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Text -- Job 36:1-24 (NET)

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Context
Elihu’s Fourth Speech
36:1 Elihu said further: 36:2 “Be patient with me a little longer and I will instruct you, for I still have words to speak on God’s behalf. 36:3 With my knowledge I will speak comprehensively, and to my Creator I will ascribe righteousness. 36:4 For in truth, my words are not false; it is one complete in knowledge who is with you. 36:5 Indeed, God is mighty; and he does not despise people, he is mighty, and firm in his intent. 36:6 He does not allow the wicked to live, but he gives justice to the poor. 36:7 He does not take his eyes off the righteous; but with kings on the throne he seats the righteous and exalts them forever. 36:8 But if they are bound in chains, and held captive by the cords of affliction, 36:9 then he reveals to them what they have done, and their transgressions, that they were behaving proudly. 36:10 And he reveals this for correction, and says that they must turn from evil. 36:11 If they obey and serve him, they live out their days in prosperity and their years in pleasantness. 36:12 But if they refuse to listen, they pass over the river of death, and expire without knowledge. 36:13 The godless at heart nourish anger, they do not cry out even when he binds them. 36:14 They die in their youth, and their life ends among the male cultic prostitutes. 36:15 He delivers the afflicted by their afflictions, he reveals himself to them by their suffering. 36:16 And surely, he drew you from the mouth of distress, to a wide place, unrestricted, and to the comfort of your table filled with rich food. 36:17 But now you are preoccupied with the judgment due the wicked, judgment and justice take hold of you. 36:18 Be careful that no one entices you with riches; do not let a large bribe turn you aside. 36:19 Would your wealth sustain you, so that you would not be in distress, even all your mighty efforts? 36:20 Do not long for the cover of night to drag people away from their homes. 36:21 Take heed, do not turn to evil, for because of this you have been tested by affliction. 36:22 Indeed, God is exalted in his power; who is a teacher like him? 36:23 Who has prescribed his ways for him? Or said to him, ‘You have done what is wicked’? 36:24 Remember to extol his work, which people have praised in song.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Elihu son of Tohu/Toah/Nahath; a Levite from Ephraim,a commander from Manasseh who defected to David,son of Shemaiah (Levi); a gatekeeper,brother of David and his chief officer over the tribe of Judah,son of Barachel the Buzite of the family of Ram; friend of Job


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Job | Gold | God | GOD, 2 | FULFIL | FORCES | FETTER | FETCH | FATNESS | Elihu | EXCEED; EXCEEDING; EXCEEDINGLY | EXALT | ESTEEM | ENJOIN | DISCIPLINE | DELIVER | CRIME; CRIMES | BROAD | BEHALF | AFFLICTION | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Job 36:3 - -- From remote times, and places, and things. I will not confine my discourse to thy particular case, but wilt justify God by declaring his great and glo...

From remote times, and places, and things. I will not confine my discourse to thy particular case, but wilt justify God by declaring his great and glorious works of creation and providence both in the heaven and in the earth, and the manner of his dealing with men in other parts and ages of the world.

Wesley: Job 36:3 - -- I will clear and maintain this truth, that God is righteous in all his ways.

I will clear and maintain this truth, that God is righteous in all his ways.

Wesley: Job 36:4 - -- _Thou hast to do with a God of perfect knowledge, by whom all thy words and actions are weighed.

_Thou hast to do with a God of perfect knowledge, by whom all thy words and actions are weighed.

Wesley: Job 36:5 - -- His greatness doth not make him (as it doth men) despise, or oppress the meanest.

His greatness doth not make him (as it doth men) despise, or oppress the meanest.

Wesley: Job 36:5 - -- His strength is guided by wisdom, and therefore cannot do any thing unbecoming God, or unjust to his creatures.

His strength is guided by wisdom, and therefore cannot do any thing unbecoming God, or unjust to his creatures.

Wesley: Job 36:6 - -- He will certainly in his time deliver his oppressed ones.

He will certainly in his time deliver his oppressed ones.

Wesley: Job 36:7 - -- Never ceases to care for and watch over them.

Never ceases to care for and watch over them.

Wesley: Job 36:7 - -- They continue to be exalted; they are not cast down from their dignity, as the wicked commonly are.

They continue to be exalted; they are not cast down from their dignity, as the wicked commonly are.

Wesley: Job 36:8 - -- Through the vicissitude of worldly affairs, they are brought from their throne into a prison, as sometimes hath been done.

Through the vicissitude of worldly affairs, they are brought from their throne into a prison, as sometimes hath been done.

Wesley: Job 36:9 - -- Their evil works, by these afflictions he brings them to a sight of their sins.

Their evil works, by these afflictions he brings them to a sight of their sins.

Wesley: Job 36:9 - -- That they have greatly sinned by abusing their power and prosperity; which even good men are too prone to do.

That they have greatly sinned by abusing their power and prosperity; which even good men are too prone to do.

Wesley: Job 36:10 - -- He inclines them to hearken to what God speaks by the rod.

He inclines them to hearken to what God speaks by the rod.

Wesley: Job 36:13 - -- Unto God for help.

Unto God for help.

Wesley: Job 36:13 - -- With the cords of affliction.

With the cords of affliction.

Wesley: Job 36:14 - -- They provoke God to cut them off before their time.

They provoke God to cut them off before their time.

Wesley: Job 36:14 - -- Or, Sodomites; to whose destruction, he may allude. They shall die by some exemplary stroke of Divine vengeance. Yea, and after death, their life is a...

Or, Sodomites; to whose destruction, he may allude. They shall die by some exemplary stroke of Divine vengeance. Yea, and after death, their life is among the unclean, the unclean spirits, the devil and his angels, for ever excluded from the new Jerusalem, into which no unclean thing shall enter.

Wesley: Job 36:15 - -- Causeth them to hear, and understand, and do, the will of God.

Causeth them to hear, and understand, and do, the will of God.

Wesley: Job 36:16 - -- If thou hadst opened thine ear to God's counsels.

If thou hadst opened thine ear to God's counsels.

Wesley: Job 36:16 - -- A state of ease and freedom.

A state of ease and freedom.

Wesley: Job 36:17 - -- Or, the sentence, thou hast justified the hard speeches which wicked men utter against God.

Or, the sentence, thou hast justified the hard speeches which wicked men utter against God.

Wesley: Job 36:17 - -- Therefore the just judgment of God takes hold on thee. Thou hast maintained their cause against God, and God passes against thee the sentence of conde...

Therefore the just judgment of God takes hold on thee. Thou hast maintained their cause against God, and God passes against thee the sentence of condemnation due to wicked men.

Wesley: Job 36:18 - -- Conceived by God against thee.

Conceived by God against thee.

Wesley: Job 36:18 - -- If once God's wrath take hold of thee, no ransom will be accepted for thee.

If once God's wrath take hold of thee, no ransom will be accepted for thee.

Wesley: Job 36:19 - -- If thou hadst as much of them as ever.

If thou hadst as much of them as ever.

Wesley: Job 36:19 - -- The strongest forces.

The strongest forces.

Wesley: Job 36:20 - -- The night of death, which Job had often desired, for then, thou art irrecoverably gone: take heed of thy foolish and often repeated desire of death, l...

The night of death, which Job had often desired, for then, thou art irrecoverably gone: take heed of thy foolish and often repeated desire of death, lest God inflict it upon thee in anger.

Wesley: Job 36:21 - -- Thou hast chosen rather to quarrel with God, and censure his judgments, than quietly to submit to them.

Thou hast chosen rather to quarrel with God, and censure his judgments, than quietly to submit to them.

Wesley: Job 36:22 - -- God is omnipotent; and therefore can, either punish thee far worse, or deliver thee, if thou dost repent. He is also infinitely wise; and as none can ...

God is omnipotent; and therefore can, either punish thee far worse, or deliver thee, if thou dost repent. He is also infinitely wise; and as none can work like him, so none can teach like him. Therefore do not presume to teach him how to govern the world. None teacheth with such authority and convincing evidence, with such condescension and compassion, with such power and efficacy as God doth, he teaches by the bible, and that is the best book; by his son, and he is the best master.

Wesley: Job 36:24 - -- Call to mind this thy duty.

Call to mind this thy duty.

Wesley: Job 36:24 - -- Every work which he doth; do not condemn any of his providential works, but adore them as done with admirable wisdom, and justice.

Every work which he doth; do not condemn any of his providential works, but adore them as done with admirable wisdom, and justice.

Wesley: Job 36:24 - -- With admiration and astonishment.

With admiration and astonishment.

JFB: Job 36:1-2 - -- (Job 36:1-33) Elihu maintains that afflictions are to the godly disciplinary, in order to lead them to attain a higher moral worth, and that the reas...

(Job 36:1-33)

Elihu maintains that afflictions are to the godly disciplinary, in order to lead them to attain a higher moral worth, and that the reason for their continuance is not, as the friends asserted, on account of the sufferer's extraordinary guilt, but because the discipline has not yet attained its object, namely, to lend him to humble himself penitently before God (Isa 9:13; Jer 5:3). This is Elihu's fourth speech. He thus exceeds the ternary number of the others. Hence his formula of politeness (Job 36:2). Literally, "Wait yet but a little for me." Bear with me a little farther. I have yet (much, Job 32:18-20). There are Chaldeisms in this verse, agreeably to the view that the scene of the book is near the Euphrates and the Chaldees.

JFB: Job 36:3 - -- Not trite commonplaces, but drawn from God's mighty works.

Not trite commonplaces, but drawn from God's mighty works.

JFB: Job 36:3 - -- Whereas Job ascribed unrighteousness (Job 34:10, Job 34:12). A man, in enquiring into God's ways, should at the outset presume they are all just, be w...

Whereas Job ascribed unrighteousness (Job 34:10, Job 34:12). A man, in enquiring into God's ways, should at the outset presume they are all just, be willing to find them so, and expect that the result of investigation will prove them to be so; such a one will never be disappointed [BARNES].

JFB: Job 36:4 - -- That is, vindicate God by unsound arguments.

That is, vindicate God by unsound arguments.

JFB: Job 36:4 - -- Rather, as the parallelism requires, "a man of integrity in sentiments is with thee" (is he with whom thou hast to do). Elihu means himself, as oppose...

Rather, as the parallelism requires, "a man of integrity in sentiments is with thee" (is he with whom thou hast to do). Elihu means himself, as opposed to the dishonest reasonings of the friends (Job 21:34).

JFB: Job 36:5 - -- Rather, "strength of understanding" (heart) the force of the repetition of "mighty"; as "mighty" as God is, none is too low to be "despised" by Him; f...

Rather, "strength of understanding" (heart) the force of the repetition of "mighty"; as "mighty" as God is, none is too low to be "despised" by Him; for His "might" lies especially in "His strength of understanding," whereby He searches out the most minute things, so as to give to each his right. Elihu confirms his exhortation (Job 35:14).

JFB: Job 36:6 - -- He espouses the cause of the afflicted.

He espouses the cause of the afflicted.

JFB: Job 36:7 - -- (1Pe 3:12). God does not forsake the godly, as Job implied, but "establishes," or makes them sit on the throne as kings (1Sa 2:8; Psa 113:7-8). True o...

(1Pe 3:12). God does not forsake the godly, as Job implied, but "establishes," or makes them sit on the throne as kings (1Sa 2:8; Psa 113:7-8). True of believers in the highest sense, already in part (1Pe 2:9; Rev 1:6); hereafter fully (Rev 5:10; Job 22:5).

JFB: Job 36:7 - -- That they may be.

That they may be.

JFB: Job 36:8-10 - -- If they be afflicted, it is no proof that they are hypocrites, as the friends maintain, or that God disregards them, and is indifferent whether men ar...

If they be afflicted, it is no proof that they are hypocrites, as the friends maintain, or that God disregards them, and is indifferent whether men are good or bad, as Job asserts: God is thereby "disciplining them," and "showing them their sins," and if they bow in a right spirit under God's visiting hand, the greatest blessings ensue.

JFB: Job 36:9 - -- Transgression.

Transgression.

JFB: Job 36:9 - -- "In that they behaved themselves mightily" (literally, "great"); that is, presumptuously, or, at least, self-confidently.

"In that they behaved themselves mightily" (literally, "great"); that is, presumptuously, or, at least, self-confidently.

JFB: Job 36:10 - -- (Job 33:16-18, Job 33:23).

JFB: Job 36:11 - -- That is, worship; as in Isa 19:23. God is to be supplied (compare Isa 1:19-20).

That is, worship; as in Isa 19:23. God is to be supplied (compare Isa 1:19-20).

JFB: Job 36:12 - -- (Job 33:18).

JFB: Job 36:12 - -- That is, on account of their foolishness (Job 4:20-21).

That is, on account of their foolishness (Job 4:20-21).

JFB: Job 36:13-15 - -- Same sentiment as Job 36:11-12, expanded.

Same sentiment as Job 36:11-12, expanded.

JFB: Job 36:13-15 - -- Or, the ungodly [MAURER]; but "hypocrites" is perhaps a distinct class from the openly wicked (Job 36:12).

Or, the ungodly [MAURER]; but "hypocrites" is perhaps a distinct class from the openly wicked (Job 36:12).

JFB: Job 36:13-15 - -- Of God against themselves (Rom 2:5). UMBREIT translates, "nourish their wrath against God," instead of "crying" unto Him. This suits well the parallel...

Of God against themselves (Rom 2:5). UMBREIT translates, "nourish their wrath against God," instead of "crying" unto Him. This suits well the parallelism and the Hebrew. But the English Version gives a good parallelism, "hypocrites" answering to "cry not" (Job 27:8, Job 27:10); "heap up wrath" against themselves, to "He bindeth them" with fetters of affliction (Job 36:8).

JFB: Job 36:14 - -- Rather (Deu 23:17), Their life is (ended) as that of (literally, "among") the unclean, prematurely and dishonorably. So the second clause answers to t...

Rather (Deu 23:17), Their life is (ended) as that of (literally, "among") the unclean, prematurely and dishonorably. So the second clause answers to the first. A warning that Job make not common cause with the wicked (Job 34:36).

JFB: Job 36:15 - -- The afflicted pious.

The afflicted pious.

JFB: Job 36:15 - -- (Job 36:10); so as to be admonished in their straits ("oppression") to seek God penitently, and so be "delivered" (Job 33:16-17, Job 33:23-27).

(Job 36:10); so as to be admonished in their straits ("oppression") to seek God penitently, and so be "delivered" (Job 33:16-17, Job 33:23-27).

JFB: Job 36:16 - -- Rather, "He will lead forth thee also out of the jaws of a strait" (Psa 18:19; Psa 118:5).

Rather, "He will lead forth thee also out of the jaws of a strait" (Psa 18:19; Psa 118:5).

JFB: Job 36:16 - -- Expresses the liberty, and the well-supplied "table" the abundance of the prosperous (Psa 23:5; Isa 25:6).

Expresses the liberty, and the well-supplied "table" the abundance of the prosperous (Psa 23:5; Isa 25:6).

JFB: Job 36:17 - -- Rather, "But if thou art fulfilled (that is, entirely filled) with the judgment of the wicked (that is, the guilt incurring judgment" [MAURER]; or rat...

Rather, "But if thou art fulfilled (that is, entirely filled) with the judgment of the wicked (that is, the guilt incurring judgment" [MAURER]; or rather, as UMBREIT, referring to Job 34:5-7, Job 34:36, the judgment pronounced on God by the guilty in misfortunes), judgment (God's judgment on the wicked, Jer 51:9, playing on the double meaning of "judgment") and justice shall closely follow each other [UMBREIT].

JFB: Job 36:18 - -- (Num 16:45; Psa 49:6-7; Mat 16:26). Even the "ransom" by Jesus Christ (Job 33:24) will be of no avail to wilful despisers (Heb 10:26-29).

(Num 16:45; Psa 49:6-7; Mat 16:26). Even the "ransom" by Jesus Christ (Job 33:24) will be of no avail to wilful despisers (Heb 10:26-29).

JFB: Job 36:18 - -- (Job 34:26). UMBREIT translates, "Beware lest the wrath of God (thy severe calamity) lead thee to scorn" (Job 34:7; Job 27:23). This accords better w...

(Job 34:26). UMBREIT translates, "Beware lest the wrath of God (thy severe calamity) lead thee to scorn" (Job 34:7; Job 27:23). This accords better with the verb in the parallel clause, which ought to be translated, "Let not the great ransom (of money, which thou canst give) seduce thee (Margin, turn thee aside, as if thou couldst deliver thyself from "wrath" by it). As the "scorn" in the first clause answers to the "judgment of the wicked" (Job 36:17), so "ransom" ("seduce") to "will he esteem riches" (Job 36:19). Thus, Job 36:18 is the transition between Job 36:17 and Job 36:19.

JFB: Job 36:19 - -- That is, resources of wealth (Psa 49:7; Pro 11:4).

That is, resources of wealth (Psa 49:7; Pro 11:4).

JFB: Job 36:20 - -- Pant for. Job had wished for death (Job 3:3-9, &c.).

Pant for. Job had wished for death (Job 3:3-9, &c.).

JFB: Job 36:20 - -- (Joh 9:4).

(Joh 9:4).

JFB: Job 36:20 - -- Rather, "whereby."

Rather, "whereby."

JFB: Job 36:20 - -- Literally, "ascend," as the corn cut and lifted upon the wagon or stack (Job 36:26); so "cut off," "disappear."

Literally, "ascend," as the corn cut and lifted upon the wagon or stack (Job 36:26); so "cut off," "disappear."

JFB: Job 36:20 - -- Literally, "under themselves"; so, without moving from their place, on the spot, suddenly (Job 40:12) [MAURER]. UMBREIT'S translation: "To ascend (whi...

Literally, "under themselves"; so, without moving from their place, on the spot, suddenly (Job 40:12) [MAURER]. UMBREIT'S translation: "To ascend (which is really, as thou wilt find to thy cost, to descend) to the people below" (literally, "under themselves"), answers better to the parallelism and the Hebrew. Thou pantest for death as desirable, but it is a "night" or region of darkness; thy fancied ascent (amelioration) will prove a descent (deterioration) (Job 10:22); therefore desire it not.

JFB: Job 36:21 - -- Literally, "turn thyself to."

Literally, "turn thyself to."

JFB: Job 36:21 - -- Namely, presumptuous speaking against God (Job 34:5, and above, see on Job 36:17-18).

Namely, presumptuous speaking against God (Job 34:5, and above, see on Job 36:17-18).

JFB: Job 36:21 - -- To bear "affliction" with pious patience. Men think it an alleviation to complain against God, but this is adding sin to sorrow; it is sin, not sorrow...

