
Text -- Job 29:22-25 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 29:22 - -- As the rain, which when it comes down gently upon the earth, is most acceptable and beneficial to it.
As the rain, which when it comes down gently upon the earth, is most acceptable and beneficial to it.

Wesley: Job 29:24 - -- Carried myself so familiarly with them, that they could scarce believe their eyes and ears.
Carried myself so familiarly with them, that they could scarce believe their eyes and ears.

Wesley: Job 29:24 - -- They were cautious not to give me any occasion to change my countenance towards them.
They were cautious not to give me any occasion to change my countenance towards them.

Wesley: Job 29:25 - -- They sought to me for advice in all difficult cases, and I directed them what methods they should take.
They sought to me for advice in all difficult cases, and I directed them what methods they should take.

As a prince or judge, while they stood waiting for my counsel.

Whose presence puts life, and courage, into the whole army.

Wesley: Job 29:25 - -- As I was ready to comfort any afflicted persons, so my consolations were always welcome to them.
As I was ready to comfort any afflicted persons, so my consolations were always welcome to them.
Did not contradict me.

JFB: Job 29:22 - -- Affected their minds, as the genial rain does the soil on which it gently drops (Amo 7:16; Deu 32:2; Son 4:11).

JFB: Job 29:23 - -- Image of Job 29:22 continued. They waited for my salutary counsel, as the dry soil does for the refreshing rain.
Image of Job 29:22 continued. They waited for my salutary counsel, as the dry soil does for the refreshing rain.

JFB: Job 29:23 - -- Panted for; Oriental image (Psa 119:131). The "early rain" is in autumn and onwards, while the seed is being sown. The "latter rain" is in March, and ...
Panted for; Oriental image (Psa 119:131). The "early rain" is in autumn and onwards, while the seed is being sown. The "latter rain" is in March, and brings forward the harvest, which ripens in May or June. Between the early and latter rains, some rain falls, but not in such quantities as those rains. Between March and October no rain falls (Deu 11:14; Jam 5:7).

JFB: Job 29:24 - -- When I relaxed from my wonted gravity (a virtue much esteemed in the East) and smiled, they could hardly credit it; and yet, notwithstanding my condes...
When I relaxed from my wonted gravity (a virtue much esteemed in the East) and smiled, they could hardly credit it; and yet, notwithstanding my condescension, they did not cast aside reverence for my gravity. But the parallelism is better in UMBREIT'S translation, "I smiled kindly on those who trusted not," that is, in times of danger I cheered those in despondency. And they could not cast down (by their despondency) my serenity of countenance (flowing from trust in God) (Pro 16:15; Psa 104:15). The opposite phrase (Gen 4:5-6). "Gravity" cannot well be meant by "light of countenance."

JFB: Job 29:25 - -- That is, I willingly went up to their assembly (from my country residence, Job 29:7).
That is, I willingly went up to their assembly (from my country residence, Job 29:7).

As a king supreme in the midst of his army.

JFB: Job 29:25 - -- Here again Job unconsciously foreshadows Jesus Christ (Isa 61:2-3). Job's afflictions, as those of Jesus Christ, were fitting him for the office herea...
Here again Job unconsciously foreshadows Jesus Christ (Isa 61:2-3). Job's afflictions, as those of Jesus Christ, were fitting him for the office hereafter (Isa 50:4; Heb 2:18).
Clarke: Job 29:22 - -- My speech dropped upon them - It descended as refreshing dew; they were encouraged, comforted, and strengthened by it.
My speech dropped upon them - It descended as refreshing dew; they were encouraged, comforted, and strengthened by it.

