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Text -- Job 22:24-30 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Look up to him, with chearfulness and confidence.
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Wesley: Job 22:27 - -- The word is, thou shalt multiply thy prayer. Under all thy burdens, in all thy wants, cares and fears, thou shalt send to heaven for wisdom, strength ...
The word is, thou shalt multiply thy prayer. Under all thy burdens, in all thy wants, cares and fears, thou shalt send to heaven for wisdom, strength and comfort.
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Wesley: Job 22:27 - -- Thou shalt obtain those blessings for which thou didst make vows to God, and therefore, according to thy obligation, shalt pay thy vows to him.
Thou shalt obtain those blessings for which thou didst make vows to God, and therefore, according to thy obligation, shalt pay thy vows to him.
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Wesley: Job 22:28 - -- Thy purposes shalt not be disappointed, but ratified by God. And in all thy counsels, and actions, God shall give thee the light of his direction and ...
Thy purposes shalt not be disappointed, but ratified by God. And in all thy counsels, and actions, God shall give thee the light of his direction and governance, and of comfort and success.
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All round about thee, in a time of general calamity.
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Wesley: Job 22:30 - -- _God will have so great a respect to thy innocency, that for thy sake he will deliver those that belong to thee, or live with thee, or near thee, thou...
_God will have so great a respect to thy innocency, that for thy sake he will deliver those that belong to thee, or live with thee, or near thee, thought in themselves they be ripe for destruction.
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Wesley: Job 22:30 - -- By thy prayers proceeding from a pure heart and conscience. So Eliphaz and his two friends, who in this matter were not innocent, were delivered by th...
By thy prayers proceeding from a pure heart and conscience. So Eliphaz and his two friends, who in this matter were not innocent, were delivered by the pureness of Job's hands, Job 42:8.
JFB: Job 22:24 - -- Rather, containing the protasis from the last clause of Job 22:23, "If thou regard the glittering metal as dust"; literally, "lay it on on the dust"; ...
Rather, containing the protasis from the last clause of Job 22:23, "If thou regard the glittering metal as dust"; literally, "lay it on on the dust"; to regard it of as little value as the dust on which it lies. The apodosis is at Job 22:25, Then shall the Almighty be, &c. God will take the place of the wealth, in which thou didst formerly trust.
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JFB: Job 22:24 - -- Rather, "precious" or "glittering metal," parallel to "(gold) of Ophir," in the second clause [UMBREIT and MAURER].
Rather, "precious" or "glittering metal," parallel to "(gold) of Ophir," in the second clause [UMBREIT and MAURER].
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JFB: Job 22:24 - -- Derived from a Hebrew word "dust," namely, gold dust. HEEREN thinks it a general name for the rich countries of the South, on the African, Indian, and...
Derived from a Hebrew word "dust," namely, gold dust. HEEREN thinks it a general name for the rich countries of the South, on the African, Indian, and especially the Arabian coast (where was the port Aphar. El Ophir, too, a city of Oman, was formerly the center of Arabian commerce). It is curious that the natives of Malacca still call their mines Ophirs.
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JFB: Job 22:24 - -- If thou dost let the gold of Ophir remain in its native valley among the stones of the brooks; that is, regard it as of little worth as the stones, &c...
If thou dost let the gold of Ophir remain in its native valley among the stones of the brooks; that is, regard it as of little worth as the stones, &c. The gold was washed down by mountain torrents and lodged among the stones and sand of the valley.
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JFB: Job 22:25 - -- Rather, as the same Hebrew means in Job 22:24 (see on Job 22:24) --Thy precious metals; God will be to thee in the place of riches.
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JFB: Job 22:25 - -- Rather, "And shall be to thee in the place of laboriously-obtained treasures of silver" [GESENIUS]. Elegantly implying, it is less labor to find God t...
Rather, "And shall be to thee in the place of laboriously-obtained treasures of silver" [GESENIUS]. Elegantly implying, it is less labor to find God than the hidden metals; at least to the humble seeker (Job 28:12-28). But [MAURER] "the shining silver."
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JFB: Job 22:27 - -- Which thou hast promised to God in the event of thy prayers being heard: God will give thee occasion to pay the former, by hearing the latter.
Which thou hast promised to God in the event of thy prayers being heard: God will give thee occasion to pay the former, by hearing the latter.
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JFB: Job 22:29 - -- Rather, When (thy ways; from Job 22:28) are cast down (for a time), thou shalt (soon again have joyful cause to) say, There is lifting up (prosperity ...
Rather, When (thy ways; from Job 22:28) are cast down (for a time), thou shalt (soon again have joyful cause to) say, There is lifting up (prosperity returns back to me) [MAURER].
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JFB: Job 22:29 - -- Hebrew, "him that is of low eyes." Eliphaz implies that Job is not so now in his affliction; therefore it continues: with this he contrasts the blesse...
Hebrew, "him that is of low eyes." Eliphaz implies that Job is not so now in his affliction; therefore it continues: with this he contrasts the blessed effect of being humble under it (Jam 4:6; 1Pe 5:5 probably quote this passage). Therefore it is better, I think, to take the first clause as referred to by "God resisteth the proud." When (men) are cast down, thou shalt say (behold the effects of) pride. Eliphaz hereby justifies himself for attributing Job's calamities to his pride. "Giveth grace to the humble," answers to the second clause.
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JFB: Job 22:30 - -- That is, "dwelling." But the Hebrew expresses the negative (1Sa 4:21); translate "Thus He (God) shall deliver him who was not guiltless," namely, one,...
That is, "dwelling." But the Hebrew expresses the negative (1Sa 4:21); translate "Thus He (God) shall deliver him who was not guiltless," namely, one, who like Job himself on conversion shall be saved, but not because he was, as Job so constantly affirms of himself, guiltless, but because he humbles himself (Job 22:29); an oblique attack on Job, even to the last.
