
Text -- Job 14:17-22 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 14:17 - -- As writings or other choice things, that they may all be brought forth upon occasion, and not one of them forgotten. Thou keepest all my sins in thy m...
As writings or other choice things, that they may all be brought forth upon occasion, and not one of them forgotten. Thou keepest all my sins in thy memory. But herein Job speaks rashly.

Wesley: Job 14:18 - -- As when a great mountain falls, by an earthquake or inundation, it moulders away like a fading leaf, (as the Hebrew word signifies) and as the rock, w...
As when a great mountain falls, by an earthquake or inundation, it moulders away like a fading leaf, (as the Hebrew word signifies) and as the rock, when by the violence of winds or earthquakes it is removed out of its place, and thrown down, is never re - advanced: and as the waters by continual droppings, wear away the stones, so that they can never be made whole again: and as thou wastest away, by a great and violent inundation, the things which grow out of the dust of the earth, herbs, and fruits, and plants, which once washed away are irrecoverably lost; in like manner, thou destroyest the hope of man: when man dies, all hope of his living again in this world is lost.

When once thou takest away this life, it is gone forever.

Wesley: Job 14:21 - -- Either is ignorant of all such events: or, is not concerned or affected with them. A dead or dying man minds not these things.
Either is ignorant of all such events: or, is not concerned or affected with them. A dead or dying man minds not these things.
JFB: Job 14:17 - -- (Job 9:7). Is shut up in eternal oblivion, that is, God thenceforth will think no more of my former sins. To cover sins is to completely forgive them...

Rather, "coverest"; akin to an Arabic word, "to color over," to forget wholly.

JFB: Job 14:18 - -- Literally, "fadeth"; a poetical image from a leaf (Isa 34:4). Here Job falls back into his gloomy bodings as to the grave. Instead of "and surely," tr...
Literally, "fadeth"; a poetical image from a leaf (Isa 34:4). Here Job falls back into his gloomy bodings as to the grave. Instead of "and surely," translate "yet"; marking the transition from his brighter hopes. Even the solid mountain falls and crumbles away; man therefore cannot "hope" to escape decay or to live again in the present world (Job 14:19).

The Hebrew order is more forcible: "Stones themselves are worn away by water."

JFB: Job 14:19 - -- Rather, "floods wash away the dust of the earth." There is a gradation from "mountains" to "rocks" (Job 14:18), then "stones," then last "dust of the ...
Rather, "floods wash away the dust of the earth." There is a gradation from "mountains" to "rocks" (Job 14:18), then "stones," then last "dust of the earth"; thus the solid mountain at last disappears utterly.

JFB: Job 14:21 - -- One striking trait is selected from the sad picture of the severance of the dead from all that passes in the world (Ecc 9:5), namely, the utter separa...
One striking trait is selected from the sad picture of the severance of the dead from all that passes in the world (Ecc 9:5), namely, the utter separation of parents and children.

JFB: Job 14:22 - -- "Flesh" and "soul" describe the whole man. Scripture rests the hope of a future life, not on the inherent immortality of the soul, but on the restorat...
"Flesh" and "soul" describe the whole man. Scripture rests the hope of a future life, not on the inherent immortality of the soul, but on the restoration of the body with the soul. In the unseen world, Job in a gloomy frame anticipates, man shall be limited to the thought of his own misery. "Pain is by personification, from our feelings while alive, attributed to the flesh and soul, as if the man could feel in his body when dead. It is the dead in general, not the wicked, who are meant here."
Clarke: Job 14:17 - -- My transgression is sealed up in a bag - An allusion to the custom of collecting evidence of state transgressions, sealing them up in a bag, and pre...
My transgression is sealed up in a bag - An allusion to the custom of collecting evidence of state transgressions, sealing them up in a bag, and presenting them to the judges and officers of state to be examined, in order to trial and judgment. Just at this time (July, 1820) charges of state transgressions, sealed up in a Green Bag, and presented to the two houses of parliament, for the examination of a secret committee, are making a considerable noise in the land. Some suppose the allusion is to money sealed up in bags; which is common in the East. This includes two ideas
1. Job’ s transgressions were all numbered; not one was passed by
2. They were sealed up; so that none of them could be lost. These bags were indifferently sewed or sealed, the two words in the text.