Clarke: Job 29:23 - -- They waited for me as for the rain - The idea continued. They longed as much to hear me speak, to receive my counsel and my decisions, as the thirst...
They waited for me as for the rain - The idea continued. They longed as much to hear me speak, to receive my counsel and my decisions, as the thirsty land does for refreshing waters

Clarke: Job 29:23 - -- They opened their mouth wide - A metaphor taken from ground chapped with long drought
They opened their mouth wide - A metaphor taken from ground chapped with long drought

Clarke: Job 29:23 - -- The latter rain - The rain that falls a little before harvest, in order to fill and perfect the grain. The former rain is that which falls about see...
The latter rain - The rain that falls a little before harvest, in order to fill and perfect the grain. The former rain is that which falls about seed-time, or in spring, in order to impregnate and swell the seed, and moisten the earth to produce its nourishment.

Clarke: Job 29:24 - -- I laughed on them, they believed it not - Similar to that expression in the Gospel, Luk 24:41 : And while they believed not for joy, and wondered, h...
I laughed on them, they believed it not - Similar to that expression in the Gospel, Luk 24:41 : And while they believed not for joy, and wondered, he said - . Our version is sufficiently perspicuous, and gives the true sense of the original, only it should be read in the indicative and not in the subjunctive mood: I laughed on them - they believed it not. We have a similar phrase: The news was too good to be true

Clarke: Job 29:24 - -- The light of my countenance - This evidence of my benevolence and regard. A smile is, metaphorically, the light of the countenance
The light of my countenance - This evidence of my benevolence and regard. A smile is, metaphorically, the light of the countenance

Clarke: Job 29:24 - -- They cast not down - They gave me no occasion to change my sentiments or feelings towards them. I could still smile upon them, and they were then wo...
They cast not down - They gave me no occasion to change my sentiments or feelings towards them. I could still smile upon them, and they were then worthy of my approbation. Their change he refers to in the beginning of the next chapter.

Clarke: Job 29:25 - -- I chose out their way, and sat chief - as a king in the army - I cannot see, with some learned men, that our version of the original is wrong. I hav...
I chose out their way, and sat chief - as a king in the army - I cannot see, with some learned men, that our version of the original is wrong. I have not seen it mended, and I am sure I cannot improve it. The whole verse seems to me to point out Job in his civil, military, and domestic life. As supreme magistrate he chose out their way, adjusted their differences, and sat chief, presiding in all their civil assemblies. As captain general he dwelt as a king in the midst of his troops, preserving order and discipline, and seeing that his fellow soldiers were provided with requisites for their warfare, and the necessaries of life. As a man he did not think himself superior to the meanest offices in domestic life, to relieve or support his fellow creatures; he went about comforting the mourners - visiting the sick and afflicted, and ministering to their wants, and seeing that the wounded were properly attended. Noble Job! Look at him, ye nobles of the earth, ye lieutenants of counties, ye generals of armies, and ye lords of provinces. Look at Job! Imitate his active benevolence, and be healthy and happy. Be as guardian angels in your particular districts, blessing all by your example and your bounty. Send your hunting horses to the plough, your game cocks to the dunghill; and at last live like men and Christians.
TSK: Job 29:22 - -- After my : Job 32:15, Job 32:16, Job 33:31-33; Isa 52:15; Mat 22:46
speech : Deu 32:2; Son 4:11; Eze 20:46; Amo 7:16; Mic 2:6 *marg.



TSK: Job 29:25 - -- chose out : Gen 41:40; Jdg 11:8; 2Sa 5:2; 1Ch 13:1-4
dwelt : Gen 14:14-17; Deu 33:5
one that : Job 4:3, Job 4:4; Isa 35:3, Isa 35:4, Isa 61:1-3; 2Co 1...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Job 29:22 - -- After my words they spake not again - The highest proof which could be given of deference. So full of respect were they that they did not dare ...
After my words they spake not again - The highest proof which could be given of deference. So full of respect were they that they did not dare to dispute him; so sagacious and wise was his counsel that they were satisfied with it, and did not presume to suggest any other.
And my speech dropped upon them - That is, like the dew or the gentle rain. So in Deu 32:2 :
My doctrine shall drop as the rain;
My speech shall distil as the dew,
As the small rain upon the tender herb,
And as the showers upon the grass.
So Homer speaks of the eloquence of Nestor,
"Words sweet as honey from his lips distill’ d."
Pope
So Milton, speaking of the eloquence of Belial, says,
- Though his tongue
Dropt manna, and could make the worse appear
The better reason, to perplex and dash
Maturest counsels.
Paradise Lost, B. ii.
The comparison in the Scriptures of words of wisdom or persuasion, is sometimes derived from honey, that drops or gently falls from the comb. Thus, in Pro 5:3 :
For the lips of a strange woman drop as an honey-comb,
And her mouth is smoother than oil,
So in Son 4:11 :
Thy lips, O my spouse, drop as the honeycomb;
Honey and milk are under thy tongue.