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JFB: Job 22:30 - -- Rather, "he (the one not heretofore guiltless) shall be delivered through the purity (acquired since conversion) of thy hands"; by thy intercession (a...
Rather, "he (the one not heretofore guiltless) shall be delivered through the purity (acquired since conversion) of thy hands"; by thy intercession (as Gen 18:26, &c.). [MAURER]. The irony is strikingly exhibited in Eliphaz unconsciously uttering words which exactly answer to what happened at last: he and the other two were "delivered" by God accepting the intercession of Job for them (Job 42:7-8).
Clarke: Job 22:24 - -- Then shalt thou lay up gold as dust - The original is not fairly rendered in this translation, ושית על עפר בצר veshith al aphar batser ...
Then shalt thou lay up gold as dust - The original is not fairly rendered in this translation,
Coverdale is different from all: We shal give the an harvest which, in plenty and abundance, shal exceade the dust of the earthe, and the golde of Ophir like ryver stones.
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Clarke: Job 22:25 - -- Thou shalt have plenty of silver - Here again the versions and critics vary. The critics may disagree; but the doctrine of Eliphaz is sufficiently p...
Thou shalt have plenty of silver - Here again the versions and critics vary. The critics may disagree; but the doctrine of Eliphaz is sufficiently plain: "To those whom God loves best he gives the most earthly good. The rich and the great are his high favorites: the poor and the distressed he holds for his enemies."In the above verses there seems to be a reference to the mode of obtaining the precious metals
1. Gold in dust
2. Gold in streams from the hills and mountains
3. Silver in mines;
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Clarke: Job 22:26 - -- For then shalt thou have thy delight - Thou shalt know, from thy temporal prosperity, that God favors thee; and for his bounty thou shalt be gratefu...
For then shalt thou have thy delight - Thou shalt know, from thy temporal prosperity, that God favors thee; and for his bounty thou shalt be grateful. How different is this doctrine from that of St. Paul and St. John! "Being justified by faith, we have peace with God, through our Lord Jesus.""Because ye are sons, God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts, crying, Abba, Father!""The Spirit himself beareth witness with our spirits that we are the children of God.""We glory in tribulation also, knowing that tribulation worketh patience; and patience, experience; and experience, hope: and hope maketh not ashamed, because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost, which is given unto us.""We love him because he first loved us."Tribulation itself was often a mark of God’ s favor.
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Clarke: Job 22:27 - -- Thou shalt make thy prayer unto him - תעתיר tatir , thou shalt open or unbosom thyself. And when the heart prays, God hears; and the person, b...
Thou shalt make thy prayer unto him -
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Clarke: Job 22:28 - -- Thou shalt also decree a thing - Whatsoever thou purposest in his strength, thou shalt be enabled to accomplish.
Thou shalt also decree a thing - Whatsoever thou purposest in his strength, thou shalt be enabled to accomplish.
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Clarke: Job 22:29 - -- When men are cast down - There is a great difficulty in this verse; the sense, however, is tolerably evident, and the following is nearly a literal ...
When men are cast down - There is a great difficulty in this verse; the sense, however, is tolerably evident, and the following is nearly a literal version: When they shall humble themselves, thou shalt say, Be exalted, or, there is exaltation: for the down-cast of eye he will save. The same sentiment as that of our Lord, "He that exalteth himself shall be abased; but he that humbleth himself shall be exalted."
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Clarke: Job 22:30 - -- He shall deliver the island of the innocent - The word אי ai , which we translate island, is most probably the Arabic particle (Arabic) whosoever...
He shall deliver the island of the innocent - The word
Thus ends Eliphaz the Temanite, who began with a tissue of the bitterest charges, continued with the most cruel insinuations, and ended with common-place exhortations to repentance, and promises of secular blessings in consequence: and from his whole speech scarcely can one new or important maxim be derived. Blessed be God for Moses and the prophets! for Jesus, the evangelists and the apostles! Their trumpet gives no uncertain sound: but by that of Job’ s friends who can prepare himself for the battle?
TSK: Job 22:24 - -- lay up : 1Ki 10:21; 2Ch 1:5, 2Ch 9:10, 2Ch 9:27
as dust : or, on the dust
Ophir : Gen 10:29; 1Ki 9:28, 1Ki 22:48; Psa 45:9; Isa 13:12
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TSK: Job 22:25 - -- the Almighty : Gen 15:1; Psa 18:2, Psa 84:11; Isa 41:10; Rom 8:31
defence : or, gold, Psa 16:5, Psa 16:6; Isa 33:6; 2Co 6:10; Jam 2:5
plenty of silver...
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TSK: Job 22:26 - -- shalt thou : Job 27:10, Job 34:9; Psa 37:4; Son 2:3; Isa 58:14; Rom 7:22
lift up : Job 11:15; Psa 25:1, Psa 86:4, Psa 143:8; 1Jo 3:20, 1Jo 3:21
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TSK: Job 22:27 - -- make thy : Psa 50:14, Psa 50:15, Psa 66:17, Psa 66:18-20, Psa 91:15, Psa 116:1; Isa 58:9; 1Jo 5:14, 1Jo 5:15
pay thy : Psa 56:12, Psa 66:13, Psa 66:14...