To bear "affliction" with pious patience. Men think it an alleviation to complain against God, but this is adding sin to sorrow; it is sin, not sorrow, which can really hurt us (contrast Heb 11:25).

JFB: Job 36:22-25 - -- God is not to be impiously arraigned, but to be praised for His might, shown in His works.

God is not to be impiously arraigned, but to be praised for His might, shown in His works.

JFB: Job 36:22-25 - -- Rather, doeth lofty things, shows His exalted power [UMBREIT] (Psa 21:13).

Rather, doeth lofty things, shows His exalted power [UMBREIT] (Psa 21:13).

JFB: Job 36:22-25 - -- (Psa 94:12, &c.). The connection is, returning to Job 36:5, God's "might" is shown in His "wisdom"; He alone can teach; yet, because He, as a soverei...

(Psa 94:12, &c.). The connection is, returning to Job 36:5, God's "might" is shown in His "wisdom"; He alone can teach; yet, because He, as a sovereign, explains not all His dealings, forsooth Job must presume to teach Him (Isa 40:13-14; Rom 11:34; 1Co 2:16). So the transition to Job 36:23 is natural. UMBREIT with the Septuagint translates, "Who is Lord," wrongly, as this meaning belongs to later Hebrew.

JFB: Job 36:23 - -- Job dared to prescribe to God what He should do (Job 34:10, Job 34:13).

Job dared to prescribe to God what He should do (Job 34:10, Job 34:13).

JFB: Job 36:24 - -- Instead of arraigning, let it be thy fixed principle to magnify God in His works (Psa 111:2-8; Rev 15:3); these, which all may "see," may convince us ...

Instead of arraigning, let it be thy fixed principle to magnify God in His works (Psa 111:2-8; Rev 15:3); these, which all may "see," may convince us that what we do not see is altogether wise and good (Rom 1:20).

JFB: Job 36:24 - -- As "see" (Job 36:25), shows; not, as MAURER, "sing," laud (see on Job 33:27).

As "see" (Job 36:25), shows; not, as MAURER, "sing," laud (see on Job 33:27).

Clarke: Job 36:1 - -- Elihu also proceeded - Mr. Heath gives a good summary of this chapter. Elihu goes on to lay before Job the impropriety of his behavior towards God, ...

Elihu also proceeded - Mr. Heath gives a good summary of this chapter. Elihu goes on to lay before Job the impropriety of his behavior towards God, and desires him to consider how vain it will prove. That God Almighty will never yield the point; that he will administer impartial justice to all men, Job 36:2-6. That the general course of his providence is to favor the righteous: and that though he may sometimes correct them in love, yet if they submit patiently to his fatherly corrections, they shall enjoy all manner of prosperity; but if they be stubborn, and will not submit, they will only draw down greater proofs of his displeasure, Job 36:7-16. He tells him that, had he followed the former course, he had probably, before now, been restored to his former condition; whereas, by persisting in the latter course, he was in a fair way of becoming a signal example of Divine justice, Job 36:17, Job 36:18. He therefore warns him to use the present opportunity, lest God should cut him off while he was in a state of rebellion against him; for with God neither wealth, power, nor any other argument that he could use, would be of any avail, Job 36:18-26. That God was infinitely powerful; there was no resisting him: and infinitely wise, as sufficiently appeared by his works; there was, therefore, no escaping out of his hands. That his purity was so great that the sun, in his presence, was more dim than the smallest ray of light when compared to that grand luminary; that his holiness was manifest by his aversion to iniquity; and his goodness, in supplying the wants of his creatures.

Clarke: Job 36:2 - -- That I have yet to speak on God’ s behalf - I have other proofs to allege in behalf of God’ s justice and providence.

That I have yet to speak on God’ s behalf - I have other proofs to allege in behalf of God’ s justice and providence.

Clarke: Job 36:3 - -- I will fetch my knowledge from afar - למרחוק lemerachok , "from the distant place,"meaning probably both remote antiquity and heaven; see bel...

I will fetch my knowledge from afar - למרחוק lemerachok , "from the distant place,"meaning probably both remote antiquity and heaven; see below. I will show thee that all antiquity and experience are on my side. I can bring proofs from the remotest ages and from the most distant countries to demonstrate that God is infinitely Wise, and can do nothing foolish or erroneous; that he is infinitely Powerful, and can bring all the purposes of his wisdom to effect; that he is infinitely Good, and can will nothing, and can do nothing that is not good in itself, and well calculated to do good to his creatures. And I shall show that his operations in the heavens and on the earth prove and demonstrate the whole

Clarke: Job 36:3 - -- And will ascribe righteousness to my Maker - By proving the above points, the righteous conduct of God, and his gracious government of the world, wi...

And will ascribe righteousness to my Maker - By proving the above points, the righteous conduct of God, and his gracious government of the world, will be fully established. That Elihu brings his knowledge from afar - from every part of the creation, as well as from the Divine nature - is evident from the end of the chapter

1.    The omnipotence of God; - God is great

2.    The eternity of God - We know him not, the number of his years cannot be found out, Job 36:26

3.    From the economy of God in the atmosphere, in dews, rain, vapor, and the irrigation of the earth; - He maketh small the drops, etc., Job 36:27, Job 36:28

4.    In the thunder and lightning, by which he performs such wonders in the atmosphere, and executes such judgments in the world; - Also who can understand the noise of his tabernacle? He spreadeth his light upon it. He judgeth the people, etc., Job 36:29-33.

Clarke: Job 36:4 - -- My words shall not be false - My words shall be truth without falsity

My words shall not be false - My words shall be truth without falsity

Clarke: Job 36:4 - -- He that is perfect in knowledge is with thee - " The perfection of knowledge is with thee."Thou art a sensible, well-informed man, and will be able ...

He that is perfect in knowledge is with thee - " The perfection of knowledge is with thee."Thou art a sensible, well-informed man, and will be able to judge of what I say.

Clarke: Job 36:5 - -- God is mighty and despiseth not any - He reproaches no man for his want of knowledge. If any man lack wisdom, he may come to God, who giveth liberal...

God is mighty and despiseth not any - He reproaches no man for his want of knowledge. If any man lack wisdom, he may come to God, who giveth liberally, and upbraideth not. I prefer this to the passive sense, will not be despised

Clarke: Job 36:5 - -- He is mighty - Literally, "He is mighty in strength of heart;"he can never be terrified nor alarmed.

He is mighty - Literally, "He is mighty in strength of heart;"he can never be terrified nor alarmed.

Clarke: Job 36:6 - -- He preserveth not the life - He will not give life to the wicked; all such forfeit life by their transgressions

He preserveth not the life - He will not give life to the wicked; all such forfeit life by their transgressions

Clarke: Job 36:6 - -- But giveth right - Justice will he give to the afflicted or humble, עניים aniyim .

But giveth right - Justice will he give to the afflicted or humble, עניים aniyim .

Clarke: Job 36:7 - -- He withdraweth not his eyes - Exactly similar to those words of David, Psa 34:15 : "The eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous.

He withdraweth not his eyes - Exactly similar to those words of David, Psa 34:15 : "The eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous.

Clarke: Job 36:7 - -- But with kings are they on the throne - I think the words should be read thus: - "But with kings upon the throne shall he place them; and they shall...

But with kings are they on the throne - I think the words should be read thus: - "But with kings upon the throne shall he place them; and they shall be exalted for ever."The word וישיבם vaiyeshibem , he will establish or place them, should be added to the first clause, as I have done; and then the sense becomes much clearer. Instead of לנצח fo da lanetsach , forever, perhaps to victory would be a better sense: "But with kings upon the throne will he place them; and they shall be exalted or triumph to victory."This is precisely the same idea, and conveyed in nearly the same words, as that of our Lord: - "To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my throne, even as I also overcame, and am set down with my Father in his throne;"Rev 3:21. "Unto him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own blood, and hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father, to him be glory,"etc.; Rev 1:5, Rev 1:6.

Clarke: Job 36:8 - -- And if they be bound in fetters - These are means which God uses, not of punishment, but of correction.

And if they be bound in fetters - These are means which God uses, not of punishment, but of correction.

Clarke: Job 36:9 - -- He showeth them their work - He shows them the exceeding sinfulness of sin

He showeth them their work - He shows them the exceeding sinfulness of sin

Clarke: Job 36:9 - -- That they have exceeded - יתגברו yithgabbaru , "that they have strengthened themselves,"and did not trust in the living God; and therefore th...

That they have exceeded - יתגברו yithgabbaru , "that they have strengthened themselves,"and did not trust in the living God; and therefore they would not help themselves when trouble came.

Clarke: Job 36:10 - -- He openeth also their ear - He gives them to understand the reason why they are thus corrected, and commands them to return from those iniquities wh...

He openeth also their ear - He gives them to understand the reason why they are thus corrected, and commands them to return from those iniquities which have induced him to visit them with afflictions and distresses.

Clarke: Job 36:11 - -- If they obey and serve him - There may appear in the course of Providence to be some exceptions to this general rule; but it is most true, that this...

If they obey and serve him - There may appear in the course of Providence to be some exceptions to this general rule; but it is most true, that this is literally or spiritually fulfilled to all the genuine followers of God. Every man is happy, in whatsoever circumstances, whose heart is unreservedly dedicated to his Maker.

Clarke: Job 36:12 - -- But if they obey not - This also is a general rule, from which, in the course of Providence, there are only few, and those only apparent, deviations...

But if they obey not - This also is a general rule, from which, in the course of Providence, there are only few, and those only apparent, deviations. Instead of they shall perish by the sword, the meaning of the Hebrew בשלח יעברו beshelach yaaboru , is, "By a dart they shall pass by."They shall be in continual dangers, and often fall before they have lived out half their days. Mr. Good translates: They pass by as an arrow. The Vulgate: Transibunt per gladium . "They shall pass away by the sword."

Clarke: Job 36:13 - -- But the hypocrites in heart - חנפי chanphey , the profligates, the impious, those who have neither the form nor the power of godliness. The hyp...

But the hypocrites in heart - חנפי chanphey , the profligates, the impious, those who have neither the form nor the power of godliness. The hypocrite is he who has the form but not the power, though he wishes to be thought as inwardly righteous as he is outwardly correct; and he takes up the profession of religion only to serve secular ends. This is not the meaning of the word in the book of Job, where it frequently occurs

Clarke: Job 36:13 - -- They cry not - " Though he binds them, yet they cry not."They are too obstinate to humble themselves even under the mighty hand of God.

They cry not - " Though he binds them, yet they cry not."They are too obstinate to humble themselves even under the mighty hand of God.

Clarke: Job 36:14 - -- They die in youth - Exactly what the psalmist says, "Bloody and deceitful men shall not live out half their days,"Psa 55:23. Literally, the words of...

They die in youth - Exactly what the psalmist says, "Bloody and deceitful men shall not live out half their days,"Psa 55:23. Literally, the words of Elihu are, "They shall die in the youth of their soul.

Clarke: Job 36:14 - -- Their life is among the unclean - בקדשים bakedeshim , among the whores, harlots, prostitutes, and sodomites. In this sense the word is used, ...

Their life is among the unclean - בקדשים bakedeshim , among the whores, harlots, prostitutes, and sodomites. In this sense the word is used, though it also signifies consecrated persons; but we know that in idolatry characters of this kind were consecrated to Baal and Ashtaroth, Venus, Priapus, etc. Mr. Good translates the rabble. The Septuagint: Their life shalt be wounded by the angels.

Clarke: Job 36:15 - -- And openeth their ears in oppression - He will let them know for what end they are afflicted, and why he permits them to be oppressed. The word י...

And openeth their ears in oppression - He will let them know for what end they are afflicted, and why he permits them to be oppressed. The word יגל yigel might be translated he shall make them exult, or sing with joy, in oppression; like the three Hebrews in the burning fiery furnace.

Clarke: Job 36:16 - -- Even so would he have removed thee - If thou hadst turned to, obeyed, and served him, thy present state would have been widely different from what i...

Even so would he have removed thee - If thou hadst turned to, obeyed, and served him, thy present state would have been widely different from what it is.

Clarke: Job 36:17 - -- But thou hast fulfilled the judgment of the wicked - As thou art acting like the wicked, so God deals with thee as he deals with them. Elihu is not ...

But thou hast fulfilled the judgment of the wicked - As thou art acting like the wicked, so God deals with thee as he deals with them. Elihu is not a whit behind Job’ s other friends. None of them seems to have known any thing of the permission given by God to Satan to afflict and torment an innocent man.

Clarke: Job 36:18 - -- Because there is wrath - This is a time in which God is punishing the wicked; take heed lest thou be cut off in a moment. Redeem the time; the days ...

Because there is wrath - This is a time in which God is punishing the wicked; take heed lest thou be cut off in a moment. Redeem the time; the days are evil

Clarke: Job 36:18 - -- Then a great ransom - When he determines to destroy, who can save?

Then a great ransom - When he determines to destroy, who can save?

Clarke: Job 36:20 - -- Desire not the night - Thou hast wished for death; (here called night); desire it not; leave that with God. If he hear thee, and send death, thou ma...

Desire not the night - Thou hast wished for death; (here called night); desire it not; leave that with God. If he hear thee, and send death, thou mayest be cut off in a way at which thy soul would shudder.

Clarke: Job 36:21 - -- Regard not iniquity - It is sinful to entertain such wishes; it is an insult to the providence of God. He sends affliction; he knows this to be best...

Regard not iniquity - It is sinful to entertain such wishes; it is an insult to the providence of God. He sends affliction; he knows this to be best for thee: but thou hast preferred death to affliction, thereby setting thy wisdom against the wisdom of God. Many in affliction, long for death; and yet they are not prepared to appear before God! What madness is this! If he takes them at their wish, they are ruined for ever. Affliction may be the means of their salvation; the wished-for death, of their eternal destruction.

Clarke: Job 36:22 - -- God exalteth by his power - He has brought thee low, but he can raise thee up. Thou art not yet out of the reach of his mercy. Thy affliction is a p...

God exalteth by his power - He has brought thee low, but he can raise thee up. Thou art not yet out of the reach of his mercy. Thy affliction is a proof that he acts towards thee as a merciful Parent. He knows what is best to be done; he teaches thee how thou shouldst suffer and improve. Why sin against his kindness? Who can teach like him?

Clarke: Job 36:23 - -- Who hath enjoined him his way - Has God taken instructions from any man how he shall govern the world

Who hath enjoined him his way - Has God taken instructions from any man how he shall govern the world

Clarke: Job 36:23 - -- Thou hast wrought iniquity? - Who can prove, in the whole compass of the creation, that there is one thing imperfect, superabundant, or out of its p...

Thou hast wrought iniquity? - Who can prove, in the whole compass of the creation, that there is one thing imperfect, superabundant, or out of its place? Who can show that there is, in the course of the Divine providence, one unrighteous, cruel, or unwise act? All the cunning and wickedness of man have never been able to find out the smallest flaw in the work of God.

Clarke: Job 36:24 - -- Remember that thou magnify his work - Take this into consideration; instead of fretting against the dispensations of Divine providence, and quarrell...

Remember that thou magnify his work - Take this into consideration; instead of fretting against the dispensations of Divine providence, and quarrelling with thy Maker, attentively survey his works; consider the operation of his hands; and see the proofs of his wisdom in the plan of all, of his power in the production and support of all, and of his goodness in the end for which all have been made, and to which every operation in nature most obviously tends; and then magnify his work. Speak of him as thou shalt find; let the visible works of thy Maker prove to thee his eternal power and Godhead, and let nature lead thee to the Creator.

TSK: Job 36:2 - -- Suffer : Job 21:3, Job 33:31-33; Heb 13:22 I have yet to speak : etc. Heb. there are yet words for God, Job 13:7, Job 13:8, Job 33:6; Exo 4:16; Jer 15...

Suffer : Job 21:3, Job 33:31-33; Heb 13:22

I have yet to speak : etc. Heb. there are yet words for God, Job 13:7, Job 13:8, Job 33:6; Exo 4:16; Jer 15:19; Eze 2:7; 2Co 5:20

TSK: Job 36:3 - -- fetch : Job 28:12, Job 28:13, Job 28:20-24, Job 32:8; Pro 2:4, Pro 2:5; Mat 2:1, Mat 2:2, Mat 12:42; Act 8:27-40; Rom 10:6-8; Jam 1:5, Jam 1:17, Jam 3...

TSK: Job 36:4 - -- my : Job 13:4, Job 13:7, Job 21:27, Job 21:34, 22:6-30; Pro 8:7, Pro 8:8; 2Co 2:17 perfect : Job 37:16; Luk 1:3; Act 24:22; 1Co 14:20 *marg. Col 4:12;...

TSK: Job 36:5 - -- despiseth : Job 10:3, Job 31:13; Psa 22:24, Psa 138:6 mighty : Job 9:14, Job 9:19, Job 12:13-16, Job 26:12-14, Job 37:23; Psa 99:4, Psa 147:5; Jer 10:...

TSK: Job 36:6 - -- preserveth : Job 21:7-9, Job 21:30; Psa 55:23; Jer 12:1, Jer 12:2; 2Pe 2:9 giveth : Job 29:12-17; Psa 9:12, Psa 10:14, Psa 10:15, Psa 72:4, Psa 72:12-...

TSK: Job 36:7 - -- withdraw, 2Ch 16:9; Psa 33:18, Psa 34:15; Zep 3:17; 1Pe 3:12 with : Job 1:3, Job 42:12; Gen 23:6, Gen 41:40; 1Sa 2:8; Est 10:3; Psa 78:70-72, Psa 113:...

TSK: Job 36:8 - -- if : Job 13:27, Job 19:6, Job 33:18, Job 33:19; Psa 18:5, Psa 107:10, Psa 116:3; Lam 3:9 cords : Pro 5:22

TSK: Job 36:9 - -- he : Job 10:2; Deu 4:21, Deu 4:22; 2Ch 33:11-13; Psa 94:12, Psa 119:67, Psa 119:71; Lam 3:39, Lam 3:40; Luk 15:17-19; 1Co 11:32 their : Psa 5:10; Isa ...

TSK: Job 36:10 - -- openeth : Job 36:15, Job 33:16-23; Psa 40:6; Isa 48:8, Isa 48:17, Isa 50:5; Act 16:14 commandeth : Pro 1:22, Pro 1:23, Pro 8:4, Pro 8:5, Pro 9:4-6; Is...

TSK: Job 36:11 - -- If : Job 22:21; Deu 4:30; Jer 7:23, Jer 26:13; Rom 6:17; Heb 11:8 spend : Job 11:13-19, Job 21:11, Job 22:23, Job 42:12; Ecc 9:2, Ecc 9:3; Jam 5:5; Re...

