
Text -- Job 25:4 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Job 25:4
Wesley: Job 25:4 - -- The word signifies man that is miserable, which supposes him to be sinful; and shall such a creature quarrel with that dominion of God, to which the s...
The word signifies man that is miserable, which supposes him to be sinful; and shall such a creature quarrel with that dominion of God, to which the sinless, and happy, and glorious angels submit? God - Before God's tribunal, to which thou dost so boldly appeal.
JFB -> Job 25:4
(Job 4:17-18; Job 14:4; Job 15:14).
Clarke -> Job 25:4
Clarke: Job 25:4 - -- How then can man be justified? - Or, ונה umah , With what, shall a man be justified with God? Though this is no conclusion from Bildad’ s p...
How then can man be justified? - Or,
Defender -> Job 25:4
Defender: Job 25:4 - -- This is essentially the same argument (Job 25:4-6) conveyed to Eliphaz by the deceiving spirit (Job 4:17-19), and then made to Job by Eliphaz (Job 15:...
This is essentially the same argument (Job 25:4-6) conveyed to Eliphaz by the deceiving spirit (Job 4:17-19), and then made to Job by Eliphaz (Job 15:14-16). Bildad here repeats it."
TSK -> Job 25:4
TSK: Job 25:4 - -- How then : Job 4:17-19, Job 9:2, Job 15:14-16; Psa 130:3, Psa 143:2; Rom 3:19, Rom 3:20, Rom 5:1
how can : Job 14:3, Job 14:4; Psa 51:5; Zec 13:1; Eph...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 25:4
Barnes: Job 25:4 - -- How then can man be justified with God? - see Job 4:17-18; Job 15:15-16. Instead of meeting the facts to which Job had appealed, all that Bilda...
How then can man be justified with God? - see Job 4:17-18; Job 15:15-16. Instead of meeting the facts to which Job had appealed, all that Bildad could now do was to repeat what had been said before. It shows that he felt himself unable to dispose of the argument, and yet that he was not willing to confess that he was vanquished.
Or how can he be clean? - This sentiment had been expressed by Job himself, Job 14:4. Perhaps Bildad meant now to adopt it as undoubted truth, and to throw it back upon Job as worthy of his special attention. It has no bearing on the arguments which Job had advanced, and is utterly irrelevant except as Bildad supposed that the course of argument maintained by Job implied that he supposed himself to be pure.
Poole -> Job 25:4
Poole: Job 25:4 - -- Man: the word signifies man that is miserable, which supposeth him to be sinful; and that such a creature should quarrel with that dominion of God, t...
Man: the word signifies man that is miserable, which supposeth him to be sinful; and that such a creature should quarrel with that dominion of God, to which the sinless, and happy, and glorious angels willingly submit, is most absurd and impious.
With God i.e. before God’ s tribunal, to which thou dost so boldly appeal. Thou mayst plead thy cause with thy fellow worms, as we are, and expect to be justified; but woe to thee if the great God undertake to plead his cause against thee! how severely and certainly wouldst thou then be condemned!
That is born of a woman to wit, after the ordinary course; for otherwise Christ was born of a woman, but in a singular manner. This birth is alleged as an evidence of man’ s filthiness, Job 14:4 15:14 Psa 51:5 , and of his liableness to God’ s curse and wrath, Gen 3:16 Eph 2:2 , and consequently of his condemnation, opposite to the justification here mentioned, and confidently expected by Job in this contest.
Haydock -> Job 25:4
Haydock: Job 25:4 - -- Clean. Job had used a similar expression, as well as Eliphaz, chap. iv. 17., and xiv. 4., and xv. 15. The holy man did not assert that he was free ...
Clean. Job had used a similar expression, as well as Eliphaz, chap. iv. 17., and xiv. 4., and xv. 15. The holy man did not assert that he was free from sin, but only that God did not punish him (Calmet) so dreadfully (Haydock) on that account, and that he has just reasons for afflicting his servants, if it were only to manifest his own power and glory. (Calmet)
Gill -> Job 25:4
Gill: Job 25:4 - -- How then can man be justified with God? Since he sees all his ways and works, his secret as well as open sins; either be more just than he, as Eliphaz...
How then can man be justified with God? Since he sees all his ways and works, his secret as well as open sins; either be more just than he, as Eliphaz expresses it, Job 4:17; which no man in his senses will say; or just as he is, and upon a level with him, or in comparison of him, or before him, and in his sight: and this is what Job himself denies, Job 9:2; for however righteous a man may be in his own sight, or in the sight of others, he cannot of himself be justified in the sight of God; nor can any be justified with him by his own righteousness, because the best righteousness of man is imperfect; and, if Bildad thought this was the sentiment of Job, he mistook him; for, what he meant by coming to the seat of God, and ordering his cause before him, Job 23:2; to which Bildad seems to refer, and being judged by him, when he doubted not but he should be acquitted, was no other than the justification of his cause, and not of his person before God; or that he should be cleared of the imputation of hypocrisy, and of being the sinner and wicked man, and guilty of very bad things, though secret and private, for which he was afflicted; for otherwise Job knew full well that he could not be justified with God by his own personal righteousness, for he knew himself to be a sinner, and owns it; nor did he think himself perfect, and his righteousness a complete one; and therefore he expected not to be justified by it; he knew his living Redeemer, and believed in him for righteousness, and expected the justification of his person, and his acceptance with God, only by him; and in this way there are many that are justified with God secretly, "in foro Dei", in the court of God, and in his sight, who always beholds his people as righteous in Christ, and openly, "in foro conscientiae", in the court of conscience, when they believe in him; and who will be publicly justified, and declared righteous, at the day of judgment:
or how can he be clean that is born of a woman? which suggests a doctrine that Job as firmly believed as Bildad did, that all men are unclean by natural generation, or as they are born into the world; their ancestors being such, the more immediate, and the more remote, which may be traced back to the first man and woman, Job 14:4; so that as no man is clean and pure as God is, or in comparison of him, or in his sight; they can neither be naturally clean, nor so of themselves, by any means or methods they can make use of; but then they may be, as many are, clean by the blood of Christ, and grace of God, through which his people are cleansed from all their sins, and all their iniquities, and are without spot before the throne and in the sight of God.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Job 25:4
NET Notes: Job 25:4 Bildad here does not come up with new expressions; rather, he simply uses what Eliphaz had said (see Job 4:17-19 and 15:14-16).
Geneva Bible -> Job 25:4
Geneva Bible: Job 25:4 How then can man ( c ) be justified with God? or how can he be clean [that is] born of a woman?
( c ) That is, be just in respect to God?

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 25:1-6
MHCC -> Job 25:1-6
MHCC: Job 25:1-6 - --Bildad drops the question concerning the prosperity of wicked men; but shows the infinite distance there is between God and man. He represents to Job ...
Matthew Henry -> Job 25:1-6
Matthew Henry: Job 25:1-6 - -- Bildad is to be commended here for two things: - 1. For speaking no more on the subject about which Job and he differed. Perhaps he began to think J...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 25:1-6
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 25:1-6 - --
1 Then began Bildad the Shuhite, and said:
2 Dominion and terror are with Him,
He maketh peace in His high places.
3 Is there any number to His a...
Constable -> Job 22:1--27:23; Job 25:1-6
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...