Clarke: Job 14:18 - -- The mountain falling cometh to naught - Every thing in nature is exposed to mutability and decay: - even mountains themselves may fall from their ba...
The mountain falling cometh to naught - Every thing in nature is exposed to mutability and decay: - even mountains themselves may fall from their bases, and be dashed to pieces; or be suddenly swallowed up by an earthquake; and, by the same means, the strongest and most massive rocks may be removed.

Clarke: Job 14:19 - -- The waters wear the stones - Even the common stones are affected in the same way. Were even earthquakes and violent concussions of nature wanting, t...
The waters wear the stones - Even the common stones are affected in the same way. Were even earthquakes and violent concussions of nature wanting, the action of water, either running over them as a stream, or even falling upon them in drops, will wear these stones. Hence the proverb: -
Gutta cavat lapidem non vi sed saepe cadendo
"Constant droppings will make a hole in a flint.
"From frequent dropping, as the proverb says, perpetually falling, even a stone is hollowed into a hole.

Clarke: Job 14:19 - -- Thou washest away the things - Alluding to sudden falls of rain occasioning floods, by which the fruits of the earth are swept away; and thus the ho...
Thou washest away the things - Alluding to sudden falls of rain occasioning floods, by which the fruits of the earth are swept away; and thus the hope of man - the grain for his household, and provender for his cattle, is destroyed.

Clarke: Job 14:20 - -- Thou prevailest for ever against him - It is impossible for him to withstand thee: every stroke of thine brings him down
Thou prevailest for ever against him - It is impossible for him to withstand thee: every stroke of thine brings him down

Clarke: Job 14:20 - -- Thou changest his countenance - Probably an allusion to the custom of covering the face, when the person was condemned, and sending him away to exec...
Thou changest his countenance - Probably an allusion to the custom of covering the face, when the person was condemned, and sending him away to execution. See the case of Haman, in the note on Esther, Est 7:8 (note).

Clarke: Job 14:21 - -- His sons come to honor - When dead, he is equally indifferent and unconscious whether his children have met with a splendid or oppressive lot in lif...
His sons come to honor - When dead, he is equally indifferent and unconscious whether his children have met with a splendid or oppressive lot in life; for as to this world, when man dies, in that day all his thoughts perish.

Clarke: Job 14:22 - -- But his flesh upon him shall have pain - The sum of the life of man is this, pain of body and distress of soul; and he is seldom without the one or ...
But his flesh upon him shall have pain - The sum of the life of man is this, pain of body and distress of soul; and he is seldom without the one or the other, and often oppressed by both. Thus ends Job’ s discourse on the miserable state and condition of man. The last verse of the preceding chapter has been differently translated and explained. Mr
Good’ s version is the following, which he vindicates in a learned note: -
For his flesh shall drop away from him
And his soul shall become a waste from him
The Chaldee thus: "Nevertheless his flesh, on account of the worms, shall grieve over him; and his soul, in the house of judgment, shall wail over him."In another copy of this version it is thus: "Nevertheless his flesh, before the window is closed over him, shall grieve; and his soul, for seven days of mourning, shall bewail him in the house of his burial."I shall give the Hebrew: -
Which Mr. Stock translates thus, both to the spirit and letter: -
But over him his flesh shall grieve
And over him his breath shall mourn
"In the daring spirit of oriental poetry,"says he, "the flesh, or body, and the breath, are made conscious beings; the former lamenting its putrefaction in the grave, the latter mourning over the mouldering clay which it once enlivened.
This version is, in my opinion, the most natural yet offered. The Syriac and Arabic present nearly the same sense: "But his body shall grieve over him; and his soul be astonished over him.
Coverdale follows the Vulgate: Whyle he lyveth his flesh must have travayle; and whyle the soul is in him, he must be in sorowe.
On Job 14:2. I have referred to the following beautiful lines, which illustrate these finely figurative texts: -
He cometh forth as a Flower, and is Cut Down; he fleeth also as a shadow, and continueth not
All flesh is Grass, and all the goodliness thereof is as the Flower of the field
The Grass withereth, the Flower fadeth; but the word of our God shall stand for ever
The morning flowers display their sweets,
And gay their silken leaves unfold
As careless of the noonday heats,
As fearless of the evening cold
Nipp’ d by the wind’ s untimely blast,
Parch’ d by the sun’ s directer ray
The momentary glories waste,
The short-lived beauties die away
So blooms the human face divine,
When youth its pride of beauty shows
Fairer than spring the colors shine,
And sweeter than the virgin rose
Or worn by slowly-rolling years,
Or broke by sickness in a day
The fading glory disappears,
The short-lived beauties die away
Yet these, new rising from the tomb,
With lustre brighter far shall shine
Revive with ever-during bloom,
Safe from diseases and decline
Let sickness blast, let death devour,
If heaven must recompense our pains
Perish the grass and fade the flower,
If firm the word of God remains
See a Collection of Poems on Sundry Occasions, by the Rev. Samuel Wesley, Master of Blundell’ s School, Tiverton.