Barnes: Job 29:23 - -- And they waited for me as for the rain - That is, as the dry and thirsty earth waits for the rain. This is a continuation of the beautiful imag...
And they waited for me as for the rain - That is, as the dry and thirsty earth waits for the rain. This is a continuation of the beautiful image commenced in the previous verse, and conveys the idea that his counsel was as necessary in the assemblies of people as the rain was to give growth to the seed, and beauty to the landscape.
And they opened their mouth wide - Expressive of earnest desire; compare Psa 119:131 : "I opened my mouth and panted."
As for the latter rain - The early and the latter rains are frequently spoken of in the Scriptures, and in Palestine and the adjacent regions are both necessary to the harvest. The early, or autumnal rains, commence in the latter half of October, or the beginning of November, not suddenly, but by degrees, so as to give the husbandman an opportunity to sow his wheat and barley. The rains come mostly from the west, or southwest, continuing for two or three days at a time, and failing especially during the nights. During the months of November and December, they continue to fall heavily; afterward they return only at longer intervals, and are less heavy; but at no period during the winter do they entirely cease to occur. Rain continues to fall more or less during the month of March, but it is rare after that period. The latter rains denote those which fall in the month of March, and which are so necessary in order to bring forward the harvest, which ripens early in May or June. If those rains fail, the harvest materially suffers, and hence, the expressions in the Scriptures, that "the husbandman waits for that rain;"compare Jam 5:7; Pro 16:15. The expression, "the early and the latter rain"seems, unless some material change has occurred in Palestine, not to imply that no rain fell in the interval, but that those rains were usually more copious, or were especially necessary, first for sowing, and then for bringing forward the harvest. In the interval between the "latter"and the "early"rains - between March and October - rain never falls, and the sky is usually serene; see Robinson’ s Bibl. Researches, vol. ii. pp. 96-100. The meaning here is, that they who were assembled in counsel, earnestly desired Job to speak, as the farmer desires the rain that will bring forward his crop.

Barnes: Job 29:24 - -- If I laughed on them they believed it not - There is considerable variety in the interpretation of this member of the verse. Dr. Good renders i...
If I laughed on them they believed it not - There is considerable variety in the interpretation of this member of the verse. Dr. Good renders it, "I smiled upon them, and they were gay."Herder, If I laughed at them, they were not offended."Coverdale,"When I laughed, they knew well it was not earnest."Schultens, "I will laugh at them, they are not secure."But Rosenmuller, Jun. et Trem., Noyes and Umbreit, accord with the sense given in our common translation. The Hebrew literally is, "Should I laugh upon them, they did not confide;"and, according to Rosenmuller, the meaning is, "Such was the reverence for my gravity, that if at any time I relaxed in my severity of manner, they would scarcely believe it, nor did they omit any of their reverence toward me, as if familiarity with the great should produce contempt."Grotius explains it to mean, "Even my jests, they thought, contained something serious."The word used here, however (
And the light of my countenance they cast not down - His smile of favor on an undertaking, or his smile at the weakness or lack of wisdom of any thing proposed, they could not resist. It settled the matter. They had not power by their arguments or moral courage to resist him even if he did not say a word, or even to change the aspect of his countenance. A look, a token of approbation or disapprobation from him, was enough.