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TSK: Job 22:28 - -- decree : Psa 20:4, Psa 90:17; Lam 3:37; Mat 21:22; Jam 4:15
the light : Job 29:3; Psa 97:11, Psa 112:4; Pro 4:18; Isa 30:21; Mal 4:2; Joh 8:12
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TSK: Job 22:29 - -- men : Job 5:19-27; Psa 9:2, Psa 9:3, Psa 91:14-16, Psa 92:9-11
he shall : Pro 29:23; Isa 57:15; Luk 14:11, Luk 18:9-14; Jam 4:6; 1Pe 5:5
the humble pe...
men : Job 5:19-27; Psa 9:2, Psa 9:3, Psa 91:14-16, Psa 92:9-11
he shall : Pro 29:23; Isa 57:15; Luk 14:11, Luk 18:9-14; Jam 4:6; 1Pe 5:5
the humble person : Heb. him that hath low eyes, Psa 138:6; Isa 66:2; Eze 21:26, Eze 21:27; Luk 1:52
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TSK: Job 22:30 - -- He shall deliver the island of the innocent : or, The innocent shall deliver the island, Job 42:8; Gen 18:26-32; Isa 58:12; Jer 5:1; Act 27:24
purenes...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Job 22:24 - -- Then shalt thou lay up gold as dust - Margin, or, "on the dust."Dr. Good renders this, "Thou shalt then count thy treasure as dust"- implying t...
Then shalt thou lay up gold as dust - Margin, or, "on the dust."Dr. Good renders this, "Thou shalt then count thy treasure as dust"- implying that he would have much of it. Noyes, "Cast to the dust thy gold"- implying that he would throw his gold away as of no account, and put his dependence on God alone. Kim-chi, and, after him, Grotius, suppose that it means, "Thy gold thou shalt regard no more than dust, and gold of Ophir no more than the stones of the brook; God shall be to thee better than gold and silver."The editor of the Pictorial Bible supposes that there is here a distinct reference to the sources from which gold was for merly obtained, as being washed down among the stones of the brooks. The word rendered "gold"here
Hence, it properly refers to the metals in their crude state, and before they were subjected to the fire. Then it comes to mean precious metals, and is parallel with gold of Ophir in the other hemistich. The word occurs only in the following places; Job 22:24; Job 36:19, where it is rendered "gold,"and Job 22:25, where it is rendered "defense."The literal translation here would be, "Cast to the dust the precious metals; on the stones of the brooks (the gold of) Ophir."The Vulgate renders it, "He shall give for earth flint, and for flint golden torrents."The Septuagint, "Thou shalt be placed on a mount in a rock, and as a rock of the torrent of Ophir."Chaldaen: "And thou shalt place upon the dust thy strong tower
And the gold of Ophir as the stones of the brooks - Or, rather, "Cast the gold of Ophir to the stones of the valley, or let it remain in its native valley among the stones of the brook, as of no more value than they are."There is, probably, allusion here to the fact, that gold was then commonly found in such places, as it is often now. It was washed down by mountain torrents, and lodged among the stones of the valley, and was thence collected, and the sand being washed out, the gold remained. Ophir is uniformly mentioned in the Scriptures as a place abounding in gold, and as well known; see 1Ki 9:28; 2Ch 8:18; 2Ch 9:10; 1Ki 10:11; 1Ki 22:48; 1Ch 29:4. Much perplexity has been felt in reference to its situation, and the difficulty has not been entirely removed. In regard to the opinions which have been held on the point, the reader may consult the notes at Isa 13:12, the note in the Pictorial Bible on 2Ch 20:36, and the Dissertation of Martin Lipenius "de Ophir,"in Ugolin’ s Thesaur. Sacr. Ant. Tom. vii. pp. 262-387; also, the Dissertation of John C. Wichmanshausen, "de navigatione Ophiritica,"and Reland’ s Dissertation "de Ophir"in the same volume. From the mention of this place at a period so early as the time of Job, it is reasonable to suppose that it was not a very remote region, as there is no evidence that voyages were made then to distant countries, or that the knowledge of geography was very extensive. The presumption would be, that it was in the vicinity of Arabia.
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Barnes: Job 22:25 - -- Yea, the Almighty shall be - Or, rather, "then the Almighty shall be"- והיה ye hâyâh . The meaning is, that if he would return to...
Yea, the Almighty shall be - Or, rather, "then the Almighty shall be"-
Thy defense - Margin, "gold."The margin is the more correct translation. The word is the same which occurs in the previous verse
And thou shalt have plenty of silver - Margin, "silver of strength."The correct idea, however, is, "and the Almighty shall be treasures of silver unto thee;"that is, he shall be better to you than an abundance of the precious metals. The Hebrew is literally, "And silver of treasures unto thee."
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Barnes: Job 22:26 - -- Shalt thou have thy delight in the Almighty - Instead of complaining of him as you now do, you would then find calm enjoyment in contemplating ...
Shalt thou have thy delight in the Almighty - Instead of complaining of him as you now do, you would then find calm enjoyment in contemplating his character and his moral government. This is a correct account of the effects of reconciliation. He who becomes truly "acquainted"with God has pleasure in his existence and attributes; in his law and administration. No longer disposed to complain, he confides in him when he is afflicted; flees to him when he is persecuted; seeks him in the day of prosperity; prefers him to all that this world can give, and finds his supremest joys in turning away from all created good to hold communion with the Uncreated One.
And shalt lift up thy face unto God - An emblem of prosperity, happiness, and conscious innocence. We hang our face down when we are conscious of guilt; we bow the head in adversity. When conscious of uprightness; when blessed with prosperity, and when we have evidence that we are the children of God, we look up toward heaven. This was the natural condition of human beings - made to look upward, while all other animals look grovelling on the earth. So Milton describes the creation of man:
There wanted yet the master-work, the end
Of all yet done; a creature, who, not prone
And brute as other creatures, but endued
With sanctity of reason, might erect
His stature, and upright with front serene
Govern the rest, self-knowing; and from thence
Magnanimous to correspond with heaven,
But grateful to acknowledge whence his good
Directed in devotion, to adore
And worship God supreme, who made him chief
Of all his works.
Paradise Lost, B. vii.