TSK: Job 14:18 - -- the mountain : Psa 102:25, Psa 102:26; Isa 40:12, Isa 41:15, Isa 41:16, Isa 54:10, Isa 64:1; Jer 4:24; Rev 6:14; Rev 8:8, Rev 20:11
cometh to nought :...

TSK: Job 14:19 - -- The waters : Hence the proverb, ""Constant droppings make a hole in a stone."
washest : Heb. overflowest, Gen 6:17, Gen 7:21-23
destroyest : Job 19:10...


TSK: Job 14:21 - -- he knoweth it not : 1Sa 4:20; Psa 39:6; Ecc 2:18, Ecc 2:19, Ecc 9:5; Isa 39:7, Isa 39:8, Isa 63:16

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Job 14:17 - -- My transgression is sealed up - The verb rendered sealed up ( חתם châtham ) means to seal, to close, to shut up; see the notes at Isa...
My transgression is sealed up - The verb rendered sealed up (
In a bag - -
And thou sewest up mine iniquity - Noyes renders this, "and thou addest unto mine iniquity."Good, "thou tiest together mine iniquity."The word used here

Barnes: Job 14:18 - -- And surely the mountain falling - Margin, "Fadeth."The sense of this is, that the hope of man in regard to living again, must certainly fail - ...
And surely the mountain falling - Margin, "Fadeth."The sense of this is, that the hope of man in regard to living again, must certainly fail - as a mountain falls and does not rise again; as the rock is removed, and is not replaced; or as the waters wear away the stones, and they disappear. The hope of dying man was not like the tree that would spring up again Job 14:7-9; it was like the falling mountain, the wasting waters Job 14:11, the rock that was removed. The reference in the phrase before us is, probably, to a mountain that settles down and disappears - as is sometimes the case in violent convulsions of nature. It does not rise again, but is gone to reappear no more. So Job says it was of man.
And the rock is removed - An earthquake shakes it, and removes it from its foundation, and it is not replaced.

Barnes: Job 14:19 - -- The waters wear the stones - By their constant attrition they wear away even the hard rocks, and they disappear, and return no more. The sense ...
The waters wear the stones - By their constant attrition they wear away even the hard rocks, and they disappear, and return no more. The sense is, that constant changes are going on in nature, and man resembles those objects which are removed to appear no more, and not the productions of the vegetable world that spring up again. It is possible that there may also be included the idea here, that the patience, constancy, firmness, and life of any man must be worn out by long continued trials, as even hard rocks would be worn away by the constant attrition of waters.
Thou washest away - Margin, "Overflowest."This is literally the meaning of the Hebrew
The things which grow out of the dust of the earth - Herder and Noyes translate this, "the floods overflow the dust of the earth,"and this accords with the interpretation of Good and Rosenmuller. So Castellio renders it, and so Luther - "Tropfen flossen die Erde weg."This is probably the true sense. The Hebrew word rendered "the things which grow out"
The dust of the earth - The earth or the land on the margin of streams. The sense is, that as a flood sweeps away the soil, so the hope of man was destroyed.
Thou destroyest the hope of man - By death - for so the connection demands. It is the language of despondency. The tree would spring up, but man would die like a removed rock, like land washed away, like a falling mountain, and would revive no more. If Job had at times a hope of a future state, yet that hope seems at times, also, wholly to fail him, and he sinks down in utter despondency. At best, his views of the future world were dark and obscure. He seems to have had at no time clear conceptions of heaven - of the future holiness and blessedness of the righteous; but he anticipated, at best, only a residence in the world of disembodied spirits - dark, dreary, sad; - a world to which the grave was the entrance, and where the light was as darkness. With such anticipations, we are not to wonder that his mind sank into despondency; nor are we to be surprised at the expressions which he so often used, and which seem so inconsistent with the feelings which a child of God ought to cherish. In our trials let us imitate his patience, but not his despondency; let us copy his example in his better moments, and when he was full of confidence in God, and not his language of complaint, and his unhappy reflections on the government of the Most High.

