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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 16:2 - -- These things are but vulgar and trivial. And so are all creatures, to a soul under deep conviction of sin, or the arrest of death.
These things are but vulgar and trivial. And so are all creatures, to a soul under deep conviction of sin, or the arrest of death.

Wesley: Job 16:3 - -- When wilt thou put an end to these impertinent discourses? He retorts upon him his charge, Job 15:2-3.
When wilt thou put an end to these impertinent discourses? He retorts upon him his charge, Job 15:2-3.
"Words of wind," Hebrew. He retorts upon Eliphaz his reproach (Job 15:2).

JFB: Job 16:3 - -- Literally, "What wearies you so that ye contradict?" that is, What have I said to provoke you? &c. [SCHUTTENS]. Or, as better accords with the first c...
Literally, "What wearies you so that ye contradict?" that is, What have I said to provoke you? &c. [SCHUTTENS]. Or, as better accords with the first clause, "Wherefore do ye weary yourselves contradicting?" [UMBREIT].
Clarke: Job 16:2 - -- I have heard many such things - These sayings of the ancients are not strange to me; but they do not apply to my case: ye see me in affliction; ye s...
I have heard many such things - These sayings of the ancients are not strange to me; but they do not apply to my case: ye see me in affliction; ye should endeavor to console me. This ye do not; and yet ye pretend to do it! Miserable comforters are ye all.

Clarke: Job 16:3 - -- What emboldeneth thee - Thou art totally ignorant of the business; what then can induce thee to take part in this discussion?
What emboldeneth thee - Thou art totally ignorant of the business; what then can induce thee to take part in this discussion?
TSK: Job 16:2 - -- heard : Job 6:6, Job 6:25, Job 11:2, Job 11:3, Job 13:5, Job 19:2, Job 19:3, Job 26:2, Job 26:3; Jam 1:19
miserable : or, troublesome, Job 13:4; Psa 6...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Job 16:2 - -- Many such things - That is, either things fitted to provoke and irritate, or sentiments that are common-place. There was nothing new in what th...
Many such things - That is, either things fitted to provoke and irritate, or sentiments that are common-place. There was nothing new in what they said, and nothing to the purpose.
Miserable comforters - Compare Job 13:4. They had come professedly to condole with him. Now all that they said was adapted only to irritate, and to deepen his distress. He was disappointed; and he was deeply wounded and grieved.

Barnes: Job 16:3 - -- Shall vain words? - Margin, As in Hebrew words of wind; that is, words which were devoid of thought-light, trifling. This is a retort on Elipha...
Shall vain words? - Margin, As in Hebrew words of wind; that is, words which were devoid of thought-light, trifling. This is a retort on Eliphaz. He had charged Job Job 15:2-3 with uttering only such words. Such forms of expression are common in the East. "His promise, it is only wind.""Breath, breath: all breath."Roberts.
Or what emboldeneth thee? - " What provokes or irritates thee, that thou dost answer in this manner? What have I said, that has given occasion to such a speech - a speech so severe and unkind?"The Syriac reads this, "do not afflict me any more with speeches; for if you speak any more, I will not answer you."
Poole: Job 16:2 - -- I have heard many such things both from you, who do so odiously repeat the same things, and from divers others; for these things, though you pride an...
I have heard many such things both from you, who do so odiously repeat the same things, and from divers others; for these things, though you pride and please yourselves in them, as if you had made some great and strange discoveries, are but vulgar and trivial.
Miserable comforters instead of giving me those comforts which you pretend to do, Job 15:11 , and which my condition loudly calls for, you feed me with terrors, and censures, and scoffs.

Poole: Job 16:3 - -- When wilt thou put an end to these idle and impertinent discourses? He retorts upon him his charge against Job, Job 15:2,3 .
That thou answerest t...
When wilt thou put an end to these idle and impertinent discourses? He retorts upon him his charge against Job, Job 15:2,3 .
That thou answerest to wit, so or in such manner, so censoriously, and opprobriously, and peremptorily. What secret grounds hast thou for thy confidence? Thy arguments are flashy and weak; if thou hast any stronger, produce them.
Haydock: Job 16:2 - -- Comforters. "Job's friends or comforters," are become proverbial, to denote people who do the contrary to what they seem to promise. (Haydock) ---
...
Comforters. "Job's friends or comforters," are become proverbial, to denote people who do the contrary to what they seem to promise. (Haydock) ---
Never did men sustain worse the character of comforters. They all magnify their knowledge and piety, and make the most absurd application of their principles to Job's condition. (Calmet) ---
He was not ignorant that tyrants and wicked men were often, may generally till the age in which he lived, visited with visible judgments. (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 16:3 - -- Windy, inconclusive arguments. They all entertain a mean opinion of their adversaries, as they did not agree in the application of the propositions....
Windy, inconclusive arguments. They all entertain a mean opinion of their adversaries, as they did not agree in the application of the propositions. Hence though they might be true, they were nothing to their present purpose, chap. xv. 3. (Haydock) ---
Trouble. You can speak without any pain: but the case is far different with me. (Menochius) ---
Hebrew, "what emboldeneth thee to answer?" (Haydock) ---
Who asks thee for advice? (Calmet) ---
True friends will give it without upbraiding, or laying false crimes to the charge of any one. (Worthington)
Gill: Job 16:1 - -- Then Job answered and said. As soon as Eliphaz had done speaking, Job stood up, and made the following reply.
Then Job answered and said. As soon as Eliphaz had done speaking, Job stood up, and made the following reply.

