
Text -- Job 21:3 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 21:3
Barnes: Job 21:3 - -- Suffer me that I may speak - Allow me to speak without interruption, or bear with me while I freely express my sentiments - it is all that I no...
Suffer me that I may speak - Allow me to speak without interruption, or bear with me while I freely express my sentiments - it is all that I now ask.
And after that I have spoken, mock on - Resume your reproaches, if you will, when I am done. I ask only the privilege of expressing my thoughts on a very important point, and when that is done, I will allow you to resume your remarks as you have done before, and you may utter your sentiments without interruption. Or it may be, that Job utters this in a kind of triumph, and that he feels that what he was about to say was so important that it would end the "argument;"and that all they could say after that would be mere mockery and reviling. The word rendered "mock on"(
Poole -> Job 21:3
Poole: Job 21:3 - -- Suffer me that I may speak without such interruption as you have given me, Job 20:2 ; and if I do not defend my cause with solid and convincing argum...
Suffer me that I may speak without such interruption as you have given me, Job 20:2 ; and if I do not defend my cause with solid and convincing arguments, go on in your scoffs if you please.
Gill -> Job 21:3
Gill: Job 21:3 - -- Suffer me that I may speak,.... To go on with his discourse, without any interruption, until he had finished it; as he before craves their attention, ...
Suffer me that I may speak,.... To go on with his discourse, without any interruption, until he had finished it; as he before craves their attention, here he entreats their patience to hear him out, as well as to give him leave to begin; they might by their gestures seem as if they were breaking up and departing; or they raised a tumultuous clamour, to hinder his proceeding to reply; or he might fear, that if he was allowed to speak, they would break in upon him before he had done, as they had already; or "bear me", as several of the Jewish commentators explain the phrase; though what he was going to say might sit heavy upon their minds, and be very burdensome, grating, and uneasy to them; yet he entreats they would endure it patiently, until he had made an end of speaking:
and after that I have spoken, mock on; as they had already, Job 12:4; they had mocked not at his troubles and afflictions, but at his words and arguments in vindication of his innocence; and now all he entreats of them is, that they would admit him to speak once more, and to finish his discourse; and then if they thought fit, or if they could, to go on with their scoffs and derisions of him; if he could but obtain this favour, he should be easy, he should not regard their mockings, but bear them patiently; and he seems to intimate, that he thought he should be able to say such things to them, that would spoil their mocking, and prevent it for the future; so the Greek version renders it, "thou shalt not laugh"; and the words being singular have led many to think, that Zophar, who spoke last, is particularly intended, though it may respect everyone of his friends.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 21:1-34
TSK Synopsis: Job 21:1-34 - --1 Job shews that even in the judgment of man he has reason to be grieved.7 Sometimes the wicked prosper, though they despise God.16 Sometimes their de...
MHCC -> Job 21:1-6
MHCC: Job 21:1-6 - --Job comes closer to the question in dispute. This was, Whether outward prosperity is a mark of the true church, and the true members of it, so that ru...
Matthew Henry -> Job 21:1-6
Matthew Henry: Job 21:1-6 - -- Job here recommends himself, both his case and his discourse, both what he suffered and what he said, to the compassionate consideration of his frie...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 21:1-6
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 21:1-6 - --
1 Then began Job, and said:
2 Hear, oh hear, my speech,
And let this be instead of your consolations.
3 Suffer me, and I will speak,
And after I...
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 21:1-34 - --6. Job's second reply to Zophar ch. 21
After the first cycle of speeches, Job responded to a poi...
