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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Job 10:22
JFB: Job 10:22 - -- The ideas of order and light, disorder and darkness, harmonize (Gen 1:2). Three Hebrew words are used for darkness; in Job 10:21 (1) the common word "...
The ideas of order and light, disorder and darkness, harmonize (Gen 1:2). Three Hebrew words are used for darkness; in Job 10:21 (1) the common word "darkness"; here (2) "a land of gloom" (from a Hebrew root, "to cover up"); (3) as "thick darkness" or blackness (from a root, expressing sunset). "Where the light thereof is like blackness." Its only sunshine is thick darkness. A bold figure of poetry. Job in a better frame has brighter thoughts of the unseen world. But his views at best wanted the definite clearness of the Christian's. Compare with his words here Rev 21:23; Rev 22:5; 2Ti 1:10.
Clarke: Job 10:21 - -- I shall not return - I shall not return again from the dust to have a dwelling among men
I shall not return - I shall not return again from the dust to have a dwelling among men

Clarke: Job 10:21 - -- To the land of darkness - See the notes on Job 3:5. There are here a crowd of obscure and dislocated terms, admirably expressive of the obscurity an...
To the land of darkness - See the notes on Job 3:5. There are here a crowd of obscure and dislocated terms, admirably expressive of the obscurity and uncertainty of the subject. What do we know of the state of separate spirits? What do we know of the spiritual world? How do souls exist separate from their respective bodies? Of what are they capable and what is their employment? Who can answer these questions? Perhaps nothing can be said much better of the state than is here said, a land of obscurity, like darkness. The shadow of death - A place where death rules, over which he projects his shadow, intercepting every light of every kind of life. Without any order,

Clarke: Job 10:22 - -- Where the light is as darkness - A palpable obscure: it is space and place, and has only such light or capability of distinction as renders "darknes...
Where the light is as darkness - A palpable obscure: it is space and place, and has only such light or capability of distinction as renders "darkness visible."The following words of Sophocles convey the same idea:
TSK: Job 10:21 - -- I go whence : Job 7:8-10, Job 14:10-14; 2Sa 12:23, 2Sa 14:14; Isa 38:11
the land : Job 3:5; Psa 88:6, Psa 88:11, Psa 88:12
the shadow : Job 3:5; Psa 2...

TSK: Job 10:22 - -- the shadow of death : Where death projects his shadow, intercepting the light of lifecaps1 . wcaps0 ithout any order, having no arrangement, no disti...
the shadow of death : Where death projects his shadow, intercepting the light of lifecaps1 . wcaps0 ithout any order, having no arrangement, no distinction of inhabitants; the poor and the rich are there, the king and the beggar, their bodies in equal corruption and disgracecaps1 . wcaps0 here the light is as darkness, a palpable obscure, space and place, with only such a light or capability of distinction, as renders ""darkness visible.""Job 3:5, Job 34:22, Job 38:17; Psa 23:4, Psa 44:19, Psa 88:12; Jer 2:6, Jer 13:16; Luk 16:26

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Job 10:21 - -- Before I go - from where "I shall not return."To the grave, to the land of shades, to "That undiscovered country, from whose bourne No travel...
Before I go - from where "I shall not return."To the grave, to the land of shades, to
"That undiscovered country, from whose bourne
No traveler returns."
To the land of darkness - This passage is important as furnishing an illustration of what was early understood about the regions of the dead. The essential idea here is that it was a land of darkness, of total and absolute night. This idea Job presents in a great variety of forms and phrases. He amplifies it, and uses apparently all the epithets which he can command to represent the utter and entire darkness of the place. The place referred to is not the grave, but the region beyond, the abode of departed spirits, the Hades of the ancients; and the idea here is, that it is a place where not a clear ray of light ever shines. That this was a common opinion of the ancients in regard to the world of departed spirits, is well known. Virgil thus speaks of those gloomy regions:
Oii, quibusimperium est animarum, umbraeque silentes,
Et Chaos, et Phlegethon, loca nocte tacentia late,
Sit mihi fas audita loqui; slt numine vestro
Pandere res alta terra et caligine mersas.
Ibant obscuri sola sub nocte per umbram,
Perque domos Ditis vacuas, et inania regna:
Quale per incertam lunam sub luce maligna
Est iter in silvis: ubi coelum condidit umbra
Jupiter, et rebus nox abstulit atra colorem
Aeneid vi. 259ff
A similar view of Hades was held by the Greeks. Thus, Theognis, 1007:
Ἄθλων, εἰς ἥ δου δῶμα μέλαν κατέβη.
There is nowhere to be found, however, a description which for intensity and emphasis of expression surpasses this of Job.
Shadow of death - See this phrase explained in the note at Job 3:5.

Barnes: Job 10:22 - -- A land of darkness - The word used here ( עיפה ‛êyphâh ) is different from that rendered "darkness" השׁך chôshek in t...
A land of darkness - The word used here (
As darkness itself - This is still another word
And of the shadow of death - I would prefer reading this as connected with the previous word - "the deep darkness of the shadow of death."The Hebrew will bear this, and indeed it is the obvious construction.
Without any order - The word rendered order (
- "A vast immeasurable abyss."
- "dark, wasteful, wild."
Ovid uses similar language in speaking of chaos: "Unus chaos, rudis indigestaque moles."
And where the light is as darkness - This is a very striking and graphic expression. It means that there is no pure and clear light. Even all the light that shines there is dark, sombre, gloomy - like the little light of a total eclipse, which seems to be darkness itself, and which only serves to render the darkness more distressing. Compare Milton:
"A dungeon horrible on all sides round,
As one great furnace flamed, yet from those flames
No light; but rather darkness visible
Served only to discover sights of woe."
Par. Lost, 1.
The Hebrew here literally is, "And it shines forth (
Poole: Job 10:21 - -- To the place whence I shall not return into this world and life: see Job 7:9,10 .
Darkness and the shadow of death i.e. a dark and dismal shade: S...
To the place whence I shall not return into this world and life: see Job 7:9,10 .
Darkness and the shadow of death i.e. a dark and dismal shade: See Poole "Job 3:5" .