Barnes: Job 14:20 - -- Thou prevailest forever against him - Thou dost always show that thou art stronger than he is. He never shows that he is able to contend with G...
Thou prevailest forever against him - Thou dost always show that thou art stronger than he is. He never shows that he is able to contend with God.
And he passeth - He cannot stand before thee, but is vanquished, and passes off the stage of being.
Thou changest his countenance - Possibly the allusion is to the change produced by death. The countenance that glowed with health and was flushed with beauty and hope - blooming as the rose - is made pale as the lily under the hand of God. What an affecting exhibition of the power of God!
And sendest him away - This language seems to be that of expectation that man would still live though he was sent away; but all his hopes on earth were blasted, and he went away from his friends and possessions to return no more.

Barnes: Job 14:21 - -- His sons come to honour, and he knoweth it not - He is unacquainted with what is passing on the earth. Even should that occur which is most gra...
His sons come to honour, and he knoweth it not - He is unacquainted with what is passing on the earth. Even should that occur which is most gratifying to a parent’ s heart; should his children rise to stations of honor and influence, he would not be permitted to enjoy the happiness which every father feels when his sons do well. This is suggested as one of the evils of death.
They are brought low, but he perceiveth it not of them - He is not permitted to sympathize with them, or to sustain them in their trials. This is another of the evils of death. When his children need his counsel and advice, he is not permitted to give it. He is taken away from his family, and revisits them no more.

Barnes: Job 14:22 - -- But his flesh upon him shall have pain - Dr. Good renders this, "his flesh shall drop away from him."This is evidently a representation of the ...
But his flesh upon him shall have pain - Dr. Good renders this, "his flesh shall drop away from him."This is evidently a representation of the state of the man after he was dead. He would be taken away from hope and from his friends. His body would be committed to the grave, and his spirit would go to the world of shades. The image in the mind seems to have been, that his flesh would suffer. It would be cold and chill, and would be devoured by worms. There seems to have been an impression that the soul would be conscious of this in its distant and silent abode, and the description is given of the grave as if the body were conscious there, and the turning back to dust were attended with pain. This thought is that which makes the grave so gloomy now. We think of ourselves in its darkness and chilliness. We insensibly suppose that we shall be conscious there. And hence, we dread so much the lonely, sad, and gloomy residence in the tomb. The meaning of the word rendered "shall have pain"-
And his soul within him shall mourn - The soul that is within him shall be sad; that is, in the land of shades. So Virgil, speaking of the death of Lausus, says,
Tum vita per auras
Concessit moesta ad manes, corpusque reliquit.
Aeneid x. 819.
The idea of Job is, that it would leave all the comforts of this life; it would be separate from family and friends; it would go lonely and sad to the land of shades and of night. Job dreaded it. He loved life; and in the future world, as it was presented to his view, there was nothing to charm and attract. There he expected to wander in darkness and sadness; and from that gloomy world he expected to return no more forever. Eichhorn, however, has rendered this verse so as to give a different signification, which may perhaps be the true one.
Nur uber sich ist er betrubt;
Nur sich betrauert er.
"His troubles pertain only to himself; his grief relates to himself alone."According to this, the idea is that he must bear all his sorrows alone, and for himself. He is cut off from the living, and is not permitted to share in the joys and sorrows of his posterity, nor they in his. He has no knowledge of anything that pertains to them, nor do they participate in his griefs. What a flood of light and joy would have been poured on his soul by the Christian hope, and by the revelation of the truth that there is a world of perfect light and joy for the righteous - in heaven! And what thanks do we owe to the Great Author of our religion - to him who is "the Resurrection and the Life "- that we are permitted to look upon the grave with hearts full of peace and joy!
Poole: Job 14:17 - -- Sealed up in a bag as writings or other choice things, that they may be safely kept, and all of them brought forth upon occasion, and not one of them...
Sealed up in a bag as writings or other choice things, that they may be safely kept, and all of them brought forth upon occasion, and not one of them forgotten or lost. Compare Deu 32:44 Job 37:7 Hos 13:12 .
Thou sewest up mine iniquity i.e. thou keepest all my sins in thy memory, and fastenest the guilt of them upon my conscience. Or, thou addest to my sin , one sin to another; the follies of my youth, Job 13:26 , to those of my riper years. Or, thou addest to my punishment , i.e. thou punishest me more than mine iniquities deserve, all things considered. For this sinful thought seems sometimes to have risen in Job’ s mind, as may be gathered from divers parts of this book; which therefore Zophar decries and disproves, Job 11:6 .