TSK: Job 36:12 - -- if : Deu 18:15-22, Deu 29:15-20; Isa 1:20, Isa 3:11; Rom 2:8, Rom 2:9 perish : Heb. pass away die : Job 4:21; Joh 8:21-24

if : Deu 18:15-22, Deu 29:15-20; Isa 1:20, Isa 3:11; Rom 2:8, Rom 2:9

perish : Heb. pass away

die : Job 4:21; Joh 8:21-24

TSK: Job 36:13 - -- heap : Num 32:14; 2Ch 28:13, 2Ch 28:22; Rom 2:5 they : Job 15:4, Job 27:8-10, Job 35:9, Job 35:10; Mat 22:12, Mat 22:13 bindeth : Job 36:8; Psa 107:10

TSK: Job 36:14 - -- They die : Heb. Their soul dieth, Job 15:32, Job 21:23-25, Job 22:16; Gen 38:7-10; Lev 10:1, Lev 10:2; Psa 55:23 unclean : or, sodomites, Gen 19:5, Ge...

They die : Heb. Their soul dieth, Job 15:32, Job 21:23-25, Job 22:16; Gen 38:7-10; Lev 10:1, Lev 10:2; Psa 55:23

unclean : or, sodomites, Gen 19:5, Gen 19:24, Gen 19:25; Deu 23:17

TSK: Job 36:15 - -- delivereth : Job 36:6 poor : or, afflicted openeth : Job 36:10; 2Ch 12:8

delivereth : Job 36:6

poor : or, afflicted

openeth : Job 36:10; 2Ch 12:8

TSK: Job 36:16 - -- a broad : Job 19:8, Job 42:10-17; Psa 18:19, Psa 31:8, Psa 40:1-3, Psa 118:5 that which should be set on thy table : Heb. the rest of thy table full :...

a broad : Job 19:8, Job 42:10-17; Psa 18:19, Psa 31:8, Psa 40:1-3, Psa 118:5

that which should be set on thy table : Heb. the rest of thy table

full : Psa 23:5, Psa 36:8, Psa 63:5; Isa 25:6, Isa 55:2

TSK: Job 36:17 - -- fulfilled : Job 16:5, Job 34:8, Job 34:36; Rom 1:32; Rev 18:4 take hold on thee : should uphold thee

fulfilled : Job 16:5, Job 34:8, Job 34:36; Rom 1:32; Rev 18:4

take hold on thee : should uphold thee

TSK: Job 36:18 - -- Because : Psa 2:5, Psa 2:12, Psa 110:5; Mat 3:7; Rom 1:18, Rom 2:5; Eph 5:6 his : Psa 39:10; Isa 14:6; Eze 24:16 then : Job 33:24; Psa 49:7, Psa 49:8;...

Because : Psa 2:5, Psa 2:12, Psa 110:5; Mat 3:7; Rom 1:18, Rom 2:5; Eph 5:6

his : Psa 39:10; Isa 14:6; Eze 24:16

then : Job 33:24; Psa 49:7, Psa 49:8; 1Ti 2:6; Heb 2:3

deliver thee : Heb. turn thee aside

TSK: Job 36:19 - -- Will : Pro 10:2, Pro 11:4; Isa 2:20; Zep 1:18; Jam 5:3 nor all : Job 9:13, Job 34:20; Psa 33:16, Psa 33:17; Pro 11:21; Isa 37:36

TSK: Job 36:20 - -- Desire : Job 3:20, Job 3:21, Job 6:9, Job 7:15, Job 14:13, Job 17:13, Job 17:14 cut : Exo 12:29; 2Ki 19:35; Pro 14:32; Ecc 11:3; Dan 5:30; Luk 12:20; ...

TSK: Job 36:21 - -- regard : Psa 66:18; Eze 14:4; Mat 5:29, Mat 5:30 this : Job 34:7-9, Job 35:3; Dan 3:16-18, Dan 6:10; Mat 13:21, Mat 16:24; Act 5:40, Act 5:41; Heb 11:...

TSK: Job 36:22 - -- God : 1Sa 2:7, 1Sa 2:8; Psa 75:7; Isa 14:5; Jer 27:5-8; Dan 4:25, Dan 4:32, Dan 5:18; Luk 1:52; Rom 13:1 who : Psa 94:10, Psa 94:12; Isa 48:17, Isa 54...

TSK: Job 36:23 - -- Who hath : Job 34:13-33; Isa 40:13, Isa 40:14; Rom 11:34; 1Co 2:16; Eph 1:11 Thou : Job 8:3, Job 34:10, Job 40:8; Rom 2:5, Rom 3:5, Rom 9:14

TSK: Job 36:24 - -- magnify : Job 12:13-25, Job 26:5-14; Psa 28:5, Psa 34:3, Psa 72:18, Psa 86:8-10, Psa 92:4, Psa 92:5, Psa 104:24; Psa 107:8, Psa 107:15, Psa 111:2-4, P...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Job 36:1 - -- Elihu also proceeded - Hebrew added - ויסף vayâsaph . Vulgate "addens;" Septuagint, Ηροσθεὶς Eerostheis - "add...

Elihu also proceeded - Hebrew added - ויסף vayâsaph . Vulgate "addens;" Septuagint, Ηροσθεὶς Eerostheis - "adding, or proceeding."The Hebrew commentators remark that this word is used because this speech is "added"to the number which it might be supposed he would make. There had been "three"series of speeches, by Job and his friends, and in each one of them Job had spoken three times. Each one of the three friends had also spoken thrice, except Zophar, who failed to reply when it came to his turn. Elihu had also now made three speeches, and here he would naturally have closed, but it is remarked that he "added"this to the usual number.

Barnes: Job 36:2 - -- Suffer me a little - Even beyond the regular order of speaking; or, allow me to go on though I have fully occupied my place in the "number"of s...

Suffer me a little - Even beyond the regular order of speaking; or, allow me to go on though I have fully occupied my place in the "number"of speeches. Jarchi remarks that this verse is "Chaldaic,"and it is worthy of observation that the principal words in it are not those ordinarily used in Hebrew to express the same thought, but are such as occur in the Chaldee. The word rendered "suffer"( כתר kâthar ) has here a signification which occurs only an Syriac and Chaldee. It properly means in Hebrew: to "surround,"in a hostile sense; Jdg 20:43; Psa 22:12; then in the Hiphil to crown oneself. In Syriac and Chaldee, it means "to wait"- perhaps from the idea of going round and round - and this is the meaning here. He wished them not to remit their attention, but to have patience with what he would yet say.

And I will show thee that - Margin, "there are yet words for God."The Hebrew is, "And I will show you that there are yet words for God;"that is, that there were yet many. considerations which could be urged in vindication of his government. The idea of Elihu is not so much that "he"had much to say, as that in fact there was much that "could be"said for him. He regarded his character and government as having been attacked, and he believed that there were ample considerations which could be urged in its defense. The word which is here rendered "I will show thee"( אחוך 'achâvekā ), is also Chaldee in its signification. It is from חוה châvâh (Chaldee) not used in the Qal, but it occurs in other forms in the Chaldee portion of the Scriptures; see Dan 2:11, Dan 2:16, Dan 2:24, Dan 2:27. The use of these Chaldee words is somewhat remarkable, and perhaps may throw some light on the question about the time and place of the composition of the book.

Barnes: Job 36:3 - -- I will fetch my knowledge from afar - What I say shall not be mere commonplace. It shall be the result of reflection on subjects that lie out o...

I will fetch my knowledge from afar - What I say shall not be mere commonplace. It shall be the result of reflection on subjects that lie out of the ordinary range of thought. The idea is, that he did not mean to go over the ground that had been already trodden, or to suggest such reflections as would occur to anyone, but that he meant to bring his illustrations from abstruser matters, and from things that had escaped their attention. He in fact appeals to the various operations of nature - the rain, the dew, the light, the instincts of the animal creation, the vicissitudes of the seasons, the laws of heat and cold, and shows that all these prove that God is inscrutably wise and gloriously great.

And will ascribe righteousness to my Maker - That is, I will show that these things to which I now appeal, "prove"that he is righteous, and is worthy of universal confidence. Perhaps, also, he means to contrast the result of his reflections with those of Job. He regarded him as having charged his Maker with injustice and wrong. Elihu says that it was a fixed principle with him to ascribe righteousness to God, and that he believed it could be fully sustained by an appeal to his works. Man should "presume"that his Maker is good, and wise, and just; he should be "willing"to find that he is so; he should "expect"that the result of the profoundest investigation of his ways and works will prove that he is so - and in such an investigation he will never be disappointed. A man is in no good frame of mind, and is not likely to be led to any good result in his investigations, when he "begins"his inquiries by believing that his Maker is unjust, and who "prosecutes"them with the hope and expectation that he will find him to be so. Yet do people never do this?

Barnes: Job 36:4 - -- For truly my words shall not be false - This is designed to conciliate attention. It is a professed purpose to state nothing but truth. Even in...

For truly my words shall not be false - This is designed to conciliate attention. It is a professed purpose to state nothing but truth. Even in order to vindicate the ways of God he would state nothing but what would bear the most rigid examination. Job had charged on his friends a purpose "to speak wickedly for God;"to make use of unsound arguments in vindicating his cause, (see the notes at Job 13:7-8), and Elihu now says that "he"will make use of no such reasoning, but that all that he says shall be founded in strict truth.

He that is perfect in knowledge is with thee - This refers undoubtedly to Elihu himself, and is a claim to a clear understanding of the subject. He did not doubt that he was right, and that he had some views which were worthy of their attention. The main idea is, that he was of "sound"knowledge; that his views were not sophistical and captious; that they were founded in truth, and were worthy, therefore. of their profound attention.

Barnes: Job 36:5 - -- Behold, God is Mighty - This is the first consideration which Elihu urges, and the purpose seems to be to affirm that God is so great that he h...

Behold, God is Mighty - This is the first consideration which Elihu urges, and the purpose seems to be to affirm that God is so great that he has no occasion to modify his treatment of any class of people from a reference to himself. He is wholly independent of all, and can therefore be impartial in his dealings. If it were otherwise; if he were dependent upon human beings for any share of his happiness, he might be tempted to show special favor to the great and to the rich; to spare the mighty who are wicked, though he cut off the poor. But he has no such inducement, as he is wholly independent; and it is to be presumed, therefore, that he treats all impartially; see the notes at Job 35:5-8.

And despiseth not any - None who are poor and humble. He does not pass them by with cold neglect because they are poor and power. less, and turn his attention to the great and mighty because he is dependent on them.

He is mighty in wisdom - Margin, "heart."The word "heart"in Hebrew is often used to denote the intellectual powers; and the idea here is, that God has perfect wisdom in the management of his affairs. He is acquainted with all the circumstances of his creatures, and passes by none from a defect of knowledge, or frown a lack of wisdom to know how to adopt his dealings to their condition.

Barnes: Job 36:6 - -- He preserveth not the life of the wicked - Elihu here maintains substantially the same sentiment which the three friends of Job had done, that ...

He preserveth not the life of the wicked - Elihu here maintains substantially the same sentiment which the three friends of Job had done, that the dealings of God in this life are in accordance with character, and that strict justice is thus maintained.

But giveth right to the poor - Margin, "or afflicted."The Hebrew word often refers to the afflicted, to the humble, or the lowly; and the reference here is to the "lower classes"of society. The idea is, that God deals justly with them, and does not overlook them because they are so poor and feeble that they cannot contribute anything to him. In this sentiment Elihu was undoubtedly right, though, like the three friends of Job, he seems to have adopted the principle that the dealings of God here are according to the "characters"of people. He had some views in advance of theirs. He saw that affliction is designed for "discipline"Job 33; that God is willing to show mercy to the sufferer on repentance; that he is not dependent upon human beings, and that his dealings "cannot"be graduated by any reference to what he would receive or suffer from people; but still he clung to the idea that the dealings of God here are a proof of the character of the afflicted. What was mysterious about it he resolved into sovereignty, and showed that man "ought"to be submissive to God, and to "believe"that he was qualified to govern. He lacked the views which Christianity has furnished, that the inequalities that appear in the divine dealings here will be made clear in the retributions of another world.

Barnes: Job 36:7 - -- He withdraweth not his eyes from the righteous - That is, he constantly observes them, whether they are in the more elevated or humble ranks of...

He withdraweth not his eyes from the righteous - That is, he constantly observes them, whether they are in the more elevated or humble ranks of life. Even though he afflicts them, his eye is upon them, and he does not forsake them. It will be remembered that one of the difficulties to be accounted for was, that they who professed to be righteous are subjected to severe trials. The friends of Job had maintained that such a fact was in itself proof that they who professed to be pious were not so, but were hypocrites. Job had verged to the other extreme, and had said that it looked as if God had forsaken those that loved him, and that there was no advantage in being righteous; notes, Job 35:2. Elihu takes a middle ground, and says that neither was the correct opinion. It is true, he says, that the righteous are afflicted, but they are not forsaken. The eye of God is still upon them, and he watches over them, whether on the throne or in dungeons, in order "to bring good results"out of their trials.

But with kings are they on the throne - That is, if the righteous are in the state of the highest earthly honor and prosperity, God is with them, and is their protector and friend. The same thing Elihu, in the following verses, says is true respecting the righteous, when they are in the most down-trodden and depressed condition.

Yea, he doth establish them for ever - The meaning of this is, that they are regarded by God with favor. When righteous kings "are"thus prospered, and have a permanent and peaceful reign, it is God who gives this prosperity to them. They are under his watchful eye, and his protecting hand.

Barnes: Job 36:8 - -- And if they be bound in fetters - That is, if the righteous are thrown into prison, and are subjected to oppressions and trials, or if they are...

And if they be bound in fetters - That is, if the righteous are thrown into prison, and are subjected to oppressions and trials, or if they are chained down, as it were, on a bed of pain, or crushed by heavy calamities, the eye of God is still upon them. Their sufferings should not be regarded either as proof that they are hypocrites, or that God is regardless of them, and is indifferent whether people are good or evil. The true solution of the difficulty was, that God was then accomplishing purposes of discipline, and that happy results would follow if they would receive affliction in a proper manner.

Barnes: Job 36:9 - -- Then he showeth them their work - What their lives have been. This he does either by a messenger sent to them Job 33:23, or by their own reflec...

Then he showeth them their work - What their lives have been. This he does either by a messenger sent to them Job 33:23, or by their own reflections Job 33:27, or by the influences of his Spirit leading them to a proper review of their lives. The object of their affliction, Elihu says, is to bring them to see what their conduct has been, and to reform what has been amiss. It should not be interpreted either as proof that the afflicted are eminently wicked, as the friends of Job maintained, or as furnishing an occasion for severe reflections on the divine government, such as Job had indulged in. It is all consistent with an equitable and kind administration; with the belief that the afflicted have true piety - though they have wandered and erred; and with the conviction that God is dealing with them in mercy, and not in the severity of wrath. They need only recal the errors of their lives; humble themselves, and exercise true repentance, and they would find afflictions to be among even their richest blessings.

Transgressions that they have exceeded - Or, rather, "he shows them their transgressions that they have been very great"; that they have made themselves great, mighty, strong - יתגברוּ yitgâbarû . The idea is, that their transgressions had been allowed to accumulate, or to become strong, until it was necessary to interpose in this manner, and check them by severe affliction. All this was consistent, however, with the belief that the sufferer was truly pious and might find favor if he would repent.

Barnes: Job 36:10 - -- He openeth also their ear to discipline - To teaching; or he makes them willing to learn the lessons which their afflictions are designed to te...

He openeth also their ear to discipline - To teaching; or he makes them willing to learn the lessons which their afflictions are designed to teach; coral). See the notes at Job 33:16.

Barnes: Job 36:11 - -- If they obey and serve him - That is, if, as the result of their afflictions, they repent of their sins, seek his mercy, and serve him in time ...

If they obey and serve him - That is, if, as the result of their afflictions, they repent of their sins, seek his mercy, and serve him in time to come, they shall be prospered still. The design of affliction, Elihu says, is, not to cut them off, but to bring them to repentance. This sentiment he had advanced and illustrated before at greater length; see the notes at Job 33:23-28. The object of all this is, doubtless, to assure Job that he should not regard his calamities either as proof that he had never understood religion - as his friends maintained; or that God was severe, and did not regard those that loved and obeyed him - as Job had seemed to suppose; but that there was something in his life and conduct which made discipline necessary, and that if he would repcnt of that, he would find returning prosperity, and end his days in happiness and peace.

Barnes: Job 36:12 - -- But if they obey not - If those who are afflicted do not turn to God, and yield him obedience, they must expect that he will continue their cal...

But if they obey not - If those who are afflicted do not turn to God, and yield him obedience, they must expect that he will continue their calamities until they are cut off.

They shall perish by the sword - Margin, as in Hebrew "pass away."The word rendered "sword"( שׁלח shelach ) means properly "anything sent"- as a spear or an arrow - "a missile"- and then an instrument of war in general. It may be applied to any weapon that is used to produce death. The idea here is, that the man who was afflicted on account of the sins which he had committed, and who did not repent of them and turn to God, would be cut off. God would not withdraw his hand unless he acknowledged his offences. As he had undertaken the work of discipline, he could not consistently do it, for it would be in fact "yielding"the point to him whom he chastised. This "may"be the case now, and the statement here made by Elihu may involve a principle which will explain the cause of the death of many persons, even of the professedly pious. They are devoted to gain or amusement; they seek the honors of the world for their families or themselves, and in fact they make no advances in piety, and are doing nothing for the cause of religion. God lays his hand upon them at first gently. They lose their health, or a part of their property. But the discipline is not effectual. He then lays his band on them with more severity, and takes from them an endeared child. Still, all is ineffectual. The sorrow of the affliction passes away, and they mingle again in the frivolous and busy scenes of life as worldly as ever, and exert no influence in favor of religion. Another blow is needful, and blow after blow is struck; but nothing overcomes their worldliness, nothing makes them devotedly and sincerely useful, and it becomes necessary to remove them from the world.

They shall die without knowledge - That is, without any true knowledge of the plans and government of God, or of the reasons why he brought these afflictions upon them. In all their sufferings they never "saw"the design. They complained, and murmured, and charged God with severity, but they never understood that the affliction was intended for their own benefit.

Barnes: Job 36:13 - -- But the hypocrites in heart heap up wrath - By their continued impiety they lay the foundation for increasing and multiplied expressions of the...