The Classic reader will instantly recollect the description in Ovid:
Pronaque cum spectent animalia caetera terram;
Os homini sublime dedit; coelumque tueri
Jussit, et erectos ad sidera tollere vultus.
Meta. 1:84.
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Barnes: Job 22:27 - -- Thou shalt make thy prayer unto him - God would then hear him, for he would be righteous. This was one of the blessings which would follow reco...
Thou shalt make thy prayer unto him - God would then hear him, for he would be righteous. This was one of the blessings which would follow reconciliation. It is, in fact, one of the blessings of a return to God. He hears the cry of his people, and answers their supplications. To be permitted to go to God and to tell him all our needs, to plead for all we need and to implore blessings on our families and friends, is a privilege of far higher value than anything which wealth can bestow; is worth more than all the honors of this world.
And thou shalt pay thy vows - That is, thy vows shall be accepted; thou shalt obtain those blessings for which thou didst make thy vows.
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Barnes: Job 22:28 - -- Thou shalt also decree a thing, and it shall be established unto thee - Thou shalt form a purpose or plan, and it shall not be frustrated. It s...
Thou shalt also decree a thing, and it shall be established unto thee - Thou shalt form a purpose or plan, and it shall not be frustrated. It shall not be opposed by the events of divine Providence, but whatever you undertake shall prosper.
And the light shall shine upon thy ways - Thou shalt be prospered in all things, instead of being overtaken with calamity.
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Barnes: Job 22:29 - -- When men are cast down - The meaning of this is, probably, when people are usually cast down, or in the times of trial and calamity, which pros...
When men are cast down - The meaning of this is, probably, when people are usually cast down, or in the times of trial and calamity, which prostrate others, you shall find support. You shall then be enabled to say, "there is lifting up, or there is support."Or, more probably still, it may mean, "in times when others are cast down and afflicted, thou shalt be able to raise them up, or to aid them. Thou shalt be able to go to them and say, ‘ Be of good cheer. Do not be cast down. There is consolation.’ And thou shalt be able to procure important blessings for them by thy counsels and prayers;"see the notes at Job 22:30.
And he shall save the humble person - That is, either, "Thou shalt save the humble person,"by a change from the second person to the third, which is not uncommon in Hebrew; or, "thou shalt be able from thine own experience to say, "He,"that is, "God,"will save the humble person, or the one that is cast down."Margin, "him that hath low eyes."The Hebrew is like the margin. In affliction the eyes are cast upon the ground; and so, also, a casting the eyes to the ground is indicative of dejection, of humility, or of modesty. It refers here to one who experiences trials; and Eliphaz says that Job would be able to save such an one; that is, to support him in his afflictions, and furnish the helps necessary to restore him again to comfort.
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Barnes: Job 22:30 - -- He shall deliver the island of the innocent - Margin, "the innocent shall deliver the island."Never was there a more unhappy translation than t...
He shall deliver the island of the innocent - Margin, "the innocent shall deliver the island."Never was there a more unhappy translation than this; and it is quite clear that our translators had no intelligible idea of the meaning of the passage. What can be meant by "saving the island of the innocent?"The word rendered island (
So it is rendered by the Chaldee, by Le Clerc, Rosenmuller, Gesenius, Noyes, and others. The Vulgate and the Septuagint render it, "He shall deliver the innocent."The sense is, that the man who returns to God, and who is regarded by him as his friend, will be able to intercede for the guilty, and to save them from the punishment which they deserved. His prayers and intercessions will be heard in their behalf, and on his account layouts will be shown to them, even when they did not personally deserve them. This sentiment accords with that expressed in Gen 18:26, "If I find in Sodom fifty righteous within the city, then I will spare all the place for their sakes;"Eze 14:14, "Though these three men, Noah, Daniel, and Job were in it, they should deliver but their own souls;"compare Eze 22:30; Jer 5:1. The sentiment, also, had a beautiful illustration, though one which Eliphaz did not here think of, in his own case and that of his friends, where this very Job, to whom he was giving this counsel, was directed to intercede for them; Job 42:7-8. The sentiment, indeed, is found every where in the Scriptures, that the righteous are permitted to pray for others, and that they are thus the means of bringing down important blessings on them. In answer to those prayers, multitudes are saved from calamity here, and will be brought to eternal life hereafter.
And it is delivered by the pureness of thine hands - Or, rather, he, i. e., the wicked, for whom you pray, will be delivered by the pureness of thine hands. That is, God will save him in answer to the prayers of a righteous man. Your upright and holy life; your pure hands stretched out in supplication, shall be the means of saving him. No one can tell how many blessings are conferred on wicked people because the righteous pray for them. No one can tell how many a wicked son is spared, and ultimately saved, in answer to the intercessions of a holy parent; nor can the wicked world yet know how much it owes its preservation, and the numberless blessings which it enjoys, to the intercessions of the saints. It is one of the innumerable blessings of being a child of God thus to be permitted to be the means of bringing down blessings on others, and saving sinners from ruin. All the friends of God may thus confer unspeakable benefits to others; and they who have "an interest at the throne of grace"should plead without ceasing for the salvation of guilty and dying people.
Poole: Job 22:24 - -- Gold solid or choice gold, as the word signifies.
As dust i.e. in great abundance. Or, upon the dust , or ground; it shall be so plentiful, and th...
Gold solid or choice gold, as the word signifies.
As dust i.e. in great abundance. Or, upon the dust , or ground; it shall be so plentiful, and therefore vile, that thou shalt not lock it up in chests and treasuries, but scatter it any where, and let it lie even upon the ground.
As the stones of the brook as plentifully as if the places of gold were but so many pebble stones, which are to be found in and near every brook. Or, for the stones , i.e. instead of them. Or, in the rock , or among the rocks : gold shall be so abundant, that thou mayst lay it any where, even upon or among the rocks.