Poole: Job 14:18 - -- As when a great mountain falls , either by an earthquake or inundation of waters, or from any other cause, it moulders away like a fading leaf , (...
As when a great mountain falls , either by an earthquake or inundation of waters, or from any other cause, it moulders away like a fading leaf , (as the Hebrew word signifies,) and never recovers its former height and stability; and as the rock, when by the violence of winds or earthquake, &c.
it is removed out of its place and thrown down, is never readvanced; and as the waters by continual droppings, or violent and frequent assaults, wear away , or break the stones to pieces , so as they can never be made whole again; and as thou washest away , to wit, by a great and violent inundation which thou sendest, the things which grow out of the dust of the earth , to wit, herbs, and fruits, and plants, which once washed away are irrecoverably lost, and , or so , (as this particle is oft used, i.e. in like manner, to wit, irrecoverably,) thou destroyest the hope of man ; i.e. so when man dies, all hope of living again in this world is utterly lost: and this seems to be the plain meaning of these two verses. And as before he declared the hopelessness of man’ s restoration from death to this animal life, by way of opposition to such things as did rise in a manner from death to life, Job 14:7 , &c.; so now he declares it by way of similitude or resemblance to such things, as being once lost and gone are past all hopes of recovery.

Poole: Job 14:20 - -- When once thou takest away this life, it is gone for ever; for he speaks not here of man’ s future and eternal life in another world.
He passe...
When once thou takest away this life, it is gone for ever; for he speaks not here of man’ s future and eternal life in another world.
He passeth i.e. he dieth, or is about to die. Man’ s death is oft called a passage , or a going , to intimate that it is not an annihilation, but only a translation of him into another place and state. His countenance; either,
1. His visage, which by death and its harbingers is quite transformed in colour and shape, as we see by daily experience. Or,
2. The face and state of his affairs, as to worldly riches, and pleasures, and honours, all which he leaves behind him.
Sendest him away to his long home by death.

Poole: Job 14:21 - -- He knoweth it not either,
1. Is ignorant of all such events; or,
2. Is not concerned nor affected with them. A dead or dying man minds not these th...
He knoweth it not either,
1. Is ignorant of all such events; or,
2. Is not concerned nor affected with them. A dead or dying man minds not these things.

Poole: Job 14:22 - -- This is man’ s condition; he is miserable both when he dies, because he dies without hope of returning to life, as he had discoursed before; an...
This is man’ s condition; he is miserable both when he dies, because he dies without hope of returning to life, as he had discoursed before; and (as he now adds) whilst he lives, whilst his flesh is upon him, and his soul within him ; whilst the soul is clothed with or united to the body, he feels sharp
pain in his body, and bitter grief in his soul. Seeing therefore the state of man upon earth is so vain and unhappy every way, Lord, give me some comfort to sweeten my life, or take away my life from me.
Haydock: Job 14:17 - -- Cured. Hebrew, "sewed up." This method and sealing was in use to keep things of value, before locks were invented. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "thou...
Cured. Hebrew, "sewed up." This method and sealing was in use to keep things of value, before locks were invented. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "thou hast noted if I had transgressed unwillingly, Greek: akon. " Yet God will not make us accountable for what we cannot help.

Haydock: Job 14:19 - -- Man. Hebrew and Septuagint, "the hope of man." (Haydock) ---
He must not expect to be more privileged than all other things, which time consumes. ...
Man. Hebrew and Septuagint, "the hope of man." (Haydock) ---
He must not expect to be more privileged than all other things, which time consumes. (Calmet) ---
Job again deplores human misery. (Menochius)

Haydock: Job 14:20 - -- Strengthened. Septuagint, "driven away." (Pagnin, &c.) ---
"Thou wilt treat him harshly." (Calmet)
Strengthened. Septuagint, "driven away." (Pagnin, &c.) ---
"Thou wilt treat him harshly." (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 14:21 - -- Or dishonour. He cannot naturally be informed. (Menochius) ---
God may, however, reveal to souls departed, what may increase their accidental happ...
Or dishonour. He cannot naturally be informed. (Menochius) ---
God may, however, reveal to souls departed, what may increase their accidental happiness or misery. (Haydock) ---
Hence the Church prays to the saints. Job is speaking chiefly of the body in the grave, and of what appear exteriorly. During life man cannot foresee the state of his children; not in the other world, would their condition render him happy or otherwise. (Calmet) (Mercer) ---
Septuagint, "If his sons be many,...or....few, he knows not." (Haydock) ---
He is not affected in the same manner as he would be, if living. (Worthington)