Barnes: Job 29:25 - -- I chose out their way - That is, I became their guide and counsellor. Rosenmuller and Noyes explain this as meaning, "When I came among them;"t...
I chose out their way - That is, I became their guide and counsellor. Rosenmuller and Noyes explain this as meaning, "When I came among them;"that is, when I chose to go in their way, or in their midst. But the former interpretation better agrees with the Hebrew, and with the connection. Job is speaking of the honors shown to him, and one of the highest which he could receive was to be regarded as a leader, and to have such respect shown to his opinions that he was even allowed to select the way in which they should go; that is, that his counsel was implicitly followed.
And sat chief - Hebrew "Sat head."He was at the head of their assemblies.
And dwelt as a king in the army - As a king, surrounded by a multitude of troops, all of whom were subservient to his will, and whom he could command at pleasure. It is not to be inferred from this, that Job was a king, or that he was at the head of a nation. The idea is, merely, that the same respect was shown to him which is to a monarch at the head of an army.
As one that comforteth the mourners - In time of peace I was their counsellor, and in time of war they looked to me for direction, and in time of affliction they came to me for consolation. There were no classes which did not show me respect, and there were no honors which they were not ready to heap on me.
It may seem, perhaps, that in this chapter there is a degree of self-commendation and praise altogether inconsistent with that consciousness of deep unworthiness which a truly pious man should have. How, it may be asked, can this spirit be consistent with religion? Can a man who has any proper sense of the depravity of his heart, speak thus in commendation of his own righteousness, and recount with such apparent satisfaction his own good deeds? Would not true piety be more distrustful of self, and be less disposed, to magnify its own doings? And is there not here a recalling to recollection of former honors, in a manner which shows that the heart was more attached to them than that of a map whose hope is in heaven should be? It may not be possible to vindicate Job in this respect altogether, nor is it necessary for us to attempt to prove that he was entirely perfect. We are to remember, also, the age in which he lived; we are not to measure what he said and did by the knowledge which we have, and the clearer light which shines upon us. We are to bear in recollection the circumstances in which he was placed, and perhaps we shall find in them a mitigation for what seems to us to exhibit such a spirit of self-reliance, and which looks so much like the lingering love of the honors of this world. Particularly we may recall the following considerations:
(1) He was vindicating himself from charges of enormous guilt and hypocrisy. To meet these charges, he runs over the leading events of his life, and shows what had been his general aim and purpose. He reminds them, also, of the respect and honor which had been shown him by those who best knew him - by the poor the needy, the inhabitants of his own city, the people of his own tribe. To vindicate himself from the severe charges which had been alleged against him, it was not improper thus to advert to the general course of his life, and to refer to the respect in which he had been held. Who could know him better than his neighbors? Who could be better witnesses than the poor whom he had relieved; and the lame, the blind, the sorrowful, whom he had comforted? Who could better testify to his character than they who had followed his counsel in times of perplexity and danger? Who would be more competent witnesses than the mourners whom he had comforted?
(2) It was a main object with Job to show the greatness of his distress and misery, and for this purpose he went into an extended statement of his former happiness, and especially of the respect which had been shown him. This he contrasts beautifully with his present condition, and the colors of the picture are greatly heightened by the contrast. In forming our estimate of this chapter, we should take this object into the account, and should not charge him with a design to magnify his own righteousness, when his main purpose was only to exhibit the extent and depth of his present woes.
(3) It is not improper for a man to speak of his former prosperity and happiness in the manner in which Job did. He does not speak of himself as having any merit, or as relying on this for salvation. He distinctly traces it all to God Job 29:2-5, and says that it was because he blessed him that he had enjoyed these comforts. It was not an improper acknowledgment of the mercies which he had received from his hand, and the remembrance was fitted to excite his gratitude. And although there may seem to us something like parade and ostentation in thus dwelling on former honors, and recounting what he had done in days that were past, yet we should remember how natural it was for him, in the circumstances of trial in which he then was, to revert to past scenes, and to recall the times of prosperity, and the days when he enjoyed the favor of God.
(4) It may be added, that few people have ever lived to whom this description would be applicable. It must have required uncommon and very remarkable worth to have made it proper for him thus to speak, and to be able to say all this so as not to be exposed to contradiction. The description is one of great beauty, and presents a lovely picture of patriarchal piety, and of the respect which then was shown to eminent virtue and worth. It is an illustration of the respect that will be, and that ought to be, shown to one who is upright in his dealings with people, benevolent toward the poor and the helpless, and steady in his walk with God.
Poole: Job 29:22 - -- After my words they spake not again either to confute them as false, or to add to them as lame and imperfect.
Dropped upon them to wit, as the rain...
After my words they spake not again either to confute them as false, or to add to them as lame and imperfect.
Dropped upon them to wit, as the rain, as the next verse explains it, which when it comes down gently and droppingly upon the earth, is most acceptable and beneficial to it; not so when it comes in great and violent showers.

