
Text -- Job 17:1-4 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 17:1 - -- He speaks of the sepulchres of his fathers, to which he must be gathered. The graves where they are laid, are ready for me also. Whatever is unready, ...
He speaks of the sepulchres of his fathers, to which he must be gathered. The graves where they are laid, are ready for me also. Whatever is unready, the grave is ready for us: it is a bed soon made. And if the grave be ready for us, it concerns us, to be ready for the grave.

Wesley: Job 17:2 - -- Do not my friends, instead of comforting, mock me? Thus he returns to what he had said, Job 16:20, and intimates the justice of his following appeal.
Do not my friends, instead of comforting, mock me? Thus he returns to what he had said, Job 16:20, and intimates the justice of his following appeal.

Wesley: Job 17:3 - -- These words contain, an humble desire to God that he would be his surety, or appoint him a surety who should maintain his righteous cause against his ...
These words contain, an humble desire to God that he would be his surety, or appoint him a surety who should maintain his righteous cause against his opposers.

Be surety to me; whereof that was the usual gesture.

Wesley: Job 17:4 - -- Thou hast blinded the minds of my friends: therefore I desire a more wise and able judge.
Thou hast blinded the minds of my friends: therefore I desire a more wise and able judge.

Wesley: Job 17:4 - -- Thou wilt not give them the victory over me in this contest, but wilt make them ashamed of their confidence.
Thou wilt not give them the victory over me in this contest, but wilt make them ashamed of their confidence.
Result of elephantiasis. But UMBREIT, "my strength (spirit) is spent."

Life is compared to an expiring light. "The light of my day is extinguished."

JFB: Job 17:2 - -- UMBREIT, more emphatically, "had I only not to endure mockery, in the midst of their contentions I (mine eye) would remain quiet."
UMBREIT, more emphatically, "had I only not to endure mockery, in the midst of their contentions I (mine eye) would remain quiet."

JFB: Job 17:2 - -- Hebrew, "tarry all night"; a figure taken from sleep at night, to express undisturbed rest; opposed to (Job 16:20), when the eye of Job is represented...
Hebrew, "tarry all night"; a figure taken from sleep at night, to express undisturbed rest; opposed to (Job 16:20), when the eye of Job is represented as pouring out tears to God without rest.

JFB: Job 17:3 - -- Namely, a pledge or security; that is, be my surety; do Thou attest my innocence, since my friends only mock me (Job 17:2). Both litigating parties ha...
Namely, a pledge or security; that is, be my surety; do Thou attest my innocence, since my friends only mock me (Job 17:2). Both litigating parties had to lay down a sum as security before the trial.

JFB: Job 17:3 - -- Provide a surety for me (in the trial) with Thee. A presage of the "surety" (Heb 7:22), or "one Mediator between God and man" (see on Job 16:21).

JFB: Job 17:3 - -- "who else (save God Himself) could strike hands with me?" that is, be my security (Psa 119:122). The Hebrew strikes the hand of him for whom he goes s...
"who else (save God Himself) could strike hands with me?" that is, be my security (Psa 119:122). The Hebrew strikes the hand of him for whom he goes security (Pro 6:1).

JFB: Job 17:4 - -- Rather imperative, "exalt them not"; allow them not to conquer [UMBREIT], (Isa 6:9-10).
Rather imperative, "exalt them not"; allow them not to conquer [UMBREIT], (Isa 6:9-10).
Clarke: Job 17:1 - -- My breath is corrupt - Rather, My spirit is oppressed, רוחי חבלה ruchi chubbalah : My days are extinct, and the sepulchral cells are ready...
My breath is corrupt - Rather, My spirit is oppressed,

Clarke: Job 17:2 - -- Are there not mockers with me? - This has been variously translated. The Vulgate: "I have not sinned, and yet my eye dwells upon afflictions."Septua...
Are there not mockers with me? - This has been variously translated. The Vulgate: "I have not sinned, and yet my eye dwells upon afflictions."Septuagint: "I conjure you, laboring under afflictions, what evil have I done? Yet strangers have robbed me of my substance."Mr. Good: "But are not revilers before me? Alas, mine eye penetrateth their rebukes."Calmet thinks the Hebrew might be translated thus: "If I have not been united in friendship with the wicked, why are my eyes in bitterness?"Coverdale translates both verses thus: My breth fayleth, my dayes are shortened, I am harde at deathes dore. I have disceaved no man, yet must myne eye continue in hevynesse. Mr. Heath "Were it not so, I have sarcasms enow in store; and I could spend the whole night unmoved at their aggravations."The general meaning is sufficiently plain, and the reader has got translations enough.

