of it; kingdoms, nations, countries, houses and lands, the beasts of the field, and cattle on a thousand hills; the gold and silver, and all the riches of the earth: and these are the gifts of his providence to the sons of men; nor have they anything but in a way of giving and receiving; and even what they enjoy, through diligence and industry, is owing to the blessing of God; and who gives not in such sort as that he loses his property in what is given; this he still retains, these are talents which he puts into the hands of men to use for themselves and others, and for which they are accountable to him; and they are but stewards, with whom he will hereafter reckon, and therefore has a right to take away when he pleases; and both Job ascribes to God, not only the giving, but the taking away: he does not attribute his losses to second causes, to the Sabeans and Chaldeans, to the fire from heaven, and the wind from the desert, but to God, whose sovereign will and overruling hand were in all; these were but the instruments of Satan, and he had no power but what was given from God; and therefore to the counsel of his will, who suffered it, Job refers it, and for that reason sits down satisfied and quiet. This is all to be understood of temporal things only; for of spiritual things it cannot be said that God gives and takes away; such gifts are without repentance, and are irreversible, Rom 11:29, the Targum is,
"the Word of the Lord hath given, and the Word of the Lord and the house of his judgment hath taken away; the Septuagint and Vulgate Latin versions add,
as it pleased the Lord, so it is done:''
blessed be the name of the Lord; for all his blessings and mercies; for all the gifts of nature and providence that had been bestowed, which could not be claimed, and of which he knew himself unworthy; and for the continuance of them so long with goodness and mercy had followed him all the days or his life hitherto, and still he had mercies to bless God for; his wife was still with him, he had some servants left, his own life was spared; he continued as yet in health of body, and therefore could sing of mercy as well as judgment; nor is there any state on earth a man can be in, but there is something to bless God for; wherefore the apostle's exhortation will always hold good, "in everything give thanks": 1Th 5:18; besides the name, the nature, the perfections, of God are always the same, and therefore always to be celebrated, and blessing, honour, and glory, are to be ascribed to him continually, in every state and condition of life; wherefore the Arabic version adds, "from henceforth, and for ever"; which agrees with Psa 72:19; and thus Job, instead of cursing God, blesses him, and proves the devil to be a liar, as he was from the beginning; and shows his superiority over him through the power of divine grace; this evil one could not touch him, he was overcome by him, and his designs defeated.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 1:21 Some commentators are troubled by the appearance of the word “Yahweh” on the lips of Job, assuming that the narrator inserted his own name...
Geneva Bible -> Job 1:21
Geneva Bible: Job 1:21 And said, Naked came I out of my mother's womb, and naked shall I return ( b ) thither: the LORD gave, and the LORD hath taken away; ( c ) blessed be ...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 1:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Job 1:1-22 - --1 The holiness, riches, and religious care of Job for his children.6 Satan, appearing before God, by calumniation obtains leave to afflict Job.13 Unde...
Maclaren -> Job 1:21
Maclaren: Job 1:21 - --Sorrow That Worships
Naked came I out of my mother's womb, and naked shall I return thither: the Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be ...
MHCC -> Job 1:20-22
MHCC: Job 1:20-22 - --Job humbled himself under the hand of God. He reasons from the common state of human life, which he describes. We brought nothing of this world's good...
Matthew Henry -> Job 1:20-22
Matthew Henry: Job 1:20-22 - -- The devil had done all he desired leave to do against Job, to provoke him to curse God. He had touched all he had, touched it with a witness; he who...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 1:20-21
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 1:20-21 - --
The Conduct of Job:
20, 21 Then Job arose, and rent his mantle, and shaved his head, and fell down upon the ground, and worshipped, and said, Naked...
Constable: Job 1:1--2:13 - --I. PROLOGUE chs. 1--2
The writer composed the prologue and epilogue of this book in prose narrative and the main...
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Constable: Job 1:6--2:11 - --B. Job's Calamities 1:6-2:10
God permitted Satan to test Job twice.23 The first test touched his possess...
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