Poole: Job 29:23 - -- As for the rain as the earth or the husbandman waiteth for the rain, to wit, the former rain, of which see Deu 11:14 , because the
latter rain is h...
As for the rain as the earth or the husbandman waiteth for the rain, to wit, the former rain, of which see Deu 11:14 , because the
latter rain is here opposed to it: see Jam 5:7 .
They opened their mouth to receive my words, and therewith to satisfy their thirst, as the dry and parched earth gapes or opens its mouth to receive the rain.

Poole: Job 29:24 - -- If I laughed on them or sported or jested with them, i.e. carried myself familiarly and pleasantly with them.
They believed it not it was so accept...
If I laughed on them or sported or jested with them, i.e. carried myself familiarly and pleasantly with them.
They believed it not it was so acceptable to them to see me well-pleased with them, that they could scarce believe their eyes and ears that it was so: compare Gen 45:26 Psa 126:1 .
The light of my countenance they cast not down my familiarity did not breed contempt or presumption in them to say or do any thing that might grieve me, or make my countenance to fall, as it doth in case of shame or sorrow, Gen 4:5 . They were very cautious not to abuse my smiles, nor to give me any occasion to change my countenance or carriage towards them.

Poole: Job 29:25 - -- I chose out their way they sought to me for my advice in all doubtful and difficult cases, and I chalked out their path, and directed them what metho...
I chose out their way they sought to me for my advice in all doubtful and difficult cases, and I chalked out their path, and directed them what methods they should take to accomplish their desires.
Sat as a prince or judge, whilst they stood waiting for my counsel.
Chief or head ; as their head or ruler, and my mind and word was as a law or oracle to them.
As a king in the army whose presence puts life, and courage, and joy into the whole army. And no less acceptable was my presence to them.
As one that comforteth the mourners as I was able and ready to comfort any afflicted or sorrowful persons, so my consolations were always grateful and welcome to them. Or, when he, to wit, the king,
comforteth the mourners i.e. his army, when they are under some great consternation or dejection, by reason of some great loss or danger, but are revived by the presence and speech of a wise and valiant king or general.
Haydock: Job 29:23 - -- Shower, in autumn, at which season only, and in spring, it rained in those countries. (Calmet) (Deuteronomy xi. 14.) (Menochius) ---
It would, of...
Shower, in autumn, at which season only, and in spring, it rained in those countries. (Calmet) (Deuteronomy xi. 14.) (Menochius) ---
It would, of course, be very acceptable after the drought of summer, Proverbs xvi. 15.

Haydock: Job 29:24 - -- Earth, with neglect. (Calmet) ---
My attendants could scarcely believe their own eyes, through joy, (Haydock) when I assumed a more familiar air wi...
Earth, with neglect. (Calmet) ---
My attendants could scarcely believe their own eyes, through joy, (Haydock) when I assumed a more familiar air with them. (Calmet) ---
They still revered my authority. (Menochius)