Clarke: Job 17:3 - -- Lay down now - Deposit a pledge; stake your conduct against mine, and your life and soul on the issue; let the cause come before God, let him try it...
Lay down now - Deposit a pledge; stake your conduct against mine, and your life and soul on the issue; let the cause come before God, let him try it; and see whether any of you shall be justified by him, while I am condemned.

Clarke: Job 17:4 - -- For thou hast hid their heart - This address is to God; and here he is represented as doing that which in the course of his providence he only permi...
For thou hast hid their heart - This address is to God; and here he is represented as doing that which in the course of his providence he only permits to be done

Clarke: Job 17:4 - -- Shalt thou not exalt them - This was exactly fulfilled: not one of Job’ s friends was exalted; on the contrary, God condemned the whole; and th...
Shalt thou not exalt them - This was exactly fulfilled: not one of Job’ s friends was exalted; on the contrary, God condemned the whole; and they were not received into the Divine favor till Job sacrificed, and made intercession for them.
TSK: Job 17:1 - -- breath is corrupt : or, spirit is spent, Job 19:17
my days : Job 6:11, Job 42:16; Isa 57:16
the graves : Job 17:13, Job 17:14; Psa 88:3-5; Isa 38:10-1...
breath is corrupt : or, spirit is spent, Job 19:17
my days : Job 6:11, Job 42:16; Isa 57:16
the graves : Job 17:13, Job 17:14; Psa 88:3-5; Isa 38:10-14

TSK: Job 17:2 - -- mockers : Job 12:4, Job 13:9, Job 16:20, Job 21:3; Psa 35:14-16; Mat 27:39-44
continue : Heb. lodge, Psa 25:13, Psa 91:1 *marg.
provocation : 1Sa 1:6,...
mockers : Job 12:4, Job 13:9, Job 16:20, Job 21:3; Psa 35:14-16; Mat 27:39-44

TSK: Job 17:3 - -- put me : Job 9:33; Gen 43:9, Gen 44:32; Pro 11:15, Pro 20:16; Heb 7:22
strike : Pro 6:11, Pro 11:15 *marg. Pro 17:18, Pro 22:26

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Job 17:1 - -- My breath is corrupt - Margin or "spirit is spent."The idea is, that his vital powers were nearly extinct; his breath failed; his power was wea...
My breath is corrupt - Margin or "spirit is spent."The idea is, that his vital powers were nearly extinct; his breath failed; his power was weakened, and he was ready to die. This is connected with the previous chapter, and should not have been separated from it. There was no necessity of making a new chapter here, and we have one of those unfortunate breaks in the middle of a paragraph, and almost of a sentence, which are too common in the Scriptures.
The graves are ready for me - The Hebrew is plural, but why so used I know not. The Vulgate is singular - sepulchrum. The Septuagint renders it, "I pray for a tomb (singular,

Barnes: Job 17:2 - -- And doth not mine eye continue in their provocation? - Margin "lodge."This is the meaning of the Hebrew word used here - נלן tālan ....
And doth not mine eye continue in their provocation? - Margin "lodge."This is the meaning of the Hebrew word used here -