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Poole: Job 22:25 - -- God by his special and watchful providence shall protect thee from all dangers and calamities. Heb.
thy defences or munitions . One God shall kee...
God by his special and watchful providence shall protect thee from all dangers and calamities. Heb.
thy defences or munitions . One God shall keep thee as safely as many munitions.
Plenty of silver Heb. silver of strength , i.e. which by God’ s blessing shall be thy defence, Ecc 7:12 . Or, silver of heights , i.e. high and heaped up like a mountain.
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Poole: Job 22:26 - -- For— so this verse contains a reason why he might confidently expect all those former outward blessings, because he should have God’ s favo...
For— so this verse contains a reason why he might confidently expect all those former outward blessings, because he should have God’ s favour, which is the spring and foundation of them. Or, surely , or, yea, moreover ; for this particle chi is sometimes used by way of aggravation, or amplification, as Gen 45:26 1Sa 14:41 Isa 7:9 32:13 . And this suits very well here; yea, God will do greater things than these for thee.
Thou shalt have thy delight in the Almighty thou shalt find delight not only in these outward comforts, but also and especially in God, whose face shall shine upon thee; who shall give time these things not in anger and wrath, as he doth to wicked men, but as pledges of his love and favour to thee, and of those greater and eternal blessings which he hath in store for thee; and accordingly thou shalt delight thyself in worshipping, enjoying, obeying, and serving God in and with all his mercies.
Shalt lift up thy face unto God i.e. look up to him by meditation and prayer, not as now thou dost, with horror and grief, which is signified by a dejected countenance, 2Sa 2:22 Luk 18:13 ; but with cheerfulness and confidence, as this phrase oft notes, as Luk 21:28 . See Poole "Job 11:15" .
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Poole: Job 22:27 - -- Hear thee i.e. answer thy prayers, and not disregard them, and hide himself from thee, as now he doth.
Thou shalt pay thy vows i.e. thou shalt obta...
Hear thee i.e. answer thy prayers, and not disregard them, and hide himself from thee, as now he doth.
Thou shalt pay thy vows i.e. thou shalt obtain those blessings for which thou didst make vows to God, and therefore, according to thy obligation, shalt pay thy vows to him. The antecedent is here supposed and understood out of the consequent.
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Poole: Job 22:28 - -- Thy purposes and designs shall not be disappointed, but effected and ratified by God; which is a great satisfaction. In all thy counsels, and course...
Thy purposes and designs shall not be disappointed, but effected and ratified by God; which is a great satisfaction. In all thy counsels, and courses, and actions, God shall give thee the light of his direction and governance, and of comfort and success; and thou shalt not be in such a dark, and doubtful, and perplexed condition as now thou art.
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Poole: Job 22:29 - -- When men are cast down Heb. When they (i.e. they who do this work. It is an indefinite and impersonal speech, which is very common in the Hebrew la...
When men are cast down Heb. When they (i.e. they who do this work. It is an indefinite and impersonal speech, which is very common in the Hebrew language) shall cast down or overthrow ; either,
1. Proud and wicked men, as may be guessed by the opposition of the humble and innocent, who should be saved, whilst these were destroyed. So the sense is, When there shall come a general calamity, which shall sweep away all the wicked round about them. Or,
2. Thee, or thine; which pronoun is oft understood. So the sense is, When through God’ s permission thou shalt be brought into some trouble, which God sees fit for thee.
Thou shalt say within thyself, with good assurance and confidence.
There is lifting up or, There shall be lifting up, either,
1. For them; if they repent and humble themselves, they shall be preserved or restored. And this thou wilt assure them of from thy own experience. Or,
2. For thee and thine; God will deliver thee, when others are crushed and destroyed. And ; or, for ; this particle being oft put causally, as hath been formerly noted. So the following words contain a reason why he might confidently say, that there would be such a lifting up for a person so humbled.
He i.e. God, unto whom only salvation belongeth, Psa 3:8 .
Shall save either,
1. Eternally; or,
2. Temporally, to wit, from the evils here mentioned.
The humble person Heb. him that hath low or cast-down eyes ; which phrase may here note, either,
1. Humility and lowliness of mind and disposition, as pride is oft expressed by high or lofty looks, as Psa 18:27 101:5 131:1 Pro 6:17 . And so this is a tacit admonition and reproof for Job, whom for his confident justification of himself, and his contemptuous expressions and censures concerning them, they judged to Job guilty of intolerable pride of heart. Or,
2. Lowness of estate or condition, as Jam 1:10 . So it notes him whose eyes and countenance are dejected by reason of his great troubles and miseries; as, on the contrary, prosperity makes persons lift up their eyes and faces.
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Poole: Job 22:30 - -- He i.e. God, as Job 22:29 , whose prerogative it is to give deliverances.
Shall deliver to wit, upon thy request, as the following clause showeth: ...
He i.e. God, as Job 22:29 , whose prerogative it is to give deliverances.
Shall deliver to wit, upon thy request, as the following clause showeth: God will hear thy prayers even for others, which is a great honour and comfort; and much more for thyself.
The island of the innocent not only thyself, when thou shalt become innocent and pure, but for thy sake he will deliver the whole island (or country, that word being oft used not only for such lands or countries as were separated from Canaan by the sea, as is commonly observed, but also for such as were upon the same continent with it, as appears from Gen 10:5 Psa 72:10 97:1 Isa 41:5 ) in which thou dwellest. Or, the guilty , or him that is not innocent ; for the word here rendered island is sometimes used for not , in Scripture, as 1Sa 4:21 Pro 31:4 . So the sense is, God will have so great a respect to thy innocency and purity, that for thy sake he will deliver those that belong to thee, or live with thee, or near thee, though in themselves they be sinful creatures, and ripe for destruction. See Gen 18:32 .
It is delivered to wit, the island; or, he , i.e. the guilty person.