Gill: Job 16:2 - -- I have heard many such things,.... As those Eliphaz has been discoursing of, concerning the punishment of wicked men; many instances of this kind had ...
I have heard many such things,.... As those Eliphaz has been discoursing of, concerning the punishment of wicked men; many instances of this kind had been reported to him from his preceptors, and from his parents, and which they had had from theirs, as well as Eliphaz had from his; and he had heard these things, or such like, told "many times" from one to another, as Ben Gersom interprets it; or "frequently", as the Vulgate Latin version, yea, he had heard them his friends say many things of this kind; so that there was nothing new delivered, nothing but what was "crambe millies cocta", the same thing over and over again; insomuch that it was not only needless and useless, but nauseous and disagreeable, and was far from carrying any conviction with it, or tracing weight and influence upon him; that he only gave it the hearing, and that was all, and scarce with any patience, it being altogether inapplicable to him: that wicked men were punished for their sins, he did not deny; and that good men were also afflicted, was a very plain case; and that neither good nor hatred, or an interest in the favour of God or not, were not known by these things; nor could any such conclusion be fairly drawn, that because Job was afflicted, that therefore he was a bad man:
miserable comforters are ye all; his friends came to comfort him, and no doubt were sincere in their intentions; they took methods, as they thought, proper to answer such an end; and were so sanguine as to think their consolations were the consolations of God, according to his will; and bore hard upon Job for seeming to slight them, Job 15:11; to which Job here may have respect; but they were so far from administering divine consolation, that they were none at all, and worse than none; instead of yielding comfort, what they said added to his trouble and affliction; they were, as it may be rendered, "comforters of trouble", or "troublesome comforters" k, which is what rhetoricians call an oxymoron; what they said, instead of relieving him, laid weights and heavy pressures upon him he could not bear; by suggesting his afflictions were for some enormous crime and secret sin that he lived in the commission of; and that he was no other than an hypocrite: and unless he repented and reformed, he could not expect it would be better with him; and this was the sentiment of them one and all: so to persons under a sense of sin, and distressed about the salvation of their souls, legal preachers are miserable comforters, who send them to a convicting, condemning, and cursing law, for relief; to their duties of obedience to it for peace, pardon, and acceptance with God; who decry the grace of God in man's salvation, and cry up the works of men; who lay aside the person, blood, and righteousness of Christ, the consolation of Israel, and leave out the Spirit of God the Comforter in their discourses; and indeed all that can be said, or directed to, besides the consolation that springs from God by Christ, through the application of the Spirit, signifies nothing; for if any comfort could be had from any other, he would not be, as he is called, the God of all comfort; all the creatures and creature enjoyments, even the best are broken cisterns, and like the deceitful brooks Job compares his friends to, Job 6:15, that disappoint when any expectations of comfort are raised upon them.

Gill: Job 16:3 - -- Shall vain words have an end?.... Or "words of wind" k, vain empty words, great swelling words of vanity, mere bubbles that look big, and have nothing...
Shall vain words have an end?.... Or "words of wind" k, vain empty words, great swelling words of vanity, mere bubbles that look big, and have nothing in them; here Job retorts what Eliphaz had insinuated concerning him and his words, Job 15:2; and he intimates such worthless discourses should have an end, and a speedy one, and not be carried on to any length, they not bearing it; and wishes they were at an end, that he might hear no more of them; and suggests that it was weak and foolish in them to continue them; that if they could speak to no better purpose, it would be best to be silent:
or what emboldeneth thee that thou answerest? when men are engaged in a good cause, have truth on their side, and are furnished with arguments sufficient to defend it, this animates and emboldens them to stand up in the defence of it, and to answer their adversaries, and to reply when there is occasion; but Job could not imagine what should encourage and spirit up Eliphaz to answer again, when he had been sufficiently confuted; when his cause was bad, and he had no strong reasons to produce in the vindication of it; or "what has exasperated" or "provoked thee" l to make reply? here Job seems to have thought that he had said nothing that was irritating, though it is notorious he had, such were his grief and troubles; and so well assured he was of his being in the right, that the harsh and severe words and expressions he had used were not thought by him to have exceeded due bounds, such as Job 12:2.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 16:1 In the next two chapters we have Job’s second reply to Eliphaz. Job now feels abandoned by God and by his friends, and so complains that this al...


NET Notes: Job 16:3 The LXX seems to have gone a different way: “What, is there any reason in vain words, or what will hinder you from answering?”
Geneva Bible -> Job 16:3
Geneva Bible: Job 16:3 Shall ( a ) vain words have an end? or what emboldeneth thee that thou answerest?
( a ) Which serve for vain ostentation and for no true comfort.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 16:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Job 16:1-22 - --1 Job reproves his friends for unmercifulness.17 He maintains his innocency.
MHCC -> Job 16:1-5
MHCC: Job 16:1-5 - --Eliphaz had represented Job's discourses as unprofitable, and nothing to the purpose; Job here gives his the same character. Those who pass censures, ...
Matthew Henry -> Job 16:1-5
Matthew Henry: Job 16:1-5 - -- Both Job and his friends took the same way that disputants commonly take, which is to undervalue one another's sense, and wisdom, and management. Th...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 16:1-5
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 16:1-5 - --
1 Then began Job, and said:
2 I have now heard such things in abundance,
Troublesome comforters are ye all!
3 Are windy words now at an end,
Or ...
Constable: Job 15:1--21:34 - --C. The Second Cycle of Speeches between Job and His Three Friends chs. 15-21
In the second cycle of spee...

Constable: Job 16:1--17:16 - --2. Job's second reply to Eliphaz chs. 16-17
This response reflects Job's increasing disinterest ...