Barnes: Job 17:3 - -- Lay down now - This is evidently an address to God - a repetition of the wish which he had so often expressed, that he might be permitted to br...
Lay down now - This is evidently an address to God - a repetition of the wish which he had so often expressed, that he might be permitted to bring his cause directly before him; see Job 13:3. The whole passage here is obscure, because we are in a great measure ignorant of the ancient practices in courts of law, and of the ancient forms of trial. The general sense seems to be, that Job desires the Deity to enter into a judicial investigation, and to give him a "pledge"- or, as we should say, a "bond,"or "security"- that he would not avail himself of his almighty power, but would place him on an equality in the trial, and allow him to plead his cause on equal terms; see the notes at Job 13:20-22. The phrase "lay down now"means, lay down a pledge, or something of that kind; and may have referred to some ancient custom of giving security on going to trial, that no advantage would be taken, or that the parties would abide by the decision in the case.
Put me in a surety with thee - The word used here (
Who is he that will strike hands with me? - Striking hands then, as now, seems to have been one mode of confirming an agreement, or ratifying a compact. The idea here is,"Who is there that will be surety to me for thee?"that is, for the faithful observance of right and justice. There is an appearance of irreverence in this language, but it arises from carrying out the ideas pertaining to a form of trial in a court. In entering into "sureties,"it was usual to unite hands; see Pro 6:1 :
My son, if thou be surety for thy friend,
If thou hast stricken thy hand with a stranger.
So Pro 17:18 :
A man void of understanding striketh hands,
And becometh surety in the presence of his friend
Compare Pro 11:15; Pro 22:26. The same custom prevailed in the times of Homer and of Virgil. Thus, Homer (Iliad,
-
Pou de4 -
-
And so Virgil (Aeneid 4:597) says;
- en dextra fidesque .

Barnes: Job 17:4 - -- For thou hast hid their heart from understanding - That is, the heart of his professed friends. Job says that they were blind and perverse, and...
For thou hast hid their heart from understanding - That is, the heart of his professed friends. Job says that they were blind and perverse, and indisposed to render him justice; and he therefore pleads that he may carry his cause directly before God. He attributes their want of understanding to the agency of God in accordance with the doctrine which prevailed in early times, and which is so often expressed in the Scriptures, that God is the source of light and truth, and that when people are blinded it is in accordance with his wise purposes; see Isa 6:9-10. It is "because"they were thus blind and perverse, that he asks the privilege of carrying the cause at once up to God - and who could blame him for such a desire?
Therefore thou shalt not exalt them - By the honor of deciding a case like this, or by the reputation of wisdom. The name of sage or "wise"man was among the most valued in those times; but Job says that that would not be awarded to his friends. God would not exalt or honor people thus devoid of wisdom.
Poole: Job 17:1 - -- My breath is corrupt i.e. it stinks, as it doth in dying persons. Or, my spirit is corrupted , or spent, or lost, i.e. my vital spirits and natural...
My breath is corrupt i.e. it stinks, as it doth in dying persons. Or, my spirit is corrupted , or spent, or lost, i.e. my vital spirits and natural powers are wasted; my soul is ready to leave the body.
My days are extinct the lamp of my life is wasted, and upon the point of going out, and that in a snuff.
The graves i.e. the grave; the plural number being put for the singular, as sepulchres , 2Ch 21:20 , cities , Jud 12:7 , asses , Zec 9:9 , are put for one of each of these.
Are ready for me open their mouths as ready to receive me. The sense and scope of this verse is the same with the former.

Poole: Job 17:2 - -- Do not my friends, instead of comforting, mock and abuse me, as if I had made use of religion only as a cloak to my wickedness? Heb. If there be no...
Do not my friends, instead of comforting, mock and abuse me, as if I had made use of religion only as a cloak to my wickedness? Heb. If there be not mockers with me , understand, let God do so or so to me. It is a form of an oath, which is defectively expressed, after the manner of the Hebrews. Assuredly I am in the midst of cruel mockers, which is a sore aggravation of my affliction. Thus he returns to what he had said Job 16:20 , and intimates the necessity and justice of his following appeal, which otherwise might be thought too bold.
Mine eye either,
1. The eyes of my body. Do they not continue to provoke me to my face? Or rather,
2. The eye of my mind. Their provoking scoffs and reproaches do not only molest me in the day-time, when they are with me, but lodge with me in the night, and are continually in my thoughts, and break my sleep, and disturb me in dreams. And therefore if I be a little disordered, I may be excused.