By the pureness of thine hands i.e. by thy prayers proceeding from a pure heart and conscience. When thou shalt lift up pure hands to God in prayer, as it is expressed, 1Ti 2:8 ; whereby as he asserts the prevalency of the righteous man’ s prayers with God for mercy, both for himself and others; and by this argument he persuadeth Job to repentance; so withal he allegeth this as an argument or evidence that Job did not stretch out pure hands to God in prayer, as he pretended, because his prayers could not prevail for the preservation of himself or his children, and much less for others at a greater distance.
Haydock: Job 22:24 - -- Gold, to build and adorn thy habitation, ver. 23. Hebrew, "He will give thee gold instead of dust; (or more abundant) yea, gold of the torrents of O...
Gold, to build and adorn thy habitation, ver. 23. Hebrew, "He will give thee gold instead of dust; (or more abundant) yea, gold of the torrents of Ophir." The Phasis is said to roll gold dust, which is of the purest kind, Genesis ii. 11. (Calmet) ---
"Thou shalt lay upon gold as dust, and the gold of Ophir, as the stones of the brooks." (Protestants) (Haydock) ---
This is an exaggeration, (3 Kings x. 27.; Calmet) and a sort of proverb, intimating that strength and plenty should succeed to infirmity. The foundations should be the hard rock, instead of earth, &c.
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Haydock: Job 22:25 - -- Silver. Septuagint, "But he shall purify thee, as silver, which has passed the fire." (Haydock)
Silver. Septuagint, "But he shall purify thee, as silver, which has passed the fire." (Haydock)
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Face, with confidence of being in favour and accepted. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Job 22:27 - -- Vows, after obtaining thy requests. (Menochius) ---
Et positis aris jam vota in littore solves. (Virgil, Æneid iii.)
Vows, after obtaining thy requests. (Menochius) ---
Et positis aris jam vota in littore solves. (Virgil, Æneid iii.)
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Haydock: Job 22:28 - -- Decree. Thy projects shall succeed. Septuagint, "But he shall appoint for thee the rule of justice." (Haydock)
Decree. Thy projects shall succeed. Septuagint, "But he shall appoint for thee the rule of justice." (Haydock)
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Haydock: Job 22:29 - -- Glory, as the gospel declares, Matthew xxiii. 12. The Hebrew is more perplexed. "When men are cast down, then thou shalt say, there is lifting ...
Glory, as the gospel declares, Matthew xxiii. 12. The Hebrew is more perplexed. "When men are cast down, then thou shalt say, there is lifting up;" (Protestants; Haydock) or "when thy eyes shall be cast down, they shall say to thee, Arise." (Calmet)
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Haydock: Job 22:30 - -- Innocent. Hebrew, "He shall deliver even the man who is not innocent, and that for the sake of the purity of thy hands." (Chaldean; Junius, &c.) --...
Innocent. Hebrew, "He shall deliver even the man who is not innocent, and that for the sake of the purity of thy hands." (Chaldean; Junius, &c.) ---
God will even spare the guilty, to manifest the regard which he has for the intercession of the saints. These interpreters have taken ai in the same sense as ain, which is the case, 1 Kings iv. 21. (Calmet) ---
Others explain, "He shall deliver the island of the innocent, and it is delivered by the pureness of thine hands." (Protestants) This also would shew the merit and protection of the saints, as a whole island may owe its safety to one of God's servants. In effect, the would stands by the prayers of the saints. (Haydock) ---
All that has been said from ver. 21 tends to shew that God favours his friends; and, consequently, that he would never have punish Job, if he had not been guilty. (Calmet)
Gill: Job 22:24 - -- Then shalt thou lay up gold as dust,.... Have such plenty of it, as not to be counted:
and the gold of Ophir as the stones of the brooks; which wa...
Then shalt thou lay up gold as dust,.... Have such plenty of it, as not to be counted:
and the gold of Ophir as the stones of the brooks; which was reckoned the best, probably in Arabia; not in the East and West Indies, which were not known to Job; though some take this to be an exhortation to despise riches, and as a dissuasion from covetousness, rendering the words, "put gold upon the dust", or earth i, and trample upon it, as a thing not esteemed by thee, as Sephorno interprets it; make no more account of it than of the dust of the earth; let it be like dirt unto thee, "and among the stones of the brooks", Ophir k; that is, the gold of Ophir, reckon no more of it, though the choicest gold, than the stones of the brook; or thus, "put gold for dust, and the gold of Ophir for the flint of the brooks" l; esteem it no more than the dust of the earth, or as flint stones; the latter clause I should choose rather to render, "and for a flint the rivers of Ophir", or the golden rivers, from whence the gold of Ophir was; and it is notorious from historians, as Strabo m and others, that gold is taken out of rivers; and especially from the writers of the history of the West Indies n.
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Gill: Job 22:25 - -- Yea, the Almighty shall be thy defence,.... In temporal things, secure the plenty of gold and silver possessed of; surround and protect by his provide...
Yea, the Almighty shall be thy defence,.... In temporal things, secure the plenty of gold and silver possessed of; surround and protect by his providence, that there shall be no danger of the Sabeans and Chaldeans, or others, breaking in and stealing it away; and, in spirituals, preserve from all enemies, sin, Satan, and the world; be a wall of fire about him, his fortress, his tower, and place of defence; or keep him as in a garrison, through faith unto salvation; or, as others render the words, "and let the Almighty be", or "he shall be thy gold", or "golds" o; all thy gold, the same word being used as in Job 22:24; treat earthly riches, gold and silver, with contempt, and reckon God to be thy truest riches: esteem him as gold, and more precious than that, and put thy confidence in him; his grace is compared to gold, for its lustre, value, and duration, and is more precious than gold that perisheth, Rev 3:18; the righteousness of Christ is, for its excellency, called the gold of Ophir, and clothing of wrought gold, Psa 45:9; and he himself is much more precious than the gold of Ophir, and the gain that comes by him than fine gold, Son 5:11; the doctrines of the grace of God are comparable to gold, silver, and precious stones; yea, to be preferred unto them, 1Co 3:12. God is instead of all riches to his people; and they that have an interest in him share in the riches of grace, and are entitled to the riches of glory; all are theirs:
and thou shall have plenty of silver; or God shall be, or "let him be to thee silver of strength" p; or instead of silver, which is the strength of men, in which they confide for business or war; but God is to his people infinitely more than what silver or gold can be to them.