Haydock: Job 29:25 - -- With. Hebrew, "in his army, like one comforting people in mourning." (Haydock) ---
Job was not merely as, or like a king, but also one in effe...
Gill: Job 29:22 - -- After my words they spake not again,.... Did not or would not make any reply to them; they did not attempt to change and alter them, to add unto them,...
After my words they spake not again,.... Did not or would not make any reply to them; they did not attempt to change and alter them, to add unto them, or take from them, or in any wise to correct them, and much less to contradict them, and treat them with contempt; or "differed not", as Mr. Broughton renders it; differed not from them, but agreed to them; and differed not among themselves, but united in what Job said, as being full to the purpose, after which nothing more could be said; see Ecc 2:12;
and my speech dropped upon them; his prophecy, as Jarchi, prophesying being expressed by dropping, Amo 7:16; his doctrine dropped from his lips like the honeycomb, and was sweet, grateful, and delightful to his hearers, as the church's lips, Son 4:11; or rather like the rain, as in Deu 32:2, when it falls and drops gently and easily, and so penetrates and soaks into the earth, and abides and does good: in like manner, when good and sound doctrine drops upon the hearers, so as to enter into their hearts, and work effectually in them, it does them good, and they rejoice at it, and are far from having anything to say against it.

Gill: Job 29:23 - -- And they waited for me as for the rain,.... The former rain, as appears by the following clause, which fell in autumn, about October, after seedtime, ...
And they waited for me as for the rain,.... The former rain, as appears by the following clause, which fell in autumn, about October, after seedtime, in order to nourish and cherish it, and bring it up; now as the husbandman waited for this, was in daily expectation of it, and greatly desired it, and longed for it; see Jam 5:7; so the people waited for Job, for his coming into their public assemblies, whether civil or religious, and longed to hear him speak, for their counsel and instruction, for their comfort and direction in all things they stood in need of:
and they opened their mouth wide as for the latter rain; which fell in the spring about March, in the time of harvest, which was of use to fatten the kernals of grain, and make them fuller, and the flour finer; now Job's hearers opened their mouths, as the dry and parched earth gapes for rain; or the husbandman, or the gardener, as the Targum, opens his mouth, and asks and prays for rain; or as a hungry and thirsty man opens his mouth to take in refreshment, or expresses thereby his desire of it; or as persons somewhat deaf open their mouths to hear the better, there being a way through the mouth to the internal ear, as anatomists h observe; which lies through the Eustachian tube, out of the palate, to the internal cavity of the ear, called the "concha"; wherefore such persons naturally open their mouths when they would hear attentively; all which expresses the eager desire of Job's hearers after his doctrine, which, like the rain, would be useful, profitable, and edifying to them; their view was not to indulge their curiosity, to please their ears, but to affect their hearts, and instruct their minds.

Gill: Job 29:24 - -- If I laughed on them, they believed it not,.... Not that he at any time laughed at them, by way of derision; but when in a cheerful frame of mind, o...
If I laughed on them, they believed it not,.... Not that he at any time laughed at them, by way of derision; but when in a cheerful frame of mind, or in a merry mood, he used freedom and familiarity, and jested with them; but they could not believe that he did jest, or was in jest, he being a man always of such gravity and seriousness, that they concluded the smile on his countenance, and the pleasant turn of his expression, had a serious meaning in them; or such familiarity with them was so pleasing to them, that they could scarcely for joy believe that he did condescend to indulge such an air of pleasantry: or as Mr. Broughton renders it, and so some others to the same sense, "they would not be bold" i; familiarity with them did not breed contempt, as it sometimes does; they did not presume upon it, and grow bold and insolent, and make him their equal, and jest with him again; but still there was an awe upon them, and they behaved with reverence to him; and to show how great it was is the design of the expression:
and the light of my countenance they cast not down; they did not ruffle his mind, or disturb the serenity of it; or cause him to change his countenance, through any bold and indecent behaviour towards him, encouraged by the freedom and pleasantry he used with them; they did not put him to shame, or provoke him to anger and displeasure by any unbecoming deportment; they kept their distance, they did not detract from his authority and majesty, or in the least lessen that, but behaved with the same reverence and regard to him they ever did; see Gen 4:6.