Poole: Job 17:3 - -- He turneth his speech either to Eliphaz, who spoke last; or rather to God, as is evident from the matter and scope of the words, and from the next v...
He turneth his speech either to Eliphaz, who spoke last; or rather to God, as is evident from the matter and scope of the words, and from the next verse. These words contain either,
1. A humble desire to God that he would appoint him a surety, who should undertake for his friends; that they should refer the cause in difference between them to God or to some other person, who should determine the matter in God’ s name, and according to God’ s will; or that God would be his Surety, or appoint him a surety who should maintain his righteous cause against his opposers; for so this phrase is oft used, as Psa 119:121,122 Isa 38:14 . And some expound this, as they did Job 16:21 , of Christ Jesus, who was called our Surety , Heb 7:22 ; appoint, I pray thee, my Surety (i.e. Christ, who is now) with thee, to plead my cause. Or rather,
2. An appeal from God unto God, or a kind of challenge or desire of debating his cause with God; which, though it savoureth of too much boldness and irreverence to God, yet seeing Job expresseth the same desire almost in the same manner, Job 9:33,34 , and is sharply reproved by God for contending with him, Job 40:2 , I know no inconvenience of ascribing the same thing to him here. So the sense is, Because I am not able to deal with thee immediately, considering the dread of thy majesty, my only desire is, that thou wouldst deal with me upon fair and equal terms, as if thou wert a man like myself, and appoint some man who shall in thy name and stead determine the time and place for the trial of my cause with thee. And this suits well enough with the two following verses, because his friends were without understanding, Job 17:4 , and partial, Job 17:5 ; therefore he desires to cease discoursing with them, and to debate his cause with God, who was just and impartial, and also would be favourable to him.
Strike hands with me i.e. agree and promise, or be surety to me; whereof that was the usual gesture, Pro 6:1,2 17:18 22:26 .

Poole: Job 17:4 - -- Thou hast blinded the minds of my friends, that they can not see those truths which are most plain and evident to all men of sense and experience; t...
Thou hast blinded the minds of my friends, that they can not see those truths which are most plain and evident to all men of sense and experience; therefore I desire a more wise and able judge.
Therefore shalt thou not exalt them i.e. thou wilt not give them the victory over me in this contest, but wilt give sentence for me, and discharge them, and make them ashamed of their confidence in affirming falsehoods of thee, and punish them severely for their miscarriage. It is a usual figure, whereby much more is understood than is expressed.
Haydock: Job 17:1 - -- Spirit. Hebrew, "breath is corrupt," (Haydock) or spent. I cannot breathe without the greatest difficulty. (Calmet) ---
Only. Septuagint, "But ...
Spirit. Hebrew, "breath is corrupt," (Haydock) or spent. I cannot breathe without the greatest difficulty. (Calmet) ---
Only. Septuagint, "But I want the grave, and do not obtain it." (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 17:2 - -- Not sinned. That is, I am not guilty of such sins as they charge me with. (Challoner) ---
Hebrew, "the wicked were not with me" in friendship at a...
Not sinned. That is, I am not guilty of such sins as they charge me with. (Challoner) ---
Hebrew, "the wicked were not with me" in friendship at any time. Protestants, " Are there not mockers with me?" (Haydock) ---
Job was doubly afflicted, with corporal pain and calumny: yet hopeth in God. (Worthington)