Haydock: Job 14:22 - -- Over. Hebrew, "within him." (Haydock) ---
During life man is full of cares, and presently he is consigned to the dreary tomb, ver. 19. (Calmet)
Over. Hebrew, "within him." (Haydock) ---
During life man is full of cares, and presently he is consigned to the dreary tomb, ver. 19. (Calmet)
Gill: Job 14:17 - -- My transgression is sealed up in a bag,.... Denoting either the concealment of it, as in Hos 13:12; not from God; nor in such sense sealed up as sin ...
My transgression is sealed up in a bag,.... Denoting either the concealment of it, as in Hos 13:12; not from God; nor in such sense sealed up as sin is by the sacrifice and satisfaction of Christ, who has thereby removed it out of the sight of divine justice; so that when it is sought for it shall not be found, nor any more seen, which is the sense of the phrase in Dan 9:24; where the words, "to make an end of sin", may be rendered, to "seal them up"; but this Job would not have complained of; he means it was hid as in a bag from himself, or he knew not what it was; the transgression was sealed up from him, he was entirely ignorant of and unacquainted with what it was for which he was severely afflicted: or else his sense is, that God had taken strict notice of his transgressions, and had, as it were, put them up in a bag, and set a seal upon it, that none might be lost, but might be ready to be produced against him another day; in allusion, as it is thought, to bills of indictment put up in bags sealed, to be brought into courts of judicature at a proper time, for which they are reserved:
and thou sewest up mine iniquity; in the bag in which it is sealed; not only did he seal up the bag, but sewed a cloth over it thus sealed, for greater security: or "thou sewest to mine iniquity" m, or adds iniquity to iniquity, as in Psa 69:27; as arithmeticians do, who add one number to another until it becomes a great sum; thus God, according to Job, tacked and joined one sin to another, till it became one large heap and pile, reaching to the heavens, and calling for vengeance; or, as Sephorno interprets it, joined sins of ignorance to sins of presumption; or rather sewed or added the punishment of sin to sin, or punishment to punishment; the Targum is,
"my transgression is sealed up in a book of remembrances, and thou hast joined it to my iniquities.''

Gill: Job 14:18 - -- And surely the mountain falling cometh to nought,.... Job here returns to his former subject of the irreparable state of man at death, which he illust...
And surely the mountain falling cometh to nought,.... Job here returns to his former subject of the irreparable state of man at death, which he illustrates by various other similes, as before; and first by a "mountain falling", which may be supposed, and has been fact, and when it does, it "comes to nought"; it crumbles into dust, and where it falls there it lies, and never rises up to a mountain, or to the height it had, any more; or it "withers" n, as some render it, the plants, herbs, and trees that grow upon it, wither away, see Nah 1:4; or "it is dissolved", or "flows" o, and spreads itself over the face of the green earth it covers, and destroys with its dust and sand, which is never more gathered up to form a mountain again; so man, like unto a mountain, as kingdoms and states, and kings and princes, and great men are; the Targum instances in Lot; as a man may be said to be, that is in good health of body, and in prosperous circumstances in his family; when he falls, as he does by death, which is expressed by falling, 2Sa 3:38; he comes to nought, he is not any more in the land of the living, nor in the place and circumstances in which he was before:
and the rock is removed out of his place; from the mountain, of which it was a part; or elsewhere, by earthquakes, by force of winds, or strength of waters; and which, when once removed, is never returned to its place any more; so man, who in his full strength seems like a rock immovable, when death comes, it shakes and moves him out of his place, and that never knows him any more.