But the hypocrites in heart heap up wrath - By their continued impiety they lay the foundation for increasing and multiplied expressions of the divine displeasure. Instead of confessing their sins when they are afflicted, and seeking for pardon: instead of returning to God and becoming truly his friends, they remaian impenitent, unconverted, and are rebellious at heart. They complain of the divine government and plans, and their feelings and conduct make it necessary for God further to interpose, until they are finally cut off and consigned to ruin. Elihu had stated what was the effect in two classes of persons who were afflicted. There were those who were truly pious, and who would receive affliction as sent from God for purposes of discipline, and who would repent and seek his mercy; Job 36:11. There were those, as a second class, who were openly wicked, and who would not be benfited by afflictions, and who would thus be cut off, Job 36:12. He says, also, that there was a third class - the class of hypocrites, who also were not profited by afflictions, and who would only by their perverseness and rebellion heap up wrath. It is "possible"that he may have designed to include Job in this number, as his three friends had done, but it seems more probable that he meant merely to suggest to Job that there was such a class, and to turn his mind to the "possibility"that he might be of the number. In explaining the design and effect of afflictions, it was at least proper to refer to this class, since it could not be doubted that there were people of this description.

They cry not when he bindeth them - They do not cry to God with the language of penitence when he binds them down by calamities; see Job 36:8.

Barnes: Job 36:14 - -- They die in youth - Margin, "Their soul dieth."The word "soul"or "life"in the Hebrew is used to denote oneself. The meaning is, that they would...

They die in youth - Margin, "Their soul dieth."The word "soul"or "life"in the Hebrew is used to denote oneself. The meaning is, that they would soon be cut down, and share the lot of the openly wicked. If they amended their lives they might be spared, and continue to live in prosperity and honor; if they did not, whether openly wicked or hypocrites. they would be early cut off.

And their life is amnong the unclean - Margin, "Sodomites."The idea is, that they would be treated in the same way as the most abandoned and vile of the race. No special favor would be shown to them because they were "professors"of religion, nor would this fact be a shield against the treatment which they deserved. They could not be classed with the righteous, and must, therefore, share the fate of the most worth mss and wicked of the race. The word rendered "unclean"( קדשׁים qâdêsh ) is from קדשׁ qâdash , "to be pure or holy"; and in the Hiphil to regard as holy, to consecrate, or devote to the service of God, as e. g. a priest; Exo 28:41; Exo 29:1. Then it means to consecrate or devote to "any"service or purpose, as to an idol god. Hence, it means one consecrated or devoted to the service of Astarte, the goddess of the Sidonians or Venus, and as this worship was corrupt and licentious, the word means one who is licentious or corrupt compare Deu 23:18; 1Ki 14:24; Gen 38:21-22. Here it means the licentious, the corrupt, the abandoned; and the idea is, that if hypocrites did not repent under the inflictions of divine judgment, they would be dealt with in the same way as the most abandoned and vile. On the evidence that licentiousness constituted a part of the ancient worship of idols, see Spencer "de Legg. ritual Hebraedor."Lib. ii. cap. iii. pp. 613, 614, Ed. 1732. Jerome renders this, "intereffoeminatos." The Septuagint strangely enough has: "Let their life be wounded by angels."

Barnes: Job 36:15 - -- He delivereth the poor in his affliction - Margin, "or afflicted."This accords better with the usual meaning of the Hebrew word ( עני ‛...

He delivereth the poor in his affliction - Margin, "or afflicted."This accords better with the usual meaning of the Hebrew word ( עני ‛ânı̂y ) and with the connection. The inquiry was not particularly respecting the "poor,"but the "afflicted,"and the sentiment which Elihu is illustrating is, that when the afflicted call upon God he will deliver them. The object is to induce Job to make such an application to God that he might be rescued from his calamities, and be permitted yet to enjoy life and happiness.

And openeth their ears - Causes them to understand the nature of his government, and the reasons why he visits them in this manner: compare Job 33:16, Job 33:23-27. The sentiment here is a mere repetition of what Elihu had more than once before advanced. It is his leading thought; the "principle"on which he undertakes to explain the reason why God afflicts people, and by which he proposes to remove the difference between Job and his friends.

In oppression - This word expresses too much. It refers to God, and implies that there was something oppressive, harsh, or cruel in his dealings. This is not the idea of Elihu in the language which he uses. The word which he uses here ( לחץ lachats ) means "that which crushes"; then straits, distress. affliction. Jerome, "in tribulatione."The word "affliction"would express the thought.

Barnes: Job 36:16 - -- Even so would he have removed thee - That is, if you had been patient and resigned, and if you had gone to him with a broken heart. Having stat...

Even so would he have removed thee - That is, if you had been patient and resigned, and if you had gone to him with a broken heart. Having stated the "principles"in regard to affliction which he held to be indisputable, and having affirmed that God was ever ready to relieve the sufferer if he would apply to him with a proper spirit, it was natural to infer from this that the reason why Job "continued"to suffer was, that he did not manifest a proper spirit in his trials. Had he done this, Elihu says, the hand of God would have been long since withdrawn, and his afflictions would have been removed.

Out of the strait into a broad place - From the narrow, pent up way, where it is impossible to move, into a wide and open path. Afflictions are compared with a narrow path, in which it is impossible to get. along; prosperity with a broad and open road in which there are no obstructions; compare Psa 18:19; Psa 31:8. "And that which should be set on thy table."Margin, "the rest of thy table."The Hebrew word ( נחת nachath - from נוח nûach , "to rest,"and in the Hiphil to set down, to cause to rest) means properly a "letting,"or "settling down;"and then that which is set down - as e. g. food on a table. This is the idea here. that the food which would be set on his table would be rich and abundant; that is, he would be restored to prosperity, if he envinced a penitent spirit in his trials, and confessed his sins to God. The same image of piety occurs in Psa 23:5, "Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies."

Barnes: Job 36:17 - -- But thou hast fulfilled the judgment of the wicked - Rosenmuller explains this as meaning, "If under divine inflictions and chastisements you w...

But thou hast fulfilled the judgment of the wicked - Rosenmuller explains this as meaning, "If under divine inflictions and chastisements you wish to imitate the obduracy of the wicked, then the cause and the punishment will mutually sustain them selves; that is, the one will be commensurate with the other."But it is not necessary to regard this as a "supposition."It has rather the aspect of; an affirmation, meaning to express the fact that Job "had,"as Elihu feared, envinced the same spirit in his trials which the wicked do. He had not seen in him evidence of penitence and of a desire to return to God, but had heard complaints and murmurings, such as the wicked indulge in. He had "filled up,"or "fulfilled,"the judgment of the wicked; that is, he had in no way come short of the opinion which "they"expressed of the divine dealings. Still it is possible that the word "if"may be here understood, and that Elihu means merely to state that if Job should manifest the same spirit with the wicked, instead of a spirit of penitence, he would have reason to apprehend the same doom which they experience.

Judgment and justice take hold on thee - Margin, "or, should uphold thee."The Hebrew word here rendered "take"- יתמכוּ yitmokû , is from תמך tâmak - "to take hold of, to obtain, to hold fast, to support."Rosenmuller and Gesenius suppose that the word here has a "reciprocal"sense, and means they take hold of each other, or sustain each other. Prof. Lee renders it, "Both judgment and justice will uphold this;"that is, the sentiment which he had just advanced, that Job had filled up the judgment of the wicked. Urnbrett renders it, "If thou art full of the opinion of the wicked, then the opinion and justice will rapidly follow each other."

Doch worm du yell bist yon des Frevlers Urtheil,

So werden Urthoil und Gericht schnell auf einander folgen .

According to this the meaning is, that if Job held the opinions of wicked people, he must expect that these opinions would be rapidly followed by judgment, or that they would go together, and support each other. This seems to me to be in accordance with the connection, and to express the thought which Elihu meant to convey. It is a sentiment which is undoubtedly true - that if a man holds the sentiments, and manifests the spirit of the wicked, he must expect to be treated as they are.

Barnes: Job 36:18 - -- Because there is wrath - That is, the wrath of God is to be dreaded. The meaning is, that if Job persevered in the spirit which he had manifest...

Because there is wrath - That is, the wrath of God is to be dreaded. The meaning is, that if Job persevered in the spirit which he had manifested, he had every reason to expect that God would suddenly cut him off. He might now repent and find mercy, but he had shown the spirit of those who were rebellions in affliction, and if he persevered in that, he had nothing to expect but the wrath of God.

With his stroke - With his smiting or chastisement; compare Job 34:26.

Then a great ransom cannot deliver thee - Margin, "turn thee aside."The meaning is, that a great ransom could not prevent him from being cut off. On the meaning of the word ransom, see the notes at Job 33:24. The idea here is, not that a great ransom could not deliver him "after"he was cut off and consigned to hell - which would be true; but that when he had manifested a spirit of insubmission a little longer, nothing could save him from being cut off from the land of the living. God would not spare him on account; of wealth, or rank, or age, or wisdom. None of these things would be a "ransom"in virtue of which his forfeited life would be preserved.

Barnes: Job 36:19 - -- Will he esteem thy riches? - That is God will not regard thy riches as a reason why he should not cut you off, or as a ransom for your forfeite...

Will he esteem thy riches? - That is God will not regard thy riches as a reason why he should not cut you off, or as a ransom for your forfeited life. The reference here must be to the fact that Job "had been"a rich man, and the meaning is, either that God would not spare him because he "had been"a rich man, or that if he had now all the wealth which he once possessed, it would not be sufficient to be a ransom for his life.

Nor all the forces of his strength - Not all that gives power and influence to a man - wealth, age, wisdom, reputation, authority, and rank. The meaning is, that God would not regard any of these when a man was rebellious in affliction, and refused in a proper manner to acknowledge his Maker. Of the truth of what is here affirmed, there can be no doubt. Riches, rank, and honors cannot redeem the life of a man. They do not save him from the grave, and from all that is gloomy and revolting there. When God comes forth to deal with mankind, he does not regard their gold, their rank, their splendid robes or palaces, but he deals with them as "men"- and the "happy,"the beautiful, the rich, the noble, moulder back, under his hand, to their native dust in the same manner as the most humble peasant. How forcibly should this teach us not to set our hearts on wealth, and not to seek the honors and wealth of the world as our portion!

Barnes: Job 36:20 - -- Desire not the night - That is, evidently, "the night of death."The darkness of the night is an emblem of death, and it is not uncommon to spea...

Desire not the night - That is, evidently, "the night of death."The darkness of the night is an emblem of death, and it is not uncommon to speak of death in this manner; see Joh 9:4, "The night cometh, when no man can work."Elihu seems to have supposed that Job might have looked forward to death as to a time of release; that so far from "dreading"what he had said would come, that God would cut him off at a stroke, it might be the very thing which he desired, and which he anticipated would be an end of his sufferings. Indeed Job had more than once expressed some such sentiment, and Elihu designs to meet that state of mind, and to charge him not to look forward to death as relief. If his present state of mind continued, he says, he would perish under the "wrath"of God; and death in such a manner, great as might be his sufferings here, could not be desirable.

When people are cut off in their place - On this passage, Schultens enumerates no less than "fifteen"different interpretations which have been given, and at the end of this enumeration remarks that he "waits for clearer light to overcome the shades of this night."Rosenmullcr supposes it means,"Long not for the night, in which nations go under themselves;"that is, in which they go down to the inferior regions, or in which they perish. Noyes renders it, "To which nations are taken away to their place."Urnbroil renders it, "Pant not for the night, to go down to the people who dwell under thee;"that is, to the Shades, or to those that dwell in Sheol. Prof. Lee translates it, "Pant not for the night, for the rising of the populace from their places."Coverdale, "Prolong not thou the time, until there come a night for thee to set other people in thy stead."The Septuagint, "Do not draw out the night, that the people may come instead of them;"that is, to their assistance.

Dr. Good "Neither long thou for the night, for the vaults of the nations underneath them;"and supposes that the reference is to the "catacombs,"or mummy-pits that were employed for burial-places. These are but specimens of the interpretations which have been proposed for this passage, and it is easy to see that there is little prospect of being able to explain it in a satisfactory manner. The principal difficulty in the passage is in the word rendered "cut off,"( עלה ‛âlâh ) which means "to go up, to ascend,"and in the incongruity between that and the word rendered in their place ( תחתם tachthâm ), which literally means "under them."A literal translation of the passage is, "Do not desire the night to ascend to the people under them;"but I confess I cannot understand the passage, after all the attempts made to explain it. The trauslation given by Umbreit, seems best to agree with the connection, but I am unable to see that the Hebrew would bear this. See, however, his Note on the passage. The word עלה ‛âlâh he understands here in the sense of "going away,"or "bearing away,"and the pbrase the "people under them,"as denoting the "Shades"in the world beneath us. The whole expression then would be equivalent to a wish "to die"- with the expectation that there would be a change for the better, or a release from present sufferings. Elihu admonishes Job not to indulge such a wish, for it would be no gain for a man to die in the state of mind in which he then was.

Barnes: Job 36:21 - -- Take heed, regard not iniquity - That is, be cautious that in the view which you take of the divine government, and the sentiments which you ex...

Take heed, regard not iniquity - That is, be cautious that in the view which you take of the divine government, and the sentiments which you express, you do not become the advocate of iniquity. Elihu apprehended this from the remarks in which he had indulged, and regarded him as having become the advocate of the same sentiments which the wicked held, and as in fact manifesting the same spirit. It is well to put a man who is afflicted on his guard against this, when he attempts to reason about the divine administration.

For this hast thou chosen rather than affliction - That is, you have chosen rather to give vent to the language of complaint, than to bear your trials with resignation. "You have chosen rather to accuse divine Providence than to submit patiently to his chastisements.""Patrick."There was too much truth in this remark about Job; and it is still not an uncommon thing in times of trial, and indeed in human life in general. People often prefer iniquity to affliction. They will commit crime rather than suffer the evils of poverty; they will be guilty of fraud and forgery to avoid apprehended want. They will be dishonest to their creditors rather than submit to the disgrace of bankruptcy. They will take advantage of the widow and the fatherless rather than suffer themselves. "Sin is often preferred to affliction;"and many are the people who, to avoid calamity, would not shrink from the commission of wrong. Especially in times of trial, when the hand of God is laid upon people, they "prefer"a spirit of complaining and murmuring to patient and calm resignation to the will of God. They seek relief even in complaining; and think it "some"alleviation of their sufferings that they can "find fault with God.""They who choose iniquity rather than affliction, make a very foolish choice; they that ease their cares by sinful pleasures, escape their troubles by sinful projects, and evade sufferings for righteousness’ sake by sinful compliances against their consciences; these make a choice they will repent of, for there is more evil in the least sin than in the greatest affliction."Henry.

Barnes: Job 36:22 - -- Behold, God exalteth by his power - The object of Elihu is now to direct the attention of Job to God, and to show him that he has evinced such ...

Behold, God exalteth by his power - The object of Elihu is now to direct the attention of Job to God, and to show him that he has evinced such power and wisdom in his works, that we ought not to presume to arraign him, but should bow with submission to his will. He remarks, therefore, that God "exalts,"or rather that God is "exalted,"or "exalts himself"( ישׂגיב yaśagiyb ) by his power. In the exhibition of his power, he thus shows that he is great, and that people ought to be submissive to him. In support of this, he appeals, in the remainder of his discourse, to the "works"of God as furnishing extraordinary proofs of power, and full demonstration that God is exalted far above man.

Who teacheth like him? - The Septuagint renders this, δυνάστης dunastēs - "Who is so powerful as he?"Rosenmuller and Umbreit render it Lord: "Who is Lord like him?"But the Hebrew word ( מורה môreh ) properly means "one who instructs,"and the idea is, that there is no one who is qualified to give so exalted conceptions of the government of God as he is himself. The object is to direct the mind to him as he is revealed in his works, in order to obtain elevated conceptions of his government.

Barnes: Job 36:23 - -- Who hath enjoined him his way? - Who hath prescribed to him what he ought to do? Who is superior to him, and has marked out for him the plan wh...

Who hath enjoined him his way? - Who hath prescribed to him what he ought to do? Who is superior to him, and has marked out for him the plan which he ought to pursue? The idea is, that God is supreme and independent; no one has advised him, and no one has a right to counsel him. Perhaps, also, Elihu designs this as a reproof to Job for having complained so much of the government of God, and for being disposed, as he thought, to "prescribe"to God what he should do.

Who can say, Thou hast wrought iniquity? - Thou hast done wrong. The object of Elihu is here to show that no one has a right to say this; no one could, in fact, say it. It was to be regarded as an indisputable point that God is always right, and that however dark his dealings with people may seem, the "reason"why they are mysterious "never is, that God is wrong."

Barnes: Job 36:24 - -- Remember that thou magnify his work - Make this a great and settled principle, to remember that God is "great"in all that he does. He is exalte...

Remember that thou magnify his work - Make this a great and settled principle, to remember that God is "great"in all that he does. He is exalted far above us, and all his works are on a scale of vastness corresponding to his nature, and in all our attempts to judge of him and his doings, we should bear this in remembrance. He is not to be judged by the narrow views which we apply to the actions of people, but by the views which ought to be taken when we remember that he presides over the vast universe, and that as the universal Parent, he will consult the welfare of the whole. In judging of his doings, therefore, we are not to place ourselves in the center, or to regard ourselves as the "whole"or the creation, but we are to remember that there are other great interests to be regarded, and that his plans will be in accordance with the welfare of the whole. One of the best rules for taking a proper estimate of God is that proposed here by Elihu - to remember that he is great.

Which men behold - The Vulgate renders this, "de quo cecinerunt viri" - "concerning which men sing."The Septuagint, ὧν ἦρξαν ἄνδρες hōn ērxan andres - "over which men rule."Schultens accords with the Vulgate. So Coverdale renders it, "Whom all men love and praise."So Herder and Noyes understand it, "Which men celebrate with songs."This difference of interpretation arises from the ambiguity of the Hebrew word ( שׁררוּ shore rû ) some deriving it from שׁור shûr , "to go round about, and then to survey, look upon, examine"; and some from שׁיר shı̂yr , "to sing, to celebrate."The word will admit of either interpretation, and either will suit the connection. The sense of "seeing"those works, however, better agrees with what is said in the following verse, and perhaps better suits the connection. The object of Elihu is not to fix the attention on the fact that people "celebrate"the works of God, but to turn "the eyes to the visible creation,"as a proof of the greatness of the Almighty.

Poole: Job 36:2 - -- Suffer me a little give me thy patient attention but a little longer; and I will show thee that I have not said all that can be said to justify God...

Suffer me a little give me thy patient attention but a little longer; and I

will show thee that I have not said all that can be said to justify God’ s proceedings against thee.