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Gill: Job 22:26 - -- For then shall thou have thy delight in the Almighty,.... In the perfections of his nature, in the works of his hands, in his word and worship, in com...
For then shall thou have thy delight in the Almighty,.... In the perfections of his nature, in the works of his hands, in his word and worship, in communion with him, and in the relation he stands in to his people as their covenant God and Father; this would be the case when Job should be more and better acquainted with God, and with the law or doctrine his month, and the words of his lips, and should return unto him with his whole heart; and when his affections should be taken off of all earthly riches; when he should look upon gold as dust, and the gold of Ophir as the stones of the brook, and God should be to him his gold and his silver; then, and not till then, could he have true delight and complacency in God:
and shalt lift up thy face unto God; in prayer, as Sephorno interprets it, with an holy confidence, boldness, and cheerfulness; as a believer in Christ may, having on his righteousness, and having his heart sprinkled from an evil conscience by his blood; such an one can appear before God, and lift up his face to him, as without spot, so without confusion, shame, and blushing, without a load of guilt upon him, without fear of wrath or punishment, and of being repulsed; see Job 11:15.
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Gill: Job 22:27 - -- Thou shalt make thy prayer unto him,.... To God, and him only; for not a creature, angels, or men, are to be prayed to; and this is to be done in a su...
Thou shalt make thy prayer unto him,.... To God, and him only; for not a creature, angels, or men, are to be prayed to; and this is to be done in a supplicating, entreating way, as the word signifies; not pleading merit, but mercy, not presenting prayers and supplications for a man's own righteousness' sake, but for the Lord's mercy's sake, and for the sake of Christ and his righteousness; and prayer is to be made in this manner frequently, to be multiplied, as the word also signifies; prayer should be made always, and without ceasing; and this is not only a duty, but a privilege; and as such it is here observed, even as a benefit and blessing to be enjoyed; as it is when a man can come to God as his Father, through Christ the Mediator, with boldness and confidence, in the faith of him, and to God as on a throne of grace, where he may find grace and mercy to help him in time of need, and especially it is so when attended with the success following:
and he shall hear thee; as he does hear those that pray to him in the name of Christ, in the exercise of faith, and in the sincerity and uprightness of their hearts; and answers their requests, fulfils their desires, and gives them what they ask of him; for he is a God hearing prayer, and sooner or later, in his own time and way, grants the petitions of his people:
and thou shalt pay thy vows; the sacrifices of praise and thanksgiving which he promised to offer up to God, should he grant him the desires of his heart; and these being granted, he would be laid under obligation to perform his promises; so that this also is to be considered as a benefit and blessing; for it does not so much regard the payment of vows, as it is designed to observe to him that he should have that done for him which would be a sufficient ground and reason for paying his vows, or making good what he promised in the time of his distress; since what he then requested, and was the condition of his vow, should now be granted; see Psa 56:12.
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Gill: Job 22:28 - -- Thou shalt also decree a thing, and it shall be established unto thee,.... Strictly speaking, this is only true of God, whose decrees are unfrustrable...
Thou shalt also decree a thing, and it shall be established unto thee,.... Strictly speaking, this is only true of God, whose decrees are unfrustrable, whose counsel shall stand, and the thoughts of his heart be established to all generations; and frequently so it is, according to an usual saying, man appoints, but God disappoints; this may be understood of Job, either as a civil magistrate, that he should decree a thing in a court of judicature with so much wisdom and equity, that it should stand firm and sure, and, though made on earth, should be ratified in heaven, as the decrees and doctrines of the apostles of Christ are said to be, Mat 16:19; see Pro 8:15; or, as a private man in civil affairs, signifying that he should be so guided by the Lord, and prospered and succeeded in all his ways and works, that what he determined to do, and formed a scheme for the execution of, it should be brought about and confirmed; he committing his ways to the Lord, his thoughts should be established, or his purposes and designs effected, see Psa 1:3; or rather as a praying man; and so it agrees with what goes before, that he should lift up his voice to God, and pray unto him with success, and have just occasion to praise him, or pay his vows to him, since he should have the desires of his heart; whatever was upon his mind, and he prayed in faith for, he should have it; as Elijah prayed, both that it might not rain, and that it might rain, and both were according to his word, or the decree of his lips in prayer: see 1Ki 17:1;
and the light shall shine upon thy ways; which is the reason of all things prospering and succeeding, and being established according to his wish and will; the light of grace shining in him, to put him upon and instruct him in denying and avoiding that which is sinful, and doing that which was just and good; and the light of the word without him, being a light unto his feet, and a lamp to his paths, to guide and direct him, and especially the light of God's favour and blessing on him, succeeding him in all his ways and works, and making them prosperous.
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Gill: Job 22:29 - -- When men are cast down,.... Wicked men are brought down from a state of prosperity to a state of adversity, are in low circumstances, great straits a...