Haydock: Job 17:3 - -- Fight. I am secure under thy protection. Hebrew, "who will strike hands with me?" or stand bondsman for my debt? (Proverbs vi. 1.) Who will take ...
Fight. I am secure under thy protection. Hebrew, "who will strike hands with me?" or stand bondsman for my debt? (Proverbs vi. 1.) Who will take my place? You accuse me of weakness and of impiety: but how would you act, if you were treated in the same manner? (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 17:4 - -- Understanding. They will not answer for me. They are not of such a generous disposition; nor can they distinguish between the punishment of guilt a...
Understanding. They will not answer for me. They are not of such a generous disposition; nor can they distinguish between the punishment of guilt and the trial of virtue. (Calmet)
Gill: Job 17:1 - -- My breath is corrupt,.... Through the force of his disease, which made it have an ill smell, so that it was strange and disagreeable to his wife, Job ...
My breath is corrupt,.... Through the force of his disease, which made it have an ill smell, so that it was strange and disagreeable to his wife, Job 19:17; passing through his lungs, or other parts, which were affected with some disorder, or as frequently is the case of dying persons, and so Job thought himself to be. The word n used has the signification of pain, even of the pains of a woman in travail; and so may signify, that Job drew his breath with great pain, as people troubled with an asthma do, or dying persons in the hiccups, or just fetching their last breath; or "my spirit" o, as it may be rendered, that is, his vital spirits which were exhausted and spent, there were scarce any left in him; or "my mind" p, or soul, which was overwhelmed with grief, and so disturbed, that he was not himself, but in a manner distracted with the terrors of God, and the severity of his hand upon him:
my days are extinct; here Job corrects himself; he had spoken of a few years before, but it is as if he should say now, why do I talk of a few years, when I have but a few days to live, and even those are as good as gone? meaning not only his days of prosperity, which were at an entire end, as he thought, but the days of his natural life; the lamp of life was almost burnt out, the oil was spent, the wick was just extinguished, it was like the snuff of a candle going out:
the graves are ready for me; the place of his fathers' sepulchres, the burial place of his ancestors, where many graves were; or he may have respect to various things into which the dead are put, as into so many graves; as besides their being rolled up in linen, as was the way of the eastern countries, there was the coffin, a sort of a grave, and which sometimes was made of stone; and then the place dug in the earth, more properly called the grave, and often over that a sepulchral monument was erected; so that there was grave upon grave. Job does not seem to have any respect to the usage of kings, and great personages, preparing stately monuments for themselves while living, such as the pyramids of Egypt, built by and for their kings, as is supposed; for the words "are ready" are not in the text, only supplied, though they are also by the Targum; they are very short and significant in the original text, "the graves for me", or they are mine; the grave is my property, my house, where I expect shortly to be, and there to abide and dwell until the resurrection, and which was desirable to him; "a grave to me"; that is all that I desire, or can expect; here he wished to be, as he did not doubt he quickly should be; and it is as if he should say, I am ready for that, and so Jarchi paraphrases it; and happy is the man that is ready for the grave, for death, and eternity, for the coming of his Lord, having the grace of God wrought in him, and the righteousness of his living Redeemer on him, which was Job's case; such an one shall go into the nuptial chamber at once, and be received into everlasting habitations.

Gill: Job 17:2 - -- Are there not mockers with me?.... Meaning not irreligious persons, such as make a mock at sin, a jest of religion, a laugh at good men, sneer at the...
Are there not mockers with me?.... Meaning not irreligious persons, such as make a mock at sin, a jest of religion, a laugh at good men, sneer at the doctrines and ordinances of God, and scoff at things future, as the coming of Christ, the resurrection of the dead, and a future judgment; with whom it is very uncomfortable to be, as well as with any sort of profane men, and such there were no doubt in Job's time; but he seems to design his friends, by whom be thought himself mocked, and who were, as he imagined, scorners of him, Job 12:4; and therefore for this reason entreats his case might be heard, and his cause pleaded:
and doth not mine eye continue in their provocation? or "lodge all night" q; his sense is, that they were continually provoking him with their words, their scoffs and jeers, their censures and calumnies, and the weak reasons and arguments they made use of to support their charges and suspicions; these dwelt upon his mind not only in the daytime but in the night, so that he could not get a wink of sleep for them; their words were so teasing and distressing, and they acted such a cruel part to him, and stuck so close to him, and hung upon his thoughts, that he could not get clear of them in the night season; but his mind ran upon them, which kept him waking, that he could not close his eyelids for thinking of them.

Gill: Job 17:3 - -- Lay down now,.... A pledge that thou wilt provide a surety, appoint and admit one to plead for me, and that thou wilt hear my cause, and determine it;...
Lay down now,.... A pledge that thou wilt provide a surety, appoint and admit one to plead for me, and that thou wilt hear my cause, and determine it; or "put now", or "put, I pray thee" r, thy heart and mind to me and my case, to my petition and request, and grant it:
put me in a surety with thee; appoint, provide, and place a surety for me with thee, and let him appear to do his work and office: such an one Jesus Christ is; he is of God the Father's appointing to be the Mediator between God and men, and who himself voluntarily engaged and agreed to be the surety of the better testament; and this was known to the Old Testament saints, and to Job; and his prayer was the prayer of faith: and this work and office Christ performs; he was surety for his people from eternity, he drew nigh to God on their account, and struck hands with his Father, or covenanted and agreed with him about the salvation of his people, and the manner of it; he gave his word, his bond, to his Father for them, that he would save them; and upon that suretyship engagement of Christ all the Old Testament saints were pardoned, justified, and glorified; he promised and bound himself to pay all their debts, to satisfy for all their sins, to bring in an everlasting righteousness for them, and to bring them all safe to heaven and happiness; in order to which, he put himself in their room and stead, and laid down his life a ransom for them; upon which Job might say, and so may every believer, what follows,
who is he that will strike hands with me? that will enter the lists, litigate and dispute the point with me, or bring any charge or accusation against me, having such a surety to answer for me, such an advocate to plead my cause, such a Mediator between God and man, who has made reconciliation for sin, brought in everlasting righteousness, and satisfied law and justice, see Rom 8:33; or else the sense is, "who is he", besides him that is a surety of God's appointing and providing, "can strike bands with me?" or be a surety for me? there is no other Mediator, Saviour, or Redeemer, besides him; if he had not undertaken the cause of his people, and the redemption of them, it must have ceased for ever, no other was equal to such a work; so that here is another reason used with the Lord to provide a surety, since no other could to any purpose.