Poole: Job 36:3 - -- From afar i.e. from remote times, and places, and things. I will not confine my discourse to thy particular case, but will justify God by declaring h...

From afar i.e. from remote times, and places, and things. I will not confine my discourse to thy particular case, but will justify God by declaring his great and glorious works of creation and providence, both in the heaven and earth, and the manner of his dealing with men in other parts and ages of the world; for these are the chief heads of the following discourse, and therefore the best comment upon this general expression.

I will acknowledge that which is true, that God is righteous. He adds the words,

my Maker either,

1. As an argument or evidence of God’ s righteousness; partly, because it is not likely that God should be unjust to his own creatures, since even men are not only just, but kind, to their own works and relations; and partly, because the work of creation gave unto God an absolute right and power to dispose of Job as he saw fit, as the potter hath power over the clay, Rom 9:21 , and therefore there was no foundation for unrighteousness, nor any temptation upon God to do it; and partly, because man’ s Maker must needs be a being of all possible perfection, and therefore one of perfect righteousness. Or,

2. As a motive or obligation upon him to plead God’ s cause. I do not engage myself in this controversy out of a pragmatical or contentious humour, nor out of any prejudice or ill-will to thee, but merely from the sense of my duty to my blessed Creator. Withal he reflects upon Job as guilty of great folly and ingratitude in contending with him, in or by whom he lived, and moved, and had his being.

Poole: Job 36:4 - -- I will not speak any thing against my own conscience, nor against truth, either to flatter God, or to vex thee, as thou supposest thy other friends ...

I will not speak any thing against my own conscience, nor against truth, either to flatter God, or to vex thee, as thou supposest thy other friends have done, Job 13:7 , and elsewhere.

He that is perfect in knowledge is with thee This is meant either,

1. Of God. Thou hast to do with a God of perfect knowledge, by whom all Shy words and actions. are weighed; and therefore hast need to be more wary and circumspect in thy expressions and behaviour. Or rather,

2. Of himself, as the former part of the verse is. And he speaketh of himself in the third person, for modesty’ s sake. He speaks not of absolute, but of comparative perfection. And whatsoever perfection of knowledge he had, he doth not ascribe it to himself, but to God’ s Spirit, Job 32:8 . And the meaning may be this, Thou hast not to do with a novice, but with one who hath accurately considered, and through God’ s grace doth fully understand, these matters; therefore hearken to me. But the word rendered

perfect signifieth also sincere , or upright , or right . And this may seem best to agree with the former clause, wherein he saith that he would not speak what he knew to be false; and now he adds, that he was and would be upright in the use of his knowledge, or in the delivery of his opinion in this matter, and not be biassed by any passion or prejudice, either to speak otherwise than he thought, or to judge otherwise than he should.

Poole: Job 36:5 - -- His greatness doth not make him (as it doth men) to scorn, or despise, or oppress the meanest. Though he may do what he pleaseth, and none can hinde...

His greatness doth not make him (as it doth men) to scorn, or despise, or oppress the meanest. Though he may do what he pleaseth, and none can hinder him, yet he will not use it to do any man wrong, as Job seemed to insinuate, Job 10:3 19:7 23:13 . His strength is guided by wisdom, and therefore cannot be employed to do any thing unbecoming God, or unjust to his creatures; for either of these is folly. Or,

in strength or virtue of heart ; for the and is not in the Hebrew. So the sense is, He is truly magnanimous, of a great and generous mind or heart, and therefore not unrighteous; for all injustice proceeds from littleness or weakness of heart. Truly great souls scorn unjust actions.

Poole: Job 36:6 - -- He preserveth not the life of the wicked to wit, for ever; but will in his due time forsake them, and give them up to the destroyer. Or, he doth not...

He preserveth not the life of the wicked to wit, for ever; but will in his due time forsake them, and give them up to the destroyer. Or, he doth not or will not preserve , is put for he will certainly and dreadfully destroy , by the figure called meiosis , used Pro 17:21 , and oft elsewhere.

Giveth right to the poor he doth uphold, and he certainly will in his time deliver, his poor oppressed ones from all their oppressors.

Poole: Job 36:7 - -- He never ceaseth to care for and watch over the righteous no, not when they are afflicted or persecuted, when he may seem to neglect them. Though ...

He never ceaseth to care for and watch over

the righteous no, not when they are afflicted or persecuted, when he may seem to neglect them. Though they may be oppressed for a time, yet ofttimes he not only delivers them, but also raiseth them to the highest honour and happiness in this life; compare 1Sa 2:8 Psa 113:7,8 ; and their felicity is more stable and permanent than that of the wicked. Having mentioned the cause, that God did establish them ; he now mentions the effect, that they are or continue to be exalted ; they are not cast down from their dignity, as the wicked commonly are.

Poole: Job 36:8 - -- If through the vicissitude of worldly affairs, and the righteous judgment of God upon them for their sins, they be brought from their throne into a ...

If through the vicissitude of worldly affairs, and the righteous judgment of God upon them for their sins, they be brought from their throne into a prison, as sometimes hath been done.

Poole: Job 36:9 - -- Their work i.e. their evil works, as the next clause explains and limits it. By these afflictions he brings them to a sight of their sins and to repe...

Their work i.e. their evil works, as the next clause explains and limits it. By these afflictions he brings them to a sight of their sins and to repentance, which is the way and means of their recovery.

That they have exceeded that they have greatly sinned by abusing their power and prosperity; which even good men are too prone to do.

Poole: Job 36:10 - -- i.e. He enableth and inclineth them to hearken to what God speaks by the rod, who would not hear in the time of their prosperity; like them Jer 22:2...

i.e. He enableth and inclineth them to hearken to what God speaks by the rod, who would not hear in the time of their prosperity; like them Jer 22:21 .

To discipline or, to instruction , i.e. to receive instruction; or, to chastening , i.e. to hear the rod, and who hath appointed it, as is said, Mic 6:9 .

Commandeth either by his word or Spirit accompanying the affliction, and discovering the mind and will of God in this dispensation.

That they return from iniquity which is the chief cause of their calamity.

Poole: Job 36:11 - -- If they obey God’ s admonition and command. They shall spend their days in prosperity they shall be restored to their farmer prosperity, and s...

If they obey God’ s admonition and command.

They shall spend their days in prosperity they shall be restored to their farmer prosperity, and shall live and die in it. This he speaks according to the tenor of God’ s promises, especially in the Old Testament state of the church, and according to the common course and method of God’ s providence, which Elihu and other good men had observed.

Their years in pleasures abounding in worldly comforts, and being enabled by God to rejoice in them, which is God’ s gift, Ecc 3:13 , and delighting themselves in God’ s love and favour to them.

Poole: Job 36:12 - -- If they the righteous, spoken of Job 35:7 , opposed to the hypocrites here following, Job 35:13 ; for even good men may sometimes be disobedient to D...

If they the righteous, spoken of Job 35:7 , opposed to the hypocrites here following, Job 35:13 ; for even good men may sometimes be disobedient to Divine admonitions, and may suffer deeply, yea, even death itself, for their folly: see 1Co 11:30 .

Without knowledge in or for their ignorance, or inadvertency, or folly. Or, because they are without knowledge; because they are foolish, or brutish, and will not learn the lessons which God so plainly teacheth them.

Poole: Job 36:13 - -- The hypocrites in heart such as are truly void of that piety which they profess; whereby he either secretly insinuates that Job was such a one; or gi...

The hypocrites in heart such as are truly void of that piety which they profess; whereby he either secretly insinuates that Job was such a one; or gives him this occasion to search himself whether he were not so; or rather, admonisheth him not to carry himself like such a one, as he had hitherto done, and for which he reproved him, Job 34:8 .

Heap up wrath i.e. by their impious and obstinate carriage in all conditions, they treasure up God’ s wrath against themselves.

They cry not unto God for help. They live in the gross neglect of God and of prayer.

When he bindeth them to wit, with the cords of affliction, expressed Job 34:8 , which is mentioned as an aggravation of their wickedness; because even wicked men, if not profligately bad, will seek God in time of affliction, Hos 5:15 . Withal he secretly reflects upon Job as one that behaved himself like a wicked man, because though he cried out of God in way of complaint, yet he did not cry unto him by humble supplication.

Poole: Job 36:14 - -- They die in youth they provoke God to cut them off before their time. Heb. Their soul (i.e. they themselves) shall die in youth . Their life is ;...

They die in youth they provoke God to cut them off before their time. Heb. Their soul (i.e. they themselves) shall die in youth . Their life is ; or, their life shall die or be extinct; which verb is understood out of the former clause, after the manner of the Hebrews.

The unclean or, the filthy , or whoremongers , or sodomites ; to whose destruction (which happened not long before this time) he may seem to allude. The sense is, they shall die by some dreadful and exemplary stroke of Divine vengeance.

Poole: Job 36:15 - -- i.e. Causeth them to hear, and understand, and do the will of God; hearing being oft put for obeying . And this latter clause seems to be added, to...

i.e. Causeth them to hear, and understand, and do the will of God; hearing being oft put for obeying . And this latter clause seems to be added, to intimate that he will not deliver all afflicted persons, but only those whose ears he openeth to receive his counsels.

In oppression i.e. in the time of their oppression. Or, by oppression or tribulation , as the means of opening their ears and hearts.

Poole: Job 36:16 - -- Even so if thou hadst opened thine ear to God’ s counsels, and humbled thyself under his correcting hand, and sued to God for mercy, would he h...

Even so if thou hadst opened thine ear to God’ s counsels, and humbled thyself under his correcting hand, and sued to God for mercy,

would he have removed thee as this verb is used, 2Ch 18:31 . Or, allured , or enticed , or persuaded thee , as the word properly signifies; which possibly may here be emphatical, and may imply, as that Job had by his sins brought himself into these straits, so that God would have brought him out of them by the usual and regular way, to wit, by persuading him to turn from his sins, and humbly and earnestly to cry to God for mercy, which if he had complied with, God would have delivered him.

Out of the strait Heb. out of the mouth or jaws of tribulation ; which like a wild beast was read to swallow him up.

Into a broad place i.e. into a state of ease and freedom.

Thy table thy dishes, or the food in them.

Poole: Job 36:17 - -- The judgment or, the cause , or sentence , as the word most properly signifieth. Thou hast fully pleaded their cause, and justified the hard and re...

The judgment or, the cause , or sentence , as the word most properly signifieth. Thou hast fully pleaded their cause, and justified the hard and reproachful speeches which wicked men in their rage utter against God, condemning God and justifying themselves.

Judgment and justice take hold on thee or, therefore (which is oft understood) the sentence and judgment (or, the judicial sentence , to wit, of the wicked now mentioned) shall take hold on thee. Thou hast maintained their cause against God, and God shall pass against thee their sentence, or the sentence of condemnation due to such wicked men.

Poole: Job 36:18 - -- Because there is wrath to wit, conceived by God against thee. Because by thy pleading the cause of the wicked, thou hast deserved that God should giv...

Because there is wrath to wit, conceived by God against thee. Because by thy pleading the cause of the wicked, thou hast deserved that God should give sentence against thee, as was now said, and hast provoked God’ s wrath against thee; therefore look to thyself, and reconcile thyself to God by true repentance whilst thou mayst, and before sentence be executed upon thee.

Beware: this is not in the Hebrew, but is necessarily to be understood to make up the sense, and is oft understood in the like cases, and that before this Hebrew particle pen , as Gen 3:22 11:4 42:4 Isa 36:8 . See the like also Mat 25:9 Act 5:39 .

With his stroke properly, with the stroke of his hand or foot. It is an allusion to men, who oft express their anger by clapping their hands, or stamping with their feet.

Then a great ransom cannot deliver thee for if once God’ s wrath take hold of thee, and sentence be executed upon thee before thou dost repent and humble thyself to thy judge, neither riches, nor friends, no, nor any person or thing in heaven and earth, can redeem thee; no ransom or price will be accepted for thee.

Poole: Job 36:19 - -- If thou couldst recover thy lost wealth or strength, or thy friends would employ theirs on thy behalf, neither could the one ransom thee, nor the ot...

If thou couldst recover thy lost wealth or strength, or thy friends would employ theirs on thy behalf, neither could the one ransom thee, nor the other rescue thee.

Poole: Job 36:20 - -- Desire not the night either, 1. Properly, that in it thou mayst find some ease or rest, as men usually do. But this Job did not much desire, for he ...

Desire not the night either,

1. Properly, that in it thou mayst find some ease or rest, as men usually do. But this Job did not much desire, for he complains that his nights were as restless as his days. Or rather,

2. Metaphorically, the night of death, which is called the night both in Scripture, as Joh 9:4 , and in other writers; and which Job had oft and earnestly desired, and even thirsted after, as this verb notes. See Job 7:15 . And this seems best to agree with the foregoing counsel, Job 36:18 , beware lest he take thee away with his stroke ; for then, saith he, thou art irrecoverably lost and gone; and therefore take heed of thy foolish and oft-repeated desire of death, lest God inflict it upon thee in great anger. When ; or, by which; which words are oft understood in divers texts of Scripture. People ; even whole nations and bodies of people, which are all God’ s creatures as well as thou, and yet are not spared by him, but cut off in wrath, and many of them sent from one death to another; take heed therefore thou be not added to the number.

Are cut off Heb. are made to ascend , i.e. to vanish, or perish, or die, as this verb is oft used, as Job 18:16 Psa 102:24 .

In their place in their several places where they are; or suddenly, before they can remove out of the place where the hand and stroke of God finds them; or in the place where they are settled and surrounded with all manner of comforts, and supports, and friends, all which could not prevent their being cut off. Possibly this phrase may allude to that expression of Job’ s, Job 29:18 , I shall die in my nest .

Poole: Job 36:21 - -- Regard not iniquity or, look not to it , to wit, with an approving or coveting eye, as this word is used, Pro 23:31 . Thou hast chosen rather to qua...

Regard not iniquity or, look not to it , to wit, with an approving or coveting eye, as this word is used, Pro 23:31 . Thou hast chosen rather to quarrel with God, and censure his judgments, than humbly and quietly to submit to them, and to wait upon God by faith and prayer for deliverance in his time and way.

Poole: Job 36:22 - -- God exalteth or, is high , or exalted; the active verb being taken intransitively; which is not unusual in the Hebrew tongue. This is a proper argum...

God exalteth or, is high , or exalted; the active verb being taken intransitively; which is not unusual in the Hebrew tongue. This is a proper argument to force the foregoing counsels. God is omnipotent; and therefore can with great facility either punish thee far worse, if thou be obstinate and refractory; or deliver thee, if thou dost repent and return to him.

Who teacheth like him? he is also infinitely wise as well as powerful; and as none can work like him, so none can teach like him. Therefore do not presume to teach him how to govern the world, or to order thy affairs; but know that whatsoever he doth with thee, or with any other men, is best to be done. And therefore be willing to learn from him. Learn obedience by the things which thou sufferest from him; and do not follow thy own fancies or affections, but use the methods which God hath taught thee to get out of thy troubles, by submission, and prayer, and repentance. The words may be rendered, what lord is like him ? For the word moreb in the Chaldee dialect signifies a lord . This translation suits with the former clause of this verse; but ours agrees well enough with that, and is confirmed by the following verse.

Poole: Job 36:23 - -- His way wherein he would walk, i.e. what courses and methods he should use in the administration of human affairs. If he had a superior Lord who gave...

His way wherein he would walk, i.e. what courses and methods he should use in the administration of human affairs. If he had a superior Lord who gave him laws for his actions, he might be accountable to him, and questionable for what he did; but he is supreme, absolute, and uncontrollable, who hath no law to regulate him but his own holy nature and blessed will. And therefore how rash, and impudent, and absurd a thing is it for any man to censure his proceedings!

Thou hast wrought iniquity thou hast swerved from the law and rule given to thee.

Poole: Job 36:24 - -- Remember call to mind this thy duty, and take this matter into thy more serious thoughts, and it will prevent thy horrible mistakes and miscarriages....

Remember call to mind this thy duty, and take this matter into thy more serious thoughts, and it will prevent thy horrible mistakes and miscarriages.

That so this Hebrew particle is used here, Job 36:10 3:12 .

His work or, his works , the singular number being put for the plural, every work which he doth; do not condemn any of his providential works towards thee or others, but adore and glorify them, as done with admirable wisdom, and justice, and faithfulness.

Which men behold to wit, with admiration and astonishment; which by their greatness and glory draw the eyes and minds of all men towards them; which deserve to be entertained with adoration and reverence of all men, not with censure and reproach.

Haydock: Job 36:1 - -- He shall. He would have prevented thee from falling into this irremediable distress, if thou hadst imitated the poor who trust in Him. (Calmet) ---...

He shall. He would have prevented thee from falling into this irremediable distress, if thou hadst imitated the poor who trust in Him. (Calmet) ---

Yea, he will still restore thee to favour, if thou wilt repent. (Haydock) ---

He will fill thee with joy and plenty. (Menochius) ---

Foundation. Hebrew, where there is not straitness. (Protestants) He would have rescued thee from distress, and set thee at large. (Haydock) ---

The psalmist often speaks in the same language. (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 36:3 - -- Beginning. Hebrew, "afar" from that God, who is ancient, and not of human invention; (Jeremias xxiii. 23.) or from the consideration of the heavens....

Beginning. Hebrew, "afar" from that God, who is ancient, and not of human invention; (Jeremias xxiii. 23.) or from the consideration of the heavens. Nothing could be more magnificent than the descriptions which conclude this fourth part of the discourse. (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 36:4 - -- Lie. Every orator will promise to speak the truth, and will do so sometimes to gain credit. (Worthington) --- Shall be. Hebrew, "is with thee." ...

Lie. Every orator will promise to speak the truth, and will do so sometimes to gain credit. (Worthington) ---

Shall be. Hebrew, "is with thee." Thou art not devoid of sense, and thou wilt (Calmet) surely approve my reasons, which are suggested by the God of all knowledge. (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 36:5 - -- God. Septuagint, "Know that the Lord will not cast away the innocent." Theodotion continues to ver. 12: "The mighty, in strength of heart, (Wisdom ...

God. Septuagint, "Know that the Lord will not cast away the innocent." Theodotion continues to ver. 12: "The mighty, in strength of heart, (Wisdom vi.) will not make the impious live, and will render judgment to the poor." (Haydock) ---

They seem to have read Thom, which is now wanting in Hebrew. (Calmet) ---

"Behold God is mighty, and despiseth not any: mighty in strength and wisdom." (Protestants) (Haydock) ---

Eliu begins to prove that God administers justice to all equally. (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 36:7 - -- Just. Hebrew, Syriac, &c., "the just man, he will place him with kings on the throne." (Calmet) --- Exalted, or "extolled" for ever, if they have...