When men are cast down,.... Wicked men are brought down from a state of prosperity to a state of adversity, are in low circumstances, great straits and difficulties:
then thou shall say, there is lifting up; that is, for himself and his; when others are in adversity, he should be in prosperity; when others are cast down into a very low estate and distressed condition, he should be exalted to a very high estate, and be in affluent circumstances, see Psa 147:6; or else the sense is, when thou and thine, and what belong to thee, are humbled and brought low, then thou mayest promise thyself a restoration and change for the better; and boldly say, they will be lifted up, and raised up again, since God's usual method is to exalt the humble, and to abase the proud, Luk 14:11; or rather, this may respect the benefit and advantage that humble persons wound gain by Job, and his prayers for them, and may be rendered and interpreted thus: "when they have humbled" q themselves, and bowed themselves low at thy feet, and especially before God, "then thou shall say", pray unto God for them, that "there may be a lifting up", raising them up out of their low estate, and thou shall be heard:
and he shall save the humble person; that is, "low of eyes" r, humble in his eyes; who is so pressed with troubles and distress, that he hangs down his head, looks upon the ground, and will not lift up his eyes, but is of a dejected countenance; or that is low in his own eyes, has humble thoughts of himself, esteems others better than himself, and lies low before God under a sense of his sinfulness and unworthiness, and casts himself entirely upon the grace and mercy of God; such an one he saves, in a spiritual sense, out of his troubles and afflictions; he does not forget the cry of such humble ones, but remembers them, and grants their desires: and he saves the lowly and humble with a spiritual and eternal salvation; gives more grace unto them, and outfits them for glory, and at last gives glory itself; raises them on high to sit among princes, and to inherit the throne of glory; the meek shall inherit the earth, the new heavens and earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness, Jam 4:6.
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Gill: Job 22:30 - -- He shall deliver the island of the innocent,.... But where is there such an island, an island of innocent persons? it seems to be better rendered by o...
He shall deliver the island of the innocent,.... But where is there such an island, an island of innocent persons? it seems to be better rendered by others, "the innocent shall deliver the island" s: good men are sometimes, by their counsel and advice, and especially by their prayers, the means of delivering an island or country from ruin and destruction: but the word rendered "island" is a negative particle, as in 1Sa 4:21; and signifies "not"; and so in the Targum; which is
"a man that is not innocent shall be delivered:''
in like manner Jarchi interprets it, and so do Noldius t and others u; and the sense is, that Job, for he is the person spoken of, as appears from the following clause, should not only be beneficial by his prayers, to humble and good men, but even to the wicked, such as were not innocent and free from fault and punishment, but guilty, and obnoxious to wrath and ruin; and yet such should escape it, at least for the present, through the prayers and intercession of Job; or God should do this for Job's sake and his prayers:
and it is, or "he is"
delivered by the pureness of thine hands; either by his good works, setting a good example, which, being followed, would be the means of the prevention of present ruin; or by his lifting up pure and holy hands in prayer to God for a sinful people; which God often attends to and hears, and so delivers them from destruction; as the Israelites were delivered through the prayer of Moses, when they had made the golden calf, and worshipped it; see Psa 106:19; though sometimes God will not admit of an intercessor for such persons, Eze 14:20.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 22:24 The Hebrew text simply has “Ophir,” a metonymy for the gold that comes from there.
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NET Notes: Job 22:25 E. Dhorme (Job, 339) connects this word with an Arabic root meaning “to be elevated, steep.” From that he gets “heaps of silver.R...
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NET Notes: Job 22:26 This is the same verb as in Ps 37:4. G. R. Driver suggests the word comes from another root that means “abandon oneself to, depend on” (...
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NET Notes: Job 22:30 The MT has “he will escape [or be delivered].” Theodotion has the second person, “you will be delivered.”
Geneva Bible: Job 22:24 Then shalt thou lay up gold as ( s ) dust, and the [gold] of Ophir as the stones of the brooks.
( s ) Which will be in abundance like dust.
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Geneva Bible: Job 22:28 Thou shalt also decree a thing, and it shall be established unto thee: and the ( t ) light shall shine upon thy ways.
( t ) That is, the favour of Go...
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Geneva Bible: Job 22:29 ( u ) When [men] are cast down, then thou shalt say, [There is] lifting up; and he shall save the humble person.
( u ) God will deliver his when the ...
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Geneva Bible: Job 22:30 He shall deliver the ( x ) island of the innocent: and it is delivered by the pureness of thine hands.
( x ) God will deliver a whole country from pe...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 22:1-30
TSK Synopsis: Job 22:1-30 - --1 Eliphaz shews that man's goodness profits not God.5 He accuses Job of divers sins.21 He exhorts him to repentance, with promises of mercy.
Maclaren -> Job 22:26-29
Maclaren: Job 22:26-29 - --What Life May Be Made
For then shalt thou have thy delight in the Almighty, and shalt lift up thy face unto God. 27. Thou shalt make thy prayer unto ...
MHCC -> Job 22:21-30
MHCC: Job 22:21-30 - --The answer of Eliphaz wrongly implied that Job had hitherto not known God, and that prosperity in this life would follow his sincere conversion. The c...
Matthew Henry -> Job 22:21-30
Matthew Henry: Job 22:21-30 - -- Methinks I can almost forgive Eliphaz his hard censures of Job, which we had in the beginning of the chapter, though they were very unjust and unkin...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 22:21-25; Job 22:26-30
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 22:21-25 - --
21 Make friends now with Him, so hast thou peace;
Thereby good will come unto thee.
22 Receive now teaching from His mouth,
And place His utteran...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Job 22:26-30 - --
26 For then thou shalt delight thyself in the Almighty,
And lift up they countenance to Eloah;
27 If thou prayest to Him, He will hear thee,
And ...
Constable: Job 22:1--27:23 - --D. The Third cycle of Speeches between Job and His Three Friends chs. 22-27
In round one of the debate J...
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Constable: Job 22:1-30 - --1. Eliphaz's third speech ch. 22
In his third speech Eliphaz was even more discourteous than he ...
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