Gill: Job 17:4 - -- For thou hast hid their heart from understanding,.... That is, the hearts of his friends, and therefore they were unfit to undertake his cause, or be ...
For thou hast hid their heart from understanding,.... That is, the hearts of his friends, and therefore they were unfit to undertake his cause, or be sureties for him, or be judges in it. It is the same thing as to hide understanding from their hearts, which God sometimes does in a natural sense; when men like not the knowledge of him, as attainable by the light of nature, he gives them up to reprobate minds, minds void of knowledge and judgment in things natural; and sometimes, in a spiritual sense, he hides men's hearts from the knowledge of things divine and evangelical, and even this he does from the wise and prudent of this world; yea, sometimes he hides the knowledge of his providential dealings with men from his own people, as he did from Asaph, Jeremiah, Habakkuk, and others; and, as it seems, from Job's friends, who therefore mistook his case, and were very unfit and insufficient to determine it:
therefore shalt thou not exalt them; to such honour and dignity, to be umpires, arbitrators, or judges in the case of Job; this God had reserved for another, Elihu, or rather himself, who decided the controversy between Job and his friends, and declared in his favour, and that they had not spoken the thing that was right of him, as his servant Job had done, Job 42:7;

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 17:1 The plural “graves” could be simply an intensification, a plural of extension (see GKC 397 §124.c), or a reference to the graveyard. ...

NET Notes: Job 17:2 The meaning of הַמְּרוֹתָם (hammÿrotam) is unclear, and the versions offer no h...

NET Notes: Job 17:3 The idiom is “to strike the hand.” Here the wording is a little different, “Who is he that will strike himself into my hand?”

NET Notes: Job 17:4 The object “them” is supplied. This is the simplest reading of the line, taking the verb is an active Polel. Some suggest that the subject...
Geneva Bible: Job 17:2 [Are there] not ( a ) mockers with me? and doth not mine eye continue in ( b ) their provocation?
( a ) Instead of comfort, being now at death's door...

Geneva Bible: Job 17:3 ( c ) Lay down now, put me in a surety with thee; who [is] he [that] ( d ) will strike hands with me?
( c ) He reasons with God as a man beside himse...

Geneva Bible: Job 17:4 For thou hast hid their heart from ( e ) understanding: therefore shalt thou not exalt [them].
( e ) That these my afflictions are your just judgment...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 17:1-16
TSK Synopsis: Job 17:1-16 - --1 Job appeals from men to God.6 The unmerciful dealing of men with the afflicted may astonish, but not discourage the righteous.11 His hope is not in ...
MHCC -> Job 17:1-9
MHCC: Job 17:1-9 - --Job reflects upon the harsh censures his friends had passed upon him, and, looking on himself as a dying man, he appeals to God. Our time is ending. I...
Matthew Henry -> Job 17:1-9
Matthew Henry: Job 17:1-9 - -- Job's discourse is here somewhat broken and interrupted, and he passes suddenly from one thing to another, as is usual with men in trouble; but we m...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 17:1-2; Job 17:3-5
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 17:1-2 - --
1 My breath is corrupt,
My days are extinct,
The graves are ready for me.
2 Truly mockery surrounds me,
And mine eye shall loiter over their dis...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 17:3-5 - --
3 Lay down now, be bondsman for me with Thyself;
Who else should furnish surety to me?!
4 For Thou hast closed their heart from understanding,
Th...
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 ...

Constable: Job 16:18--17:3 - --Job's desire for a representative in heaven 16:18-17:2
Job called on the earth not to co...