Just. Hebrew, Syriac, &c., "the just man, he will place him with kings on the throne." (Calmet) ---

Exalted, or "extolled" for ever, if they have done well. (Worthington) ---

He always disposes of kingdoms. (Menochius)

Haydock: Job 36:9 - -- Violent, while in power and on the throne, or because even in a private station, their will has risen up in rebellion against God. (Haydock) --- Po...

Violent, while in power and on the throne, or because even in a private station, their will has risen up in rebellion against God. (Haydock) ---

Poverty and afflictions are scourges, which are often inflicted by mercy, to bring us to a sense of duty. (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 36:10 - -- Ear, by secret inspirations, or by the admonition of pastors. (Calmet) --- Afflictions will also speak louder to them than any orator. (Haydock)

Ear, by secret inspirations, or by the admonition of pastors. (Calmet) ---

Afflictions will also speak louder to them than any orator. (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 36:12 - -- Folly. Hebrew, "without knowledge." He speaks of princes, (Calmet) and of all the wicked, who have not known the day of their visitation. (Haydock...

Folly. Hebrew, "without knowledge." He speaks of princes, (Calmet) and of all the wicked, who have not known the day of their visitation. (Haydock) ---

They shall suffer the punishment prepared for fools or wicked men. (Menochius)

Haydock: Job 36:13 - -- Bound, in misery and evil habits. They will not have recourse to God by humble prayer, though they perceive his displeasure, and design in punishing...

Bound, in misery and evil habits. They will not have recourse to God by humble prayer, though they perceive his displeasure, and design in punishing them.

Haydock: Job 36:14 - -- Storm. Hebrew and Septuagint, "in youth," (Haydock) being suddenly cut off, without having deplored the sins of their youth. (Calmet) --- Effemina...

Storm. Hebrew and Septuagint, "in youth," (Haydock) being suddenly cut off, without having deplored the sins of their youth. (Calmet) ---

Effeminate. Hebrew, "the consecrated" to prostitution. Eliu compares those who will not attend unto God, to the most infamous characters. (Calmet) ---

Septuagint, "and let their life be taken away by the angels" (Haydock) of death, chap. xxxiii. 23. (Calmet) ---

He may allude to the impure Sodomites. (Menochius)

Haydock: Job 36:17 - -- Recover. Thou shalt be treated as thou hast treated others. Hebrew is not well understood. It may be, "Thou hast spoken like the impious; but judg...

Recover. Thou shalt be treated as thou hast treated others. Hebrew is not well understood. It may be, "Thou hast spoken like the impious; but judgment and justice rule. ( 18 ) Beware lest wrath overtake thee, so that thy prayers may not avert it. ( 19 ) Will He regard thy cries, thy riches, gold or strength?" (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 36:19 - -- Without, or before thou be forced by tribulation. (Menochius) --- Lay aside all sentiments of pride, (St. Gregory) or keep in awe the mighty, who...

Without, or before thou be forced by tribulation. (Menochius) ---

Lay aside all sentiments of pride, (St. Gregory) or keep in awe the mighty, who administer justice in thy name. (Menochius) ---

Protestants, "Will he esteem thy riches? No, not gold, nor all the forces of strength." Septuagint, "Let not a willing mind incline thee unjustly to the prayer of the needy in distress." (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 36:20 - -- Prolong not the night, &c. Prolong not causes that are brought before thee, but dispatch, by early rising, the business of them that come up to thee...

Prolong not the night, &c. Prolong not causes that are brought before thee, but dispatch, by early rising, the business of them that come up to thee. (Challoner) ---

Septuagint, "and all the men of power do not withdraw in the night," from just punishment. Theodotion adds, "that the people may come up against them," to demand vengeance. Do strict justice both to the rich and to the poor, without pity or fear. (Haydock) ---

This text is very obscure; and the Hebrew may have different meanings, which do not, however, seem well connected with the rest. "Plant not after night, when people retire home;" (Calmet) or Protestants, "are cut off in their place." (Haydock) ---

Delay not to banish temptations, or they will increase. (St. Gregory xxvi. 38.) (Worthington)

Haydock: Job 36:21 - -- Iniquity, or blaspheming, (chap. xxxiv. 37.; Menochius) and murmurs, to which alone thou hast given way since thy fall. (Calmet)

Iniquity, or blaspheming, (chap. xxxiv. 37.; Menochius) and murmurs, to which alone thou hast given way since thy fall. (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 36:22 - -- Lawgivers. Hebrew more, "a master." In Chaldean, "a sovereign." (Grotius) Septuagint, "what potentate is against him?" (Haydock) --- What art ...

Lawgivers. Hebrew more, "a master." In Chaldean, "a sovereign." (Grotius) Septuagint, "what potentate is against him?" (Haydock) ---

What art thou, to dare thus to resist him? (Calmet) ---

St. Gregory (xxvii. 1.) explains this as a prediction of Christ, "or singular lawgiver." God is most able to punish transgressors, and willing to reward those who obey his laws. (Worthington)

Haydock: Job 36:24 - -- Not, is omitted in Hebrew and Septuagint. "Remember that thou magnify his work, which men behold;" Protestants, (Haydock) or "thou hast magnified," ...

Not, is omitted in Hebrew and Septuagint. "Remember that thou magnify his work, which men behold;" Protestants, (Haydock) or "thou hast magnified," formerly. Do so again. ---

Sung. The memory of great exploits was commonly preserved by canticles. (Calmet)

Gill: Job 36:1 - -- Elihu also proceeded, and said. Or "added" f what follows to his former discourses; pausing a while to see whether Job would make any reply to what he...

Elihu also proceeded, and said. Or "added" f what follows to his former discourses; pausing a while to see whether Job would make any reply to what he had already said; but perceiving he had no inclination to do it, and having more upon his mind to deliver, went on with his discourse.

Gill: Job 36:2 - -- Suffer me a little,.... Bear with me a little longer, and allow me to say a few words more. I have but little more to say, and it will take but a litt...

Suffer me a little,.... Bear with me a little longer, and allow me to say a few words more. I have but little more to say, and it will take but a little time to say it in; thus, proposing brevity, he hoped to be heard with patience, since he should not long trespass upon it. The word used has the signification of a crown; but not to be understood in the sense of surrounding, as a crown surrounds the head, as some, who interpret it, stand about me, surround me, in order to hear; for this cannot with propriety be said to a single person; but rather in the sense of doing honour, as Aben Ezra; and so the meaning may be, do me the honour of giving; me thy presence a little longer, and hearing me out patiently;

and I will show thee: make things clear, manifest, and plain to thee: clearness of expression, with brevity, recommends a discourse. Something may be here supplied; for a greater stop is here to be made than in our version, as either "my opinion", as in Job 32:10; his sentiment concerning God and his righteousness in his dealings with the sons of men; or "truth", as Ben Gersom; truth in general, plain naked truth, without any colouring, just as it is, cordially, sincerely, in love, and by clear manifestations of it; and particularly the truth of the righteousness of God in all his ways and works. He proposed to make it clear to him that God did all things well and right, and to lay before him in the plainest manner what were the ends God had in view in dealing thus with Job, and what was his duty to do in his present circumstances;

that I have yet to speak in God's behalf: or "for I have yet to speak" g, &c. Elihu had said much for God already, in vindication of his sovereignty, purity, holiness, and justice, and he had yet more to say; out of the abundance of his heart his mouth spake for God; he set out with this, that he was full of matter, and wanted to vent himself, that he might be eased, Job 32:18; and he had vented much, but he had yet more to deliver; and since it was not for himself, in his own behalf, nor of any other but God, he hoped he should be heard: it may be rendered, "for yet God has words" h, to put into my mouth, and speak by me; signifying, that he had spoken by him already, and had still more to say by him; and since it was not so much he that spoke, as God that spoke in him and by him, it might be expected he would be heard.

Gill: Job 36:3 - -- I will fetch my knowledge from afar,.... Not from himself; for it is but a small share of knowledge that a man gets of himself, or attains to by the l...

I will fetch my knowledge from afar,.... Not from himself; for it is but a small share of knowledge that a man gets of himself, or attains to by the light of nature, and especially concerning God and divine things; but from others, either from persons that lived in former ages, and in foreign countries; it being usual for men desirous of acquiring knowledge to travel into distant parts for it; and such were generally much esteemed of, and the knowledge they professed to have got and published; as the queen of Sheba came from the further parts of the earth to hear and learn the wisdom of Solomon, 1Ki 10:1, or rather the sense is, he would fetch the knowledge he should now communicate concerning God from God himself, from the nature and perfections of God, who, and his knowledge, are high as heaven; and from the works of God, which are far above men; or should treat of things deep and sublime, and not common; though perhaps it is best of all to read the words, "I will bring forth knowledge concerning", or "with respect to him that is afar off" i; that is, God, who is in the highest heavens, and inhabits the high and holy place; a God both at hand and afar off; with which agrees what follows; though some interpret it of lifting it up, and causing it to be heard afar off so some, as Aben Ezra;

and will ascribe righteousness to my Maker: God is the Maker of all men; Elihu considered him as his Maker with gratitude, while many have no regard of him, Job 35:10; and therefore thought himself obliged to speak for him, and on his behalf; and particularly in vindication of his righteousness; assert this to be an essential attribute and perfection of his nature; own, acknowledge, publish, and declare it; give him the glory of it, and demonstrate that he is righteous in all his ways and works; and clear him from all imputation of unrighteousness.

Gill: Job 36:4 - -- For truly my words shall not be false,.... But strictly true; he would take the utmost care to say nothing but the truth, with the greatest impartia...

For truly my words shall not be false,.... But strictly true; he would take the utmost care to say nothing but the truth, with the greatest impartiality and sincerity, so that what was said might be depended upon; truth spoken briefly, clearly, and on so important a subject as the righteousness of God, deserved attention;

he that is perfect in knowledge is with thee; meaning either God, whose knowledge is perfect, who knows all persons and things; knows himself, his nature, persons, and perfections; his thoughts, counsels, and purposes; all his creatures, angels and men; the hearts of all men, their thoughts, words, and works; he, the omniscient and omnipresent God was with Job, from whose presence there is no fleeing; and therefore it became him to be careful of his thoughts, words, and actions; that he did not entertain any unbecoming thoughts of God, and say anything unworthy of him, or do anything that tended to his dishonour; since he was present with him, and nothing could escape his notice: or else Elihu means himself; suggesting, that he who undertook to speak for God and plead his cause, and clear him from the charge of unrighteousness, was no novice, but one that thoroughly understood the point in hand; and though no man is perfect in knowledge in an absolute sense, yet may be in comparison of others; or however may be upright and sincere in his knowledge; which sense the word used often has; and so it may signify, that as he was a sincere searcher after knowledge, and had through divine goodness attained to a competent share of it, even of sound and not superficial knowledge, he should be honest and upright in the communication of it; and this he might choose to observe the more, to excite the attention of Job to what he had to say; though it may be the truest reading of the words is, "perfect knowledge" or "perfection of knowledge is with thee" k, that is, in his own apprehension, so Jarchi; and may be understood either ironically, or rather really, insinuating that Job was a man of such consummate wisdom and knowledge, that he would easily see the force of his reasonings, and the justness of them, and acquiesce in them; and having thus prefaced his discourse, he next enters upon his subject.

Gill: Job 36:5 - -- Behold, God is mighty,.... This is a clear plain truth, easy to be discerned, and worthy of notice, and therefore introduced with a "behold"; that Go...

Behold, God is mighty,.... This is a clear plain truth, easy to be discerned, and worthy of notice, and therefore introduced with a "behold"; that God is mighty, the most mighty, the Almighty, as appears from his works of nature and providence; making all things out of nothing, upholding them by the word of his power, and governing and overruling all things in the world, and doing in it whatever he pleases: and from the works of redemption and grace; ransoming his people out of the hands of them that are stronger than they; converting them by the power of his grace; assisting them to do all they do in a spiritual way; supporting them under all their troubles; protecting and defending them from all their enemies; supplying all their wants, and preserving them safe to his kingdom and glory;

and despises not any; not the meanest of his creatures, clothing the grass of the field, feeding the fowls of the air, and preserving man and beast; and particularly he despises not any of the sons of men: not the mighty through fear of them, nor envy at them, whose power and grandeur are from him, which he gives and can take away at his pleasure; nor the mean and miserable the poor and the afflicted, to whom he has a merciful regard; much less the innocent and harmless, as the Septuagint; or the just and righteous man, as the Targum: he does not despise his own people, whom he has loved and chosen, redeemed and called; nor any, as Aben Ezra observes, without a cause; for though there are some whose image he will despise, it is because of their own sins and transgressions; and since, therefore, though he is mighty, yet despises not any of his creatures, he cannot do any unrighteous thing; he does not and cannot use or abuse his power to the in jury of any of his creatures;

he is mighty in strength and wisdom, as there is a pleonasm, a redundancy in the expression, "mighty in strength", it denotes the abundance of his strength, that he is exceeding strong, superlatively and all expression so; and also strong in wisdom, his strength is tempered with wisdom, so that he cannot employ it to any bad purpose, or be guilty of any unrighteousness. Some men have strength, but not wisdom to make a right use of it; but God abounds as much in wisdom as in strength; he is the only wise and the all wise God, and therefore can do no injustice; and thus Elihu, as he promised, ascribes righteousness to his almighty Maker.

Gill: Job 36:6 - -- He preserveth not the life of the wicked,.... He makes a difference between wicked and righteous men, which shows him to be a holy and righteous God; ...

He preserveth not the life of the wicked,.... He makes a difference between wicked and righteous men, which shows him to be a holy and righteous God; though he preserves the life of all men so long as they live, yet not in the same way; he preserves the lives of wicked men in the common course of his providence, but not in a special way and manner, as he does the lives of the righteous, which are dear and precious to him; nor does he preserve to any great length such as are notorious sinners, who are guilty of capital crimes, as murder, &c. their lives are shortened, and they do not live out half their days: or he does not quicken them, bestow his spiritual favour upon them, in which only is life; and though they will be quickened and raised at the last day, as well as the righteous, yet not to the resurrection of life, but to the resurrection of damnation;

but giveth right to the poor; pleads their cause and rights their wrongs, administers justice to them, especially to the poor in spirit, who hunger and thirst after righteousness; to these he gives freely the righteousness of his son, which only denominates persons truly righteous: of whom in Job 36:7.

Gill: Job 36:7 - -- He withdraweth not his eyes from the righteous,.... His eyes of providence are upon them to supply their temporal wants, and to protect and defend the...

He withdraweth not his eyes from the righteous,.... His eyes of providence are upon them to supply their temporal wants, and to protect and defend them from their enemies, and they are never off of them; his eyes of love, grace, and mercy, are upon them; he always viewed them as righteous in his Son, and through his righteousness imputed; and looked upon them with delight and pleasure, and always so views them; they are engraven on his heart and on his hands, and are ever before him, and in his sight: and his eyes are upon them from the beginning of the year to the end of it, yea, from one eternity to another; these were set upon them from everlasting, and are upon them in time; at the time of their conversion to quicken them, and call them by his grace; and afterwards they continue upon them under all their afflictions, temptations, and desertions, and ever will remain on them; they will never be withdrawn, nothing can separate them from the love of God;

but with kings are they on the throne; that is, either the eyes of the Lord are with them, even with righteous kings, as the Targum; to guide and direct them in the affairs of government, and to protect and preserve them from the designs of evil men: or the righteous are with kings on the throne, or are the favourites of kings that are on thrones; are admitted into their presence, and are highly esteemed by them, and have honour conferred on them, even to be the next to them in the throne and kingdom, as Joseph and Daniel, Gen 41:41, or rather, the righteous are equal to kings on the throne; they are so accounted of by the Lord as kings; they are made by him kings and priests, and are regarded by him as such; they have the power, and riches, and honour of kings; they have a kingdom of grace bestowed on them now, and a kingdom of glory they are entitled to hereafter; and shall reign with Christ on earth a thousand years, and in the ultimate glory to all eternity, Rev 20:6;

yea, he doth establish them for ever; as righteous persons in their righteousness, which is an everlasting one; so that they shall never come into condemnation: they are established in the love of God, in the covenant of grace, in the hands of Christ, and in a state of grace now, and shall be in a stable permanent state of happiness to all eternity;

and they are exalted: now, being raised as beggars from the dung hill to sit among princes, even among the princes of God's people; and they will be exalted hereafter, and sit at Christ's right hand, and be introduced into his kingdom, where they will be set down with him in his throne, and reign with him for ever and ever, Rev 22:5.

Gill: Job 36:8 - -- And if they be bound in fetters,.... Not the wicked, as the Targum, but the righteous spoken of in Job 36:7, with which this is closely connected; an...

And if they be bound in fetters,.... Not the wicked, as the Targum, but the righteous spoken of in Job 36:7, with which this is closely connected; and this is not to be understood of righteous kings on the throne in particular, or their special favourites, but of the righteous in general; and not in a literal sense, of their bonds and imprisonment for religion and righteousness sake, which is sometimes their lot; but in a figurative sense, of afflictions, as chastenings and corrections for sin, as appears by the next clause; and the design is to obviate an objection, and to show that the eye of God is upon them, and his heart towards them; and they are not the less objects of his love and delight, of his value and esteem, care and protection, though they are afflicted by him, and, as it may seem, used with some severity; seeing he has gracious ends and designs in all this, which are suggested in the following verses;

and be holden in cords of affliction; righteous men are not exempt from afflictions; the afflictions of the righteous are many, according to divine appointment, the covenant of grace, the declaration of God, the constant experience of good men, it being the way in which they are all led, and must enter into the kingdom; and the metaphor here used shows that afflictions are sometimes heavy upon them, like fetters and chains, and those made heavy by the hand of God pressing them sore, Lam 3:7; no affliction is joyous, but grievous and heavy in itself; it is indeed comparatively light when viewed with the weight of glory; and God can make a heavy affliction light with his presence, and the discoveries of his love; but they are heavy to the flesh, as Job felt his to be, Job 6:2; and, like fetters and cords, they cannot free themselves from them, or loose them, until it is the pleasure of God to take them off; and moreover by these they are sometimes held and restrained from going into more or greater sins, which is one use of them: as they are with afflictions hedged about that they cannot come out, any more than a person bound fast in a prison; so they are hedged up with thorns that they cannot go out after their lovers, Lam 3:7, Hos 2:6. Some render the phrase, "cords of poverty" l; it is oftentimes the case of righteous persons to be poor, and to be sadly hampered with poverty, and out of which, by all that they can do, cannot extricate themselves; and sometimes they fall into it, and are held in it, after they have enjoyed much worldly prosperity, which was the case of Job. Mr. Broughton renders it, cords of anguish; and indeed the word for "cords" is used of the pains of a woman in travail, who has then great anguish and trouble; and anguish on various accounts lays hold on the righteous, and they are holden thereby, and cannot relieve themselves, Psa 119:143; and yet this is all in mercy, and to answer some good ends and purposes, as follow.