Gill: Job 29:25 - -- I chose out their way,.... When his friends and neighbours came to him for advice in things civil, he marked out their way for them, directed what ste...
I chose out their way,.... When his friends and neighbours came to him for advice in things civil, he marked out their way for them, directed what steps to take, what methods to pursue for their good; they desired him to choose for them, preferring his judgment to theirs, and were determined to abide by his choice of ways and means, and to follow his counsel; and in religious matters, he instructed them in their duty, both towards God and men, and proposed unto them what was most eligible, both with respect to doctrine and practice;
and sat chief; in all their public assemblies; he presided in their councils and courts of judicature; and when met together for religious worship, he sat in the chair of the teacher, and instructed them; he was chief speaker, as the Heathens said of the Apostle Paul, Act 14:12;
and dwelt as a king in the army, or "troop" k. Mr. Broughton renders it with a garrison; Job was surrounded with multitudes of persons, that waited upon him on one account or another, who were ready to receive his words, and be obedient to them, as a king or general in the midst of an army, surrounded by his general officers, and the whole army encamped about him, doing him honour, and ready to obey whatever commands or instructions he should give them; some conclude from hence that Job was really a king, as being not a note of similitude, but of truth and reality, as in Mat 14:2; and so he might be; for in those times and countries every city almost had its king; though this is not necessarily supposed here; for the phrase seems only to denote the authority and influence Job had over men by his advice and instruction, which were as much regarded as from a king; and the majesty he appeared in, and the reverence in which he was had:
as one that comforteth the mourners: which some restrain to the king in his army, and connect them therewith thus, "when he comforteth the mourners" l; the soldiers mourning for some loss sustained, and slaughter made among them; whose minds the king or general by a set speech endeavours to cheer, and comfort, and allay their fears, and animate them to intrepidity and fortitude, when all eyes are upon him and attentive to him; and so attentive were Job's hearers to him. Bar Tzemach observes, that the copulative

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 29:22 The verb simply means “dropped,” but this means like the rain. So the picture of his words falling on them like the gentle rain, drop by d...

NET Notes: Job 29:23 The כּ (kaf) preposition is to be supplied by analogy with the preceding phrase. This leaves a double proposition, “as for” (b...

NET Notes: Job 29:24 The meaning, according to Gordis, is that they did nothing to provoke Job’s displeasure.

NET Notes: Job 29:25 Most commentators think this last phrase is odd here, and so they either delete it altogether, or emend it to fit the idea of the verse. Ewald, howeve...
Geneva Bible: Job 29:22 After my words they spake not again; and my speech ( o ) dropped upon them.
( o ) That is, was pleasant to them.

Geneva Bible: Job 29:23 And they waited for me as for the rain; and they opened their mouth wide ( p ) [as] for the latter rain.
( p ) As the dry ground thirsts for the rain...

Geneva Bible: Job 29:24 [If] I ( q ) laughed on them, they believed [it] not; and the light of my countenance they ( r ) cast not down.
( q ) That is, they thought it not to...

Geneva Bible: Job 29:25 I chose out ( s ) their way, and sat chief, and dwelt as a king in the army, as one [that] comforteth the mourners.
( s ) I had them at commandment.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 29:1-25
MHCC -> Job 29:18-25
MHCC: Job 29:18-25 - --Being thus honoured and useful, Job had hoped to die in peace and honour, in a good old age. If such an expectation arise from lively faith in the pro...
Matthew Henry -> Job 29:18-25
Matthew Henry: Job 29:18-25 - -- That which crowned Job's prosperity was the pleasing prospect he had of the continuance of it. Though he knew, in general, that he was liable to tro...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 29:21-25
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 29:21-25 - --
21 They hearkened to me and waited,
And remained silent at my decision.
22 After my utterance they spake not again,
And my speech distilled upon ...
Constable -> Job 29:1--31:40; Job 29:1-25
Constable: Job 29:1--31:40 - --2. Job's defense of his innocence ch. 29-31
Job gave a soliloquy before his dialogue with his th...