Gill: Job 14:19 - -- The waters wear the stones,.... Either by continual running in them, or constant dropping upon them p; and the excavations or hollow places they: make...
The waters wear the stones,.... Either by continual running in them, or constant dropping upon them p; and the excavations or hollow places they: make are never filled up again, these impressions are never effaced, nor the stones reduced to their ancient form; so man, though he may have the strength of stones, yet the waters of afflictions will gradually wear him away, and bring him to the dust of death, and where he must lie till the heavens be no more:
thou washest away the things which grow out of the dust of the earth; herbs, plants, and trees, which a violent inundation of water tears up by the roots, and carries away, and they are never restored to their places any more. The word
and or "so" r.
thou destroyest the hope of man, not the hope of a good man about his eternal state, and of enjoying eternal happiness; which is the gift of God's grace, which is without repentance, never revoked, called in, or taken away or destroyed; it is built upon the promise of God, who cannot lie; it is founded on the person, blood, and righteousness of Christ; and though it may be brought low, it is never lost; the hope of carnal men in an arm of flesh, in the creature and creature enjoyments, is indeed destroyed; and so is the hope of external professors of religion, that is formed on their own works of righteousness, and profession of religion; but of this Job is not speaking, but of the hope of man of living again in this world after death; for this is a reddition or application of the above similes used to illustrate this point, the irreparable state of man at death, so as that he shall never return to this life again, and to the same state and circumstances of things as before; and next follows a description of death, and the state of the dead.

Gill: Job 14:20 - -- Thou prevailest for ever against him,.... God is a more than a match for man, in anything, in everything; there is no contending with him, or standing...
Thou prevailest for ever against him,.... God is a more than a match for man, in anything, in everything; there is no contending with him, or standing against him, he is stronger than he, and always prevails; there is no withstanding any disease, and the force of it, when he sends it; it is a messenger and servant of his, it goes at his command, and does what he bids it do; and all the art and power of man cannot resist it, or hinder what God would have done by it; and so death itself is irresistible; what is stronger than death? it is a king that reigns with a despotic power; it reigns irresistibly, victoriously, and triumphantly; it prevails over all men, in all ages, and will do to the end of the world; no man has power over his spirit to retain it one moment, when death comes to separate it from the body: and this prevalence of God by death over men will be for ever; the grave is man's long home, to which he is brought by death, and he will never return from it more, to come again into this world, and be about the business of it as now;
and he passeth; out of the world, and is seen no more in it; death is a going the way of all flesh, a departure out of this life, and to it man never usually returns more; he goes to Hades, to the invisible place, and makes his appearance no more here; see Psa 37:35;
thou changest his countenance; at death; the forerunners of death will change a man's countenance, pains, and diseases of body; by these God makes man's beauty to consume like the moth; the fear of death will change a man's countenance, as the handwriting on the wall did Belshazzar's, Dan 5:9; even such who have out-braved death, and pretended to have made a covenant and agreement with it, yet when the king of terrors is presented to them, they are seized with a panic, their hearts ache, and their countenances turn pale; but oh! what a change is made by death itself, which for this reason is represented as riding on a pale horse; Rev 6:8; when the rosy florid looks of man are gone, his comeliness turned into corruption, his countenance pale and meagre, his eyes hollow and sunk, his nose sharp pointed, his ears contracted, and jaws fallen, and his complexion altered, and still more when laid in the grave, and he is turned to rottenness, dust, and worms:
and sendeth him away; giveth him a dismission from this world; sendeth him out of it, from his house, his family, friends, and acquaintance: his birth is expressed often by his coming into the world, and his death by going out of it; for here he has no continuance, no abiding, no rest; and yet there is no departure till God gives him dismission by death, then he sends him away from hence; some in wrath, whom he sends to take up their abode with devils and damned spirits; others in love, to prevent their being involved in evils coming upon the earth, and to be in better company, with God and Christ, with angels, and the spirits of just men made perfect: Maimonides interprets this of Adam r, who, when he changed the object of his countenance, and looked on the forbidden fruit, was sent out of paradise.

Gill: Job 14:21 - -- His sons come to honour,.... Or "are multiplied" s, see Nah 3:15; their families increase like a flock, become very numerous, which was reckoned a gre...
His sons come to honour,.... Or "are multiplied" s, see Nah 3:15; their families increase like a flock, become very numerous, which was reckoned a great blessing; or "become heavy" t; being loaded with gold and silver, with riches and honour, raised to great grandeur and dignity, and possessed of much wealth and large estates:
and he knoweth it not; the man whose countenance is changed and sent away into another world; for the dead know nothing of the affairs of this life; a good man indeed after death knows more of God and Christ, of the doctrines of grace, and mysteries of Providence; but he knows nothing of the affairs of his family he has left behind: some understand this of a man on his death bed while alive, who, when he is told of the promotion of his sons to honour, or of the increase of their worldly substance, takes no notice of it; either being deprived of his senses by the disease upon him; or through the greatness of his pains and agonies, or the intenseness of his thoughts about a future state, does not notice what is told him, nor rejoice at it; which in the time of health would have been pleasing to him: but the first sense seems best:
and they are brought low, that is, his sons; or "are diminished" u; lessened in their numbers, one taken off after another, and so his family decreases; or they come into low circumstances of life, are reduced in the world, and brought to straits and difficulties, to want and poverty:
but he perceiveth it not of them; he is not sensible of their troubles, and so not grieved at them; see Isa 63:16; or when he is told of them on his death bed, he does not take notice of them, or regard them, having enough to grapple with himself, and his mind intent on his everlasting state, or carried above them in the views of the love, grace, and covenant of God; see 2Sa 23:5.