Poole: Job 10:22 - -- A land of darkness either in things, without any succession of day and night, winter and summer; or among persons, where great and small are in the s...
A land of darkness either in things, without any succession of day and night, winter and summer; or among persons, where great and small are in the same condition, Job 3:19 .
Where the light is as darkness where there is no difference between light and darkness, where the day is as dark as the night, where there is nothing but perpetual and uninterrupted darkness.
Death, to the grave, or to hell, (Calmet) if my sins deserve it. (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 10:22 - -- Horror. At death all distinction of ranks is at an end. (Tirinus) ---
Hebrew, "where the light is as darkness." (Protestants) Septuagint, "To ...
Horror. At death all distinction of ranks is at an end. (Tirinus) ---
Hebrew, "where the light is as darkness." (Protestants) Septuagint, "To the land of eternal darkness, where there is no sound, nor life of mortals to see." (Haydock)
Gill: Job 10:21 - -- Before I go whence I shall not return,.... Before he went out of the world, the way of all flesh, to the grave, his long home, from whence there is n...
Before I go whence I shall not return,.... Before he went out of the world, the way of all flesh, to the grave, his long home, from whence there is no return to this world, and to the business and affairs of it; to a man's house, his family and his friends, to converse with them as before, there will be no return until the resurrection, which Job does not here deny, as some have thought; it was a doctrine he well understood, and strongly asserts in Job 19:26; but this must be understood in the same sense as in Job 7:9,
even to the land of darkness, and the shadow of death; which describes not the state of the damned, as some Popish interpreters, carry it; for Job had no thought nor fear of such a state; but the grave, which is called "a land", or country, it being large and spacious, and full of inhabitants; a land of "darkness", a very dark one, where the body separated from the soul is deprived of all light; where the sun, moon, and stars, are never seen; nor is there the least crevice that light can enter in at, or be seen by those that dwell in those shades, which are "the shadow of death" itself; deadly shades, thick and gross ones, the darkest shades, where death itself is, or dead men are, destitute of light and life; where no pleasure, comfort, and conversation, can be had; and therefore a land in itself most undesirable.

Gill: Job 10:22 - -- A land of darkness, as darkness itself,.... Not merely like it, but truly so; as gross thick darkness, like that of Egypt, that might be felt; even b...
A land of darkness, as darkness itself,.... Not merely like it, but truly so; as gross thick darkness, like that of Egypt, that might be felt; even blackness of darkness, which is as dark as it possibly can be; not only dark, but darkness, extremely dark:
and of the shadow of death; which is repeated for the illustration and confirmation of it, as having in it all kind of darkness, and that to the greatest degree:
without any order, or "orders" i; or vicissitudes and successions of day and night, summer and winter, heat and cold, wet and dry; or revolutions of sun, moon, and stars, or of the constellations, as Aben Ezra; and whither persons go without any order, either of age, sex, or station; sometimes a young man, sometimes an old man, and the one before the other; sometimes a man, sometimes a woman; sometimes a king, prince, and nobleman, and sometimes a peasant; sometimes a rich man, and sometimes a poor man; no order is observed, but as death seizes them they are brought and laid in the grave, and there is no order there; the bones and dust of one and the other in a short time are mixed together, and, there is no knowing to whom they belong, only by the omniscient God:
and where the light is as darkness; were there anything in the grave that could with any propriety be called light, even that is nothing but darkness; darkness and light are the same thing there: or when "it shineth it is darkness" k; that is, when the sun shines brightest here, as at noon day, it is entire darkness in the grave; no light is discerned there, the rays of the sun cannot penetrate there; and could they, there is no visive faculty in the dead to receive them; all darkness is in those secret places.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 10:22 The verse multiplies images for the darkness in death. Several commentators omit “as darkness, deep darkness” (כְּמ...
Geneva Bible: Job 10:21 Before I go [whence] I shall not ( t ) return, [even] to the land of darkness and the shadow of death;
( t ) He speaks this in the person of a sinner...

Geneva Bible: Job 10:22 A land of darkness, as darkness [itself; and] of the shadow of death, without any ( u ) order, and [where] the light [is] as darkness.
( u ) No disti...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 10:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Job 10:1-22 - --1 Job, taking liberty of complaint, expostulates with God about his afflictions.18 He complains of life, and craves a little ease before death.
MHCC -> Job 10:14-22
MHCC: Job 10:14-22 - --Job did not deny that as a sinner he deserved his sufferings; but he thought that justice was executed upon him with peculiar rigour. His gloom, unbel...
Matthew Henry -> Job 10:14-22
Matthew Henry: Job 10:14-22 - -- Here we have, I. Job's passionate complaints. On this harsh and unpleasant string he harps much, in which, though he cannot be justified, he may be ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 10:18-22
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 10:18-22 - --
18 And wherefore hast Thou brought me forth out of the womb?
I should have expired, that no eye had seen me,
19 I should have been as though I had...
Constable -> Job 4:1--14:22; Job 10:1-22
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...