Gill: Job 36:9 - -- Then he showeth them their work,.... Either what they ought to do, so the Tigurine version; and which they have not done, their sins of omission; when...

Then he showeth them their work,.... Either what they ought to do, so the Tigurine version; and which they have not done, their sins of omission; when they have been negligent either of the duty of prayer in private and public, or of attendance on the ordinances of the house of God; then he sends an affliction, and by it, as in a glass, presents to their view the omissions they have been guilty of: or else the work which they have done, and should not have done, their sins of commission: sin is a work at which some toil and labour, and weary themselves to commit; it is a work of the flesh; and so it is in good men; it is a man's own work, and which he can work of himself; to have a will, and to do good works, is owing to God working in his people, and it is through him strengthening them they do them; but sin fill works are their own act and deed, though tempted to them by others, and which they are able to do of their own freewill and power. Now God, in the glass of affliction, holds forth to view the sinful actions of good men, and brings them to their remembrance which they had forgotten; as the cases of Joseph's brethren, David, and others, prove: the Lord shows them that they have done such actions, and shows them the evil of them, how exceeding sinful they are; and humbles them under a sense of them, and brings them to repentance for them, and the acknowledgment of them; which sense is confirmed by the next clause, which explains what this their work is,

and their transgressions that they have exceeded. Sin is a transgression of the law, 1Jo 3:4; every sin, greater or lesser, is, and even righteous persons are guilty of many; for there is not a just man that sinneth not; and these exceed the bounds set by the righteous law of God, and many of them are sadly aggravated by the light and knowledge, grace and mercy, such have been favoured with; and some of them, they are suffered to fall into, are exceeding great and exceeding sinful; such as those of David, Peter, and others; all which they are made to see, bewail, and weep over, when God by afflictions brings them to a sense of them. Or "when" or "because they have prevailed" m; or begin to prevail: as soon as ever indwelling sin begins to be prevalent, the Lord is pleased to take measures to nip it in the bud, by sending a sharp and severe affliction; or when it has prevailed greatly, as sometimes it does, so that good is hindered from being done, and much evil is committed, then the soul is so much under the power of it, as to be carried captive with it; see Rom 7:23. Or "because they are become proud", or "behaved themselves proudly" n; and therefore he afflicts them to humble them, and drive pride from them.

Gill: Job 36:10 - -- He openeth also their ear to discipline,.... Or "to correction" o; to the rod of correction; to hear the voice of it and him that has appointed it; it...

He openeth also their ear to discipline,.... Or "to correction" o; to the rod of correction; to hear the voice of it and him that has appointed it; its reproving voice for sin, its directing voice to duty, and its commanding voice to return from iniquity, as in the next clause. Or "to instruction" p; God's corrections of his people being instructions to them, whereby they learn more of their duty, and of the rich experiences of grace; their faith, hope, love, and patience, are tried and increased hereby; and more of the love of God, of his care and faithfulness, of his covenant, of his gracious presence, and communion with God, what it is; and even of the doctrines of the everlasting Gospel: sometimes more is learned by an affliction than by a sermon. Now in order to hearken hereunto, to the voice of God in an affliction, the ear must be opened; which is first done in conversion by the mighty power of God: but sometimes good men fall asleep, and are inattentive to divine things; and this is one way God takes to awaken them, to arouse their attention; he speaks to them out of a whirlwind; he sends some terrible startling affliction, which fetches them out of their slumber, and so their ears are opened to hear what he says in it: at the noise of his waterspouts, and his billows one after another rolling over them, they are awakened to a sense of their sin and duty, Psa 42:7;

and commandeth that they return from iniquity; repent of their sin, turn from it and forsake it: such a strong voice has an affliction in it, when sanctified and attended with the spirit and power of God; then it effectually teaches men to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts, as the word of God, the Gospel of the grace of God does, when accompanied with the same; as there is a commanding voice in the one, so there is in the other; and happy it is when such ends as these are answered by afflictions.

Gill: Job 36:11 - -- If they obey and serve him,.... That is, God, to whom so many things are ascribed in the preceding verses; and who only is to be obeyed and served in...

If they obey and serve him,.... That is, God, to whom so many things are ascribed in the preceding verses; and who only is to be obeyed and served in a religious way, with the obedience of faith and love, in all his commands and ordinances. But here not so much obedience to his word, his law or Gospel, as to his rod is intended: "if they hear", &c. q; hear the rod and him that has appointed it; hearken to his reproving, instructing, and commanding voice, in affliction; to his calls, cautions, and admonitions thereby given; and act according to them; humble themselves under the mighty hand of God, and return from iniquity:

they shall spend their days in prosperity, and their years in pleasures; which intimates, that those to whom afflictions are sanctified, and they obedient under them, when recovered out of them shall enjoy long life; not only live many days, but years, and those in great prosperity and pleasure; be blessed with much temporal prosperity, which lies in riches and wealth, as this word is rendered in Job 21:13; and in bodily health, which is a considerable part of outward prosperity; but more especially prosperity of soul may be intended, see 3Jo 1:2; which is enjoyed when a man is favoured with the discoveries of the love of God to him; with applications of pardoning grace and mercy; when grace is in lively exercise in him, and he has a spiritual appetite for the good word of God, and is fruitful in every good work: and so pleasures do not so much design corporeal pleasures, though ever so innocent and lawful; for though they may at proper times be indulged unto, yet a man's days and years are not to be spent in them; but rather spiritual pleasures, which are had in views of the wonderful love of God in Christ; in the enjoyment of the gracious presence of God, and communion with him; and which the people of God are favoured with, in his house and ordinances, ways and worship: and when those years are gone, endless pleasures at God's right hand, and in his presence, will follow.

Gill: Job 36:12 - -- But if they obey not,.... Who seem to be righteous and are not; and when afflicted are not submissive to the will of God; attend not to the voice of h...

But if they obey not,.... Who seem to be righteous and are not; and when afflicted are not submissive to the will of God; attend not to the voice of his providence; receive no instruction thereby; but kick against the pricks, and rebel, against God; complain of him, and murmur at his dealings with them:

they shall perish by the sword; or they shall pass away out of the world by it, or by some missive weapon: they shall die a violent death, by the sword of justice, of the civil magistrate, or by the sword of men; or, as a Jewish commentator r paraphrases it, by the dart of death, by the sword of Satan, they shall pass out of this world;

and they shall die without knowledge; without knowledge of their death being near, it coming upon them suddenly and at unawares; or without knowledge of themselves and of their miserable and lost estate; and without knowledge of Christ, and of God in Christ, and of the way of salvation by him. Or they shall perish for lack of knowledge; because they have none; through ignorance and that affected; they know not nor will they understand, but despise the means of knowledge, and hate instruction.

Gill: Job 36:13 - -- But the hypocrites in heart heap up wrath,.... Or "and the hypocrites" s; for these are the same with the disobedient in Job 36:12; who seem to be rig...

But the hypocrites in heart heap up wrath,.... Or "and the hypocrites" s; for these are the same with the disobedient in Job 36:12; who seem to be righteous, but are not; pretend to what they have not; have a double heart, Psa 12:2, or say one thing with their mouth, and mean another thing in their hearts; or with their mouths draw nigh to God, but their hearts are far from him, Mat 15:8; and so hypocrites, at least outwardly righteous before men, but inwardly full of wickedness, as the Pharisees were, whom our Lord often calls hypocrites, Mat 15:7, these "put" or add wrath, as Aben Ezra interprets it; they increase the wrath of God; or, as we express it, heap up wrath; or, to use the apostle's phrase, treasure up wrath against the day of wrath: though some understand it of the wrath of the hypocrites against God for afflicting them; so Jarchi. When afflictions come upon them, they reproach and blaspheme; they are angry with God and are wrathful, and quarrel at his dealings with them: "they put the nose" t; so it may be literally rendered; they erect that against God, and point it at him in a proud, haughty, wrathful, and contumacious manner;

they cry not when he bindeth them; in fetters and cords of affliction, Job 36:8; or when he corrects them, as Mr. Broughton rightly as to the sense renders it: they pray not, as Ben Gersom interprets it; whereas sanctified afflictions bring good men to the throne of grace, who have been too long absent from it: but these men cry not unto God for grace and mercy, help, assistance, and deliverance; they cry out against God, but not unto him.

Gill: Job 36:14 - -- They die in youth,.... They, or "their soul" u; which, though that dies not, being immaterial and immortal; yet being the principal part of man, is pu...

They die in youth,.... They, or "their soul" u; which, though that dies not, being immaterial and immortal; yet being the principal part of man, is put for the whole person, and which being taken away, the body dies. All men must die, but all do not die at an age; there is a common term of human life, Psa 90:10; some few exceed it, multitudes arrive not to it; such who die before it may be said to die in youth; it seems to signify premature and untimely death: the word signifies an "excussion", or violent shaking out; and the Vulgate Latin version is, "in a tempest"; in a tempest of divine wrath, and in a storm in their consciences, Job 27:20. Jarchi interprets it by suffocation or strangling;

and their life is among the unclean: all men are by nature unclean, and all that is in them; some are more notoriously and openly so than others, who give themselves over to lasciviousness, to work all uncleanness with greediness; such as whoremongers and fornicators, of whom Mr. Broughton understands those unclean persons; or Sodomites, of whom the word is sometimes used, Deu 23:17. And this may be understood either of the present life of hypocrites before they die; who are unclean persons themselves, whatever show of purity they make, and love to live and converse, at least privately, if not openly, with unclean persons, and die while they live with such and in their sins: or of their life after death; for wicked men live after death; their souls live in hell, and their bodies at the resurrection will be raised to life, and be reunited to their souls, and both together will live in endless punishment; and the life of hypocrites will be among such; as is a man in life, so he is at and after death; if filthy, filthy still; and such will have no admittance into the heavenly state, and with such impure ones, hypocrites will live for ever, Rev 21:8.

Gill: Job 36:15 - -- He delivereth the poor in his affliction,.... The righteous or godly poor; who are not only poor in worldly things, but poor in spirit; who are humble...

He delivereth the poor in his affliction,.... The righteous or godly poor; who are not only poor in worldly things, but poor in spirit; who are humbled, brought low, and made contrite, through the afflicting hand of God: these, though the Lord does sooner or later deliver "out" of their afflictions, yet that is not intended here, but a deliverance "in" them; which is done by supporting them under them, by supplying them with his grace to bear them patiently, by granting them his gracious presence for their comfort in them, by stilling the enemy and the avenger, keeping Satan from disturbing them, and freeing them from doubts and fears and unbelief, and by drawing their hearts and affections off of the world, and the things of it, to himself;

and openeth their ears in oppression; while they are oppressed; not only to discipline, correction, and instruction, Job 36:10; but to hear comfortable words spoken, to them by the Lord; who, in the midst of their affliction and oppression, whispers in their ears, and tells them how he loves them, though they are rebuked and chastened by him; how he has chosen them to everlasting life and happiness, though now in the furnace of affliction; that he is their covenant God and Father, and knows and owns their souls in adversity that he has pardoned all their sins, though he takes vengeance on their inventions; and in a little time will free them from all their afflictions and oppressions.

Gill: Job 36:16 - -- Even so,.... Here Elihu accommodates what he had said to the case of Job; that had he hearkened and been obedient to the voice of God in his rod, and ...

Even so,.... Here Elihu accommodates what he had said to the case of Job; that had he hearkened and been obedient to the voice of God in his rod, and had submitted to his chastening hand, and patiently bore his afflictions;

he, God,

would have removed thee out of the strait into a broad place, where there is no straitness: that is, out of the strait circumstances in which he was, into liberty; would have brought him into a large place, where he might walk at liberty, as David experienced, Psa 4:1; and may be understood both in a temporal and spiritual sense. In a temporal sense; he was now in great straits, in poverty and affliction; these pressed him hard on every side, so that his way, as he says, was "fenced up, that he could not pass", Job 19:8. Now had he been rightly humbled under his affliction, God would have taken him out of the straits of adversity, and set his feet in a large room of prosperity; see Psa 31:7. In a spiritual sense; persons are as in a strait place and pent up, when they cannot come forth in the free exercise of grace and duty; their souls are as it were in prison, they are shut up, and have not freedom with God nor man; their faith is ready to fail, their hope is sunk very low, they are straitened in their own bowels or affections, in their love to God and his people: and then they are removed into a large place, when it is the reverse with them; when they are favoured with the free spirit of the Lord, for where he is there is liberty; and when their hearts are enlarged with the love of God, and in the exercise of grace; and then they can run cheerfully the ways of his commandments;

and that which should be set on thy table should be full of fatness; which in a temporal sense denotes, that he should have had a plentiful table, spread with the best of provisions, the richest dainties, the finest of the wheat, and the fattest of the creatures; and these should rest and remain upon his table, or be constantly renewed there: and in a spiritual sense, that his soul should have been satisfied with the love of God, shed abroad in his heart; with the blessings of the everlasting covenant of grace applied unto him; and with the goodness of the house of God, his word and ordinances, as with marrow and fatness; see Psa 63:5.

Gill: Job 36:17 - -- But thou hast fulfilled the judgment of the wicked,.... Some w take this to be a continuation of the happiness Job would have enjoyed, had he behaved ...

But thou hast fulfilled the judgment of the wicked,.... Some w take this to be a continuation of the happiness Job would have enjoyed, had he behaved in his affliction as he ought to have done; then he would have been filled to satisfaction, by seeing the judgments of God exercised on wicked men, as on the Chaldeans and Sabeans, who had injured him: "and judgment and justice would have upheld thee"; when they should be cast down. But these words rather seem to be expressive of his present state, and the reason of it, he not being sufficiently humbled: and the sense is, not that he had lived a vicious course of life, as the wicked do, and filled up the measure of his wickedness as they; and so deserved to be filled with the like judgments as inflicted on them. Mr. Broughton reads the words,

"as thou hast fulfilled the sentence of the wicked, sentence and judgment have laid hold:''

but rather the meaning is, that he had "fulfilled the contention of the wicked" x; pleaded as they did, argued with God after their manner: and therefore is said to go in company and walk with them, and make answers for them, Job 34:8. Wherefore

justice and judgment take hold on thee; afflictions in righteousness, or the chastening hand of God, in righteous judgment, had taken hold upon him, and would hold him until he was sufficiently humbled under them.

Gill: Job 36:18 - -- Because there is wrath,.... Either wrath in Job, so some; indignation and impatience under the afflicting hand of God, expressed by cursing the day o...

Because there is wrath,.... Either wrath in Job, so some; indignation and impatience under the afflicting hand of God, expressed by cursing the day of his birth, and by his angry pleadings with God: and therefore Elihu advises him to beware of it, and check this impetuous spirit; cease from his anger and forsake wrath, and fret not himself to do evil, and provoke the Lord to take him away at once, and then his case would be irretrievable. Or rather wrath in God, which is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men. His vindictive and punitive justice, to revenge and punish wickedness, the effects of which are sometimes awful judgments on men in this life; and eternal vengeance hereafter, called wrath to come: this is laid up in store with him, and sealed up in his treasures, prepared in his purposes and decrees, is revealed in his law, and breaks forth in various instances; see Num 16:46. And there is an appearance of wrath, a little wrath, which is no other than love displeased, in the afflictions and chastisements of God's people, and might be perceived by Job: and this being the case, Elihu advises him to

beware; which, though not expressed in the original, is well supplied; and his meaning is, that he would be cautious of what he said, and not go on to multiply words against God; speak unbecomingly of him, arraign his justice, and find fault with his dealings with him; as well as beware of his actions, conduct, and behaviour, that his tongue and his doings be not against the Lord, to provoke the eyes of his glory;

lest he take thee away with his stroke; out of the world by death, which is the stroke of his hand; and is sometimes given suddenly, and in an awful manner, in wrath and vengeance. Some render the last word, "with clapping of hands" y; either the hands of men, Job 27:23; or of God; expressing his exultation and pleasure at the death of such a person, laughing at his calamity, and mocking when fear cometh; which is dreadful and tremendous;

then a great ransom cannot deliver thee: there is no ransom on earth equal to the life or soul of man; "what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" Mat 16:26; see Psa 49:6. The great ransom of all is the ransom of Christ, which Elihu had made mention of before, Job 33:24; and what else could he have in his mind now? This is the ransom found by infinite wisdom, which Christ came to give, and has given; and by which he has ransomed his people from him that is stronger than they, from the bondage of sin, of Satan, of the world, of hell and death, and everlasting destruction: and this is a great one, plenteous redemption, a great salvation; the ransomer is the great God and our Saviour; the ransom price is not corruptible things, as silver and gold, but the precious blood of Christ, his life, yea, he himself. How great must this ransom be! and it is given for great sinners, the chief of them; and is sufficient for all the elect of God, both Jews and Gentiles: and yet, as great as it is, it is of no avail to one that God has taken away by a stroke out of this world, and sent to everlasting destruction; not through want of sufficiency in this ransom, but by reason of the final and unalterable state of such persons; as, even in the present life, it is of no avail to the deniers and despisers of it, Heb 10:26.

Gill: Job 36:19 - -- Will he esteem thy riches? no, not gold, nor all the forces of strength. Riches can be of no account, nor bear any weight with God; for they are of h...

Will he esteem thy riches? no, not gold, nor all the forces of strength. Riches can be of no account, nor bear any weight with God; for they are of him and come from him, and what he has a right to take away and dispose of as he pleases. These cannot ward off the stroke of death, or secure from it; nor can a man possessed of them carry them with him into the other world; nor will they profit in the day of wrath. Mr. Broughton renders it, "will he esteem thy nobleness?" so Junius and Tremellius; thy noble birth, rank and station, thou hast had among men? Not at all. God is no respecter of persons; he regards not the noble and the rich more than the poor: and as for gold, the same may be said of that, which, though the most valuable among men, is of no esteem with God; and besides it is his: "the gold is mine", says he, "and the silver is mine", Hag 2:8. Nor is death to be bribed with it, or put off by it; nor is a "munition" z fortress or castle, as some render the word, any defence against it: "nor all the forces of strength". Had a man at his command ever such numerous and powerful armies, they could not protect him from the stroke of death, or deliver him from eternal punishment, the demerit of sin. Though as Job had no riches, no gold, nor troops of soldiers about him; nor was there any great likelihood that this would be his case at death; I should think the words might be better rendered, "will he regard thy cry? no, not in distress; not even the most strong and forcible" cries or entreaties: when the stroke of death is given, the sentence of wrath is passed, and eternal destruction takes place; weeping and wailing will signify nothing: the cries and howlings of the damned in hell are of no avail; their strong cryings, and most intense and earnest entreaties, will have no effect on the Lord; though he is a God of great pity and compassion, and has sympathy with his people in distress, and in all their afflictions is afflicted; yet will have no regard to cries and tears, when the decree is gone forth and carried into execution: the verb from whence the first word is derived is used for "crying" in this chapter, Job 36:13; and the Targum renders it here by supplication and petition; so some other Jewish writers a interpret it of crying: and the second word is by several rendered "in straits" b and distress; and Cocceius has observed the notion of intense and fervent prayer in the third, and renders the whole pretty near to what has been observed c.

