
Text -- Job 36:17 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
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.
JFB -> Job 36:17
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].
Clarke -> Job 36:17
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.
TSK -> Job 36:17

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 36:17
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"-
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.
Poole -> Job 36:17
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.
Haydock -> Job 36:17
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)
Gill -> Job 36:17
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.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 36:1-33
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 36:15-23
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 ...
Matthew Henry -> Job 36:15-23
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...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 36:16-18
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...
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...