Gill: Job 14:22 - -- But his flesh upon him shall have pain,.... Either he shall be chastened with strong pains on his sick and dying bed; which is the reason why he neith...
But his flesh upon him shall have pain,.... Either he shall be chastened with strong pains on his sick and dying bed; which is the reason why he neither rejoices at the happiness of his family, nor is distressed at their misfortunes; having so much pain in his flesh and bones to endure himself; or, as Gussetius x renders it, "for this" his flesh and soul shall have pain and grief while he lives, because he cannot know how it will be with his family when he is dead; but rather this is to be understood of a man when dead; and so it is a continuation of the description of death, or of the state of the dead; thus Aben Ezra interprets it of his flesh upon him, that is, his body shall melt away, rot and corrupt, meaning in the grave; so the word is used of marring and destroying, in 2Ki 3:19, to which the Targum inclines,
"but his flesh, because of worms upon him, shall grieve;''
and so Jarchi, troublesome is the worm to a dead man as a needle in quick flesh; pain and grief are by a prosopopoeia or personification attributed to a dead body; signifying, that could it be sensible of its case, it would be painful and grievous to it:
and his soul within him shall mourn; either while he lives, because of his afflictions and terrors, the days being come in which he has no pleasure, and the time of death drawing nigh; or his dead body, as the word is used in Psa 16:10; said to mourn by the same figure; or his soul, because of his body being dead; or rather his breath, which at death fails and pines away y.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 14:17 This verb was used in Job 13:4 for “plasterers of lies.” The idea is probably that God coats or paints over the sins so that they are forg...

NET Notes: Job 14:18 The word יִבּוֹל (yibbol) usually refers to a flower fading and so seems strange here. The LXX and the Syria...

NET Notes: Job 14:19 The meaning for Job is that death shatters all of man’s hopes for the continuation of life.

NET Notes: Job 14:20 The subject of the participle is most likely God in this context. Some take it to be man, saying “his face changes.” Others emend the text...

NET Notes: Job 14:21 The verb is בִּין (bin, “to perceive; to discern”). The parallelism between “know” and “pe...

NET Notes: Job 14:22 In this verse Job is expressing the common view of life beyond death, namely, that in Sheol there is no contact with the living, only separation, but ...
Geneva Bible: Job 14:17 My transgression [is] sealed up in a ( i ) bag, and thou sewest up mine iniquity.
( i ) You lay them all together and do not allow any of my sins to ...

Geneva Bible: Job 14:18 And surely the mountain falling cometh to nought, and the ( k ) rock is removed out of his place.
( k ) He murmurs through the impatiency of the fles...

Geneva Bible: Job 14:22 But his ( l ) flesh upon him shall have pain, and his soul within him shall mourn.
( l ) Yet while he is in pain and misery.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 14:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Job 14:1-22 - --1 Job entreats God for favour, by the shortness of life, and certainty of death.7 He waits for his change.16 By sin the creature is subject to corrupt...
MHCC -> Job 14:16-22
MHCC: Job 14:16-22 - --Job's faith and hope spake, and grace appeared to revive; but depravity again prevailed. He represents God as carrying matters to extremity against hi...
Matthew Henry -> Job 14:16-22
Matthew Henry: Job 14:16-22 - -- Job here returns to his complaints; and, though he is not without hope of future bliss, he finds it very hard to get over his present grievances. I....
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 14:17-19; Job 14:20-22
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 14:17-19 - --
17 My transgression is sealed up in a bag,
And Thou hast devised additions to my iniquity.
18 But a falling mountain moveth indeed,
And a rock fa...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 14:20-22 - --
20 Thou siezest him for ever, then he passeth away;
Thou changest his countenance and castest him forth.
21 If his sons come to honour, he knoweth...
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 12:1--14:22 - --6. Job's first reply to Zophar chs. 12-14
In these chapters Job again rebutted his friends and t...