Gill: Job 36:20 - -- Desire not the night,.... Either in a literal sense, which Job might do; not for secrecy to commit sin, as the thief, murderer, and adulterer do; Elih...

Desire not the night,.... Either in a literal sense, which Job might do; not for secrecy to commit sin, as the thief, murderer, and adulterer do; Elihu had no such suspicion of Job; nor for ease and rest, which he expected not; nor would his sores admit thereof; his nights were wearisome, and when come he wished they were gone, Job 7:2; but either for retirement, that he might muse and consider, and endeavour to search and find out the reason of God's dealing with men, in cutting off sometimes such great numbers together. Elihu suggests, that such a search was altogether vain and to no purpose; he would never be able to find out the reason of these things: or rather for shelter from the eye and hand of God; as nothing before mentioned could ward off his stroke, so neither could the night or darkness preserve from it; see Psa 139:11. Or else the words may be taken in a figurative sense; either of the night of calamity and distress, he might be tempted to desire and wish for, to come upon his enemies; or rather of the night of death, he wished for himself, as he often had done; in doing which Elihu suggests he was wrong; not considering that if God should take him away with a stroke, and he not be humbled and brought to repentance, what would be the consequence of it;

when people are cut off in their place; as sometimes they are in the night, literally taken; just in the place where they stood or lay down, without moving elsewhere, or stirring hand or foot as it were. So Amraphel, and the kings with him, as Jarchi observes, were cut off in the night, the firstborn of Egypt, the Midianites and Sennacherib's army, Gen 14:15; and so in the night of death, figuratively, the common passage of all men, as Mr. Broughton observes, who renders the words, "for people's passage to their place".

Gill: Job 36:21 - -- Take heed, regard not iniquity,.... Not any iniquity, as to show any approbation of it, love for it, and desire after it. All appearance of sin, of ev...

Take heed, regard not iniquity,.... Not any iniquity, as to show any approbation of it, love for it, and desire after it. All appearance of sin, of every sin, is to be abstained from; but particularly by the iniquity here meant may be the sin of impatience under his affliction; murmuring at the dealings of God with him; arraigning his justice, and saying very indecent things of him, as in Job 34:5. Or it may mean the evil he had been guilty of in so earnestly desiring the night of death:

for this thou hast chosen rather than affliction; chose rather to die than to be afflicted as he was; or chose rather to complain of God, as if he dealt hardly with him, and did not do justly by him, than to submit patiently to the will of God, as he, ought to have done: or this he chose "through affliction" d; through the force of it, because of it, and by means thereof; and so is a sort of excuse that Elihu makes for him; though at the same time he would have him by no means to regard such iniquity, and indulge to it.

Gill: Job 36:22 - -- Behold, God exalteth by his power,.... He exalts himself, or causes himself to be exalted, and even above all the blessing and praise of his creatures...

Behold, God exalteth by his power,.... He exalts himself, or causes himself to be exalted, and even above all the blessing and praise of his creatures; by his power, in the works of creation and providence, he makes such a display of his glorious perfections, as to set him on high, and out of the reach of the highest praises of men. He exalts his Son as Mediator, and has made him higher than the kings of the earth, 1Ti 2:5; he exalts him as a Prince and a Saviour, Act 5:31, to give repentance and remission of sins to his people, and to be the Judge of quick and dead, Act 10:42. He has exalted the human nature of Christ to the grace of union to the Son of God: and exalted him in this nature at his right hand, far above all principality and power, Eph 1:21, he exalts men in a civil sense, who are in a low estate, and raises them to a very high one; promotion is alone of him, he sets up and puts down at pleasure. In a spiritual sense, he exalts men when he brings them out of a state of nature into an open state of grace; brings them out of the horrible pit, and sets their feet upon the rock Christ Jesus; takes them as beggars from the dunghill, and places them among princes, even the princes of his people; admits them to communion with himself, puts and keeps them in his favour, as in a garrison; and at last causes them to inherit the throne of glory, 1Sa 2:8. He exalts men, when he sets the poor on high from affliction, and brings them out of adversity into prosperity; and which is what may be chiefly intended here; let a man he brought as low as may, God can by his power, if he will, raise him up again. And this may be said for the comfort and encouragement of Job, in his present circumstances: and so Aben Ezra interprets it,

"God will exalt thee;''

as he afterwards did. The Targum is,

"behold, God alone is strong in his might;''

see Psa 21:13;

who teacheth like him? He teaches by his providences, adverse as well as prosperous; he teaches by his word and ordinances; he teaches by his Spirit and grace, and none teaches like him. Ministers of the word teach men both doctrine and duty, but not like him; they have their gifts for teaching, their wisdom and knowledge, their doctrine, and all the use they are of, from him; none teach so pleasantly, so profitably, so powerfully and effectually, as he does: the Targum adds,

"right things?''

Gill: Job 36:23 - -- Who hath enjoined him his way?.... He teaches men his own ways, the methods of his grace and mercy towards them; and he prescribes to them the ways in...

Who hath enjoined him his way?.... He teaches men his own ways, the methods of his grace and mercy towards them; and he prescribes to them the ways in which they should walk; but none can lead or prescribe to him; as the way of governing the world, in what manner he should act in it; who has "taught him in the path of judgment?" or "showed to him the way of understanding?" Isa 40:14; and particularly whom he should afflict, in what manner he should do it, when and how long he should continue it; all which he does according to his sovereign will, and is not to be controlled: and, in a spiritual sense, no man can or ought to enjoin and prescribe to him whom he should save, and in what way; he saves whom he pleases, and in his own way, even by his Son Jesus Christ, and no other; or "who hath visited", or "should visit on him", or "with him his way" e? who can take upon him to examine into his ways, and scrutinize them, and call him to an account for what he does? no man can overlook his ways and works, or censure him for any of his actions:

or, who can say, thou hast wrought iniquity? this may be said of every man, but it cannot be said of God by any without sin; for, as there is no iniquity in his nature, there can be none in his works; not any in his works of providence, no, not in the afflictions of his people; just and true are all his ways.

Gill: Job 36:24 - -- Remember that thou magnify his work,.... Or his works; his works of creation and providence, which are great in themselves, and declare the greatness ...

Remember that thou magnify his work,.... Or his works; his works of creation and providence, which are great in themselves, and declare the greatness of God; and which, though they cannot be made greater than they are, men may be said to magnify them when they ascribe them to God, and magnify him on account of them; when they think and speak well of them, and give glory to God: and particularly by his work may be meant the chastisement of his people, which is a rod in his hand, which he appoints, and with which he smites; it is his own doing, and he may do what he pleases this way; and it becomes his people to be still and patient because he does it; and then do they magnify this work of his, when they bear it patiently, quietly submit to it, and humble themselves under the mighty hand of God;

which men behold: for the works of God are visible, particularly the works of creation, and the glory of God in them; which men of wisdom and understanding behold with admiration and praise; and so the Targum is,

"which righteous men praise;''

and some derive the word here used from a root which signifies to "sing", and so may be understood of men's celebrating the works of God in songs of praise; though his work here may chiefly design the afflictions he lays on his people, and particularly which he had laid upon Job, which were so visible, and the hand of God in them was so clearly to be seen, that men easily beheld it and took notice of it.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 36:1 The use of וַיֹּסֶף (vayyosef) is with the hendiadys construction: “and he added and said,”...

NET Notes: Job 36:2 The Hebrew text simply has “for yet for God words.”

NET Notes: Job 36:3 This line gives the essence of all of Elihu’s speech – to give or ascribe righteousness to God against the charges of Job. Dhorme translat...

NET Notes: Job 36:4 The word is תְּמִים (tÿmim), often translated “perfect.” It is the same word used of Job in...

NET Notes: Job 36:5 There are several problems in this verse: the repetition of “mighty,” the lack of an object for “despise,” and the meaning of ...

NET Notes: Job 36:6 Or “he does not keep the wicked alive.”

NET Notes: Job 36:7 Heb “he seats them forever and exalts them.” The last verb can be understood as expressing a logical consequence of the preceding action (...

NET Notes: Job 36:8 Dhorme thinks that the verse is still talking about kings, who may be in captivity. But this diverts attention from Elihu’s emphasis on the righ...

NET Notes: Job 36:9 Heb “their work.”

NET Notes: Job 36:10 The verb שׁוּב (shuv, “to turn; to return”) is one of the two major words in the OT for “repent”...

NET Notes: Job 36:11 Some commentators delete this last line for metrical considerations. But there is no textual evidence for the deletion; it is simply the attempt by so...

NET Notes: Job 36:12 This is a similar expression to the one in Job 33:18, where the suggestion was made by many that it means crossing over the canal or river of death. S...

NET Notes: Job 36:13 Heb “they put anger.” This is usually interpreted to mean they lay up anger, or put anger in their hearts.

NET Notes: Job 36:14 Heb “among the male prostitutes” who were at the temple – the “holy ones,” with “holy” being used in that se...

NET Notes: Job 36:15 Heb “he uncovers their ear.”

NET Notes: Job 36:16 Heb “filled with fat.”

NET Notes: Job 36:18 The word is כֹּפֶר (kofer), often translated “ransom,” but frequently in the sense of a bribe.

NET Notes: Job 36:19 For the many suggestions and the reasoning here, see the commentaries.

NET Notes: Job 36:20 The meaning of this line is difficult. There are numerous suggestions for emending the text. Kissane takes the first verb in the sense of “oppre...

NET Notes: Job 36:21 Normally “tested” would be the translation for the Niphal of בָּחַר (bakhar). Although the Qal is empl...

NET Notes: Job 36:22 The word מוֹרֶה (moreh) is the Hiphil participle from יָרַה (yarah). It is related t...

NET Notes: Job 36:24 The expression is “that you extol,” serving as an object of the verb.

Geneva Bible: Job 36:3 I will fetch ( a ) my knowledge from afar, and will ascribe righteousness to my Maker. ( a ) He shows that when we speak of God, we must lift our spi...

Geneva Bible: Job 36:4 For truly my words [shall] not [be] false: he that is ( b ) perfect in knowledge [is] with thee. ( b ) You will perceive that I am a faithful instruc...

Geneva Bible: Job 36:5 Behold, God [is] mighty, and despiseth not [any: he is] ( c ) mighty in strength [and] wisdom. ( c ) Strong and constant, and of understanding: for t...

Geneva Bible: Job 36:6 He ( d ) preserveth not the life of the wicked: but giveth right to the poor. ( d ) Therefore he will not preserve the wicked, but to the humble and ...

Geneva Bible: Job 36:7 He withdraweth not his eyes from the righteous: but with ( e ) kings [are they] on the throne; yea, he doth establish them for ever, and they are exal...

Geneva Bible: Job 36:9 Then he sheweth them their ( f ) work, and their transgressions that they have exceeded. ( f ) He will move their hearts to feel their sins that they...

Geneva Bible: Job 36:12 But if they obey not, they shall perish by the sword, and they shall die ( g ) without knowledge. ( g ) That is, in their folly or obstinacy, and so ...

Geneva Bible: Job 36:13 But the hypocrites ( h ) in heart heap up wrath: they ( i ) cry not when he bindeth them. ( h ) Which are maliciously bent against God, and flatter t...

Geneva Bible: Job 36:14 They die in ( k ) youth, and their life [is] among the unclean. ( k ) They die of some vile death, and that before they come to age.

Geneva Bible: Job 36:16 Even so would he have removed thee out of the strait [into] a broad place, where [there is] no straitness; and ( l ) that which should be set on thy t...

Geneva Bible: Job 36:17 But thou hast fulfilled the ( m ) judgment of the wicked: judgment and justice take hold [on thee]. ( m ) You are altogether after the manner of the ...

Geneva Bible: Job 36:18 ( n ) Because [there is] wrath, [beware] lest he take thee away with [his] stroke: then a great ransom cannot deliver thee. ( n ) God punishes you, l...

Geneva Bible: Job 36:20 ( o ) Desire not the night, when people are cut off in their place. ( o ) Do not be curious in seeking the cause of God's judgments, when he destroys...

Geneva Bible: Job 36:21 Take heed, regard not ( p ) iniquity: for this hast thou chosen rather than affliction. ( p ) And so murmur against God through impatiency.

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Job 36:1-33 - --1 Elihu shews how God is just in his ways.16 How Job's sins hinder God's blessings.24 God's works are to be magnified.

MHCC: Job 36:1-4 - --Elihu only maintained that the affliction was sent for his trial; and lengthened because Job was not yet thoroughly humbled under it. He sought to asc...

MHCC: Job 36:5-14 - --Elihu here shows that God acts as righteous Governor. He is always ready to defend those that are injured. If our eye is ever toward God in duty, his ...

MHCC: Job 36:15-23 - --Elihu shows that Job caused the continuance of his own trouble. He cautions him not to persist in frowardness. Even good men need to be kept to their ...

MHCC: Job 36:24-33 - --Elihu endeavours to fill Job with high thought of God, and so to persuade him into cheerful submission to his providence. Man may see God's works, and...

Matthew Henry: Job 36:1-4 - -- Once more Elihu begs the patience of the auditory, and Job's particularly, for he has not said all that he has to say, but he will not detain them l...

Matthew Henry: Job 36:5-14 - -- Elihu, being to speak on God's behalf, and particularly to ascribe righteousness to his Maker, here shows that the disposals of divine Providence ar...

Matthew Henry: Job 36:15-23 - -- Elihu here comes more closely to Job; and, I. He tells him what God would have done for him before this if he had been duly humbled under his afflic...

Matthew Henry: Job 36:24-33 - -- Elihu is here endeavouring to possess Job with great and high thoughts of God, and so to persuade him into a cheerful submission to his providence. ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 36:1-4 - -- 1 Then Elihu continued and said: 2 Suffer me a little, and I will inform thee, For there is something still to be said for Eloah. 3 I will fetch ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 36:5-7 - -- 5 Behold, God is mighty, and yet doth not act scornfully, Mighty in power of understanding. 6 He preserveth not the life of the ungodly, And to t...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 36:8-10 - -- 8 And if they are bound with chains, Holden in cords of affliction: 9 Then He declareth to them their doing And their transgressions, that they h...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 36:11-12 - -- 11 If they hear and yield, They pass their days in prosperity And their years in pleasure. 12 And if they hear not, They pass away by the bow A...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 36:13-15 - -- 13 Yet the hypocrites in heart cherish wrath, They cry not when He hath chained them. 14 Thus their soul dieth in the vigour of youth, And their ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 36:16-18 - -- 16 And He even bringeth thee out of the jaws of distress To a broad place, whose ground hath no straitness, And the adorning of thy table shall be...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 36:19-21 - -- 19 Shall thy crying place thee beyond distress, And all the efforts of strength? 20 Long not for the night to come, Which shall remove people fro...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 36:22-25 - -- 22 Behold, God acteth loftily in His strength; Who is a teacher like unto Him? 23 Who hath appointed Him His way, And who dare say: Thou doest in...

Constable: Job 32:1--37:24 - --F. Elihu's Speeches chs. 32-37 Many critical scholars believe that a later editor inserted chapters 32-3...

Constable: Job 36:1--37:24 - --5. Elihu's fourth speech chs. 36-37 Of all Elihu's discourses this one is the most impressive be...

Constable: Job 36:1-26 - --God's dealings with man 36:1-26 The first four verses of chapter 36 introduce this speec...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Job (Book Introduction) JOB A REAL PERSON.--It has been supposed by some that the book of Job is an allegory, not a real narrative, on account of the artificial character of ...

JFB: Job (Outline) THE HOLINESS OF JOB, HIS WEALTH, &c. (Job 1:1-5) SATAN, APPEARING BEFORE GOD, FALSELY ACCUSES JOB. (Job 1:6-12) SATAN FURTHER TEMPTS JOB. (Job 2:1-8)...

TSK: Job (Book Introduction) A large aquatic animal, perhaps the extinct dinosaur, plesiosaurus, the exact meaning is unknown. Some think this to be a crocodile but from the desc...

TSK: Job 36 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Job 36:1, Elihu shews how God is just in his ways; Job 36:16, How Job’s sins hinder God’s blessings; Job 36:24, God’s works are to ...

Poole: Job 36 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 36 God is first in all his ways; towards the wicked, Job 36:1-6 , the godly, Job 36:7-11 , the hypocrite, Job 36:12-14 , the poor, Job 36:1...

MHCC: Job (Book Introduction) This book is so called from Job, whose prosperity, afflictions, and restoration, are here recorded. He lived soon after Abraham, or perhaps before tha...

MHCC: Job 36 (Chapter Introduction) (Job 36:1-4) Elihu desires Job's attention. (Job 36:5-14) The methods in which God deals with men. (Job 36:15-23) Elihu counsels Job. (Job 36:24-33...

Matthew Henry: Job (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Job This book of Job stands by itself, is not connected with any other, and is therefore to...

Matthew Henry: Job 36 (Chapter Introduction) Elihu, having largely reproved Job for some of his unadvised speeches, which Job had nothing to say in the vindication of, here comes more generall...

Constable: Job (Book Introduction) Introduction Title This book, like many others in the Old Testament, got its name from...

Constable: Job (Outline) Outline I. Prologue chs. 1-2 A. Job's character 1:1-5 B. Job's calamitie...

Constable: Job Job Bibliography Andersen, Francis I. Job. Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries series. Leicester, Eng. and Downe...

Haydock: Job (Book Introduction) THE BOOK OF JOB. INTRODUCTION. This Book takes its name from the holy man, of whom it treats; who, according to the more probable opinion, was ...

Gill: Job (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JOB This book, in the Hebrew copies, generally goes by this name, from Job, who is however the subject, if not the writer of it. In...

Gill: Job 36 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JOB 36 This chapter, with the following, contains Elihu's fourth and last discourse, the principal view of which is to vindicate th...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


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