
Text -- Job 40:1-6 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 40:1 - -- Having made a little pause to try what Job could answer. This is not said to be spoken out of the whirlwind, and therefore some think God said it in a...
Having made a little pause to try what Job could answer. This is not said to be spoken out of the whirlwind, and therefore some think God said it in a still, small voice, which wrought more upon Job, (as upon Elijah) than the whirlwind did. Tho' Job had not spoken any thing, yet God is said to answer him. For he knows mens thoughts, and can return a fit answer to their silence.

That boldly censureth his ways or works; it is at his peril.

Speak again; I will contend no more with thee.

Often, the definite number being used indefinitely.

Wesley: Job 40:6 - -- Which was renewed when God renewed his charge upon Job, whom he intended to humble more throughly.
Which was renewed when God renewed his charge upon Job, whom he intended to humble more throughly.
Hebrew, "JEHOVAH."

JFB: Job 40:2 - -- As Job had so often expressed a wish to do. Or, rebuketh. Does Job now still (after seeing and hearing of God's majesty and wisdom) wish to set God ri...
As Job had so often expressed a wish to do. Or, rebuketh. Does Job now still (after seeing and hearing of God's majesty and wisdom) wish to set God right?

JFB: Job 40:4 - -- I am (too) vile (to reply). It is a very different thing to vindicate ourselves before God, from what it is before men. Job could do the latter, not t...
I am (too) vile (to reply). It is a very different thing to vindicate ourselves before God, from what it is before men. Job could do the latter, not the former.


Clarke: Job 40:1 - -- Moreover the Lord answered - That is, the Lord continued his discourse with Job. Answered does not refer to any thing said by Job, or any question a...
Moreover the Lord answered - That is, the Lord continued his discourse with Job. Answered does not refer to any thing said by Job, or any question asked. I think it very likely that this whole piece, from the beginning of this first verse to the end of the fourteenth, was originally the ending of the poem. Mr. Heath has noticed this, and I shall lay his words before the reader: "The former part of this chapter is evidently the conclusion of the poem; the latter part whereof seems to be in great disorder; whether it has happened from the carelessness of the transcriber, or, which appears most probable, from the skins of parchment composing the roll having by some accident changed their places. It is plain from the seventh verse of the forty-second chapter Job 42:7 that Jehovah is the last speaker in the poem. If, then, immediately after the end of the thirty-ninth chapter, we subjoin the fifteenth verse of the forty-second chapter, and place the fourteen first verses of the fortieth chapter immediately after the sixth verse of the forty-second chapter, and by that means make them the conclusion of the poem, all will be right; and this seventh verse of the forty-second chapter will be in its natural order. The action will be complete by the judgment of the Almighty; and the catastrophe of the poem will be grand and solemn."To these reasons of Mr. Heath, Dr. Kennicott has added others, which the reader may find at the end of the chapter. Job 40:24 Without taking any farther notice of the transposition in this place, I will continue the notes in the present order of the verses.

Clarke: Job 40:2 - -- He that reproveth God, let him answer it - Let the man who has made so free with God and his government, answer to what he has now heard.
He that reproveth God, let him answer it - Let the man who has made so free with God and his government, answer to what he has now heard.

Behold, I am vile - I acknowledge my inward defilement. I cannot answer thee

Clarke: Job 40:4 - -- I will lay mine hand upon my mouth - I cannot excuse myself, and I must be dumb before thee.
I will lay mine hand upon my mouth - I cannot excuse myself, and I must be dumb before thee.

Clarke: Job 40:5 - -- I will proceed no farther - I shall attempt to justify myself no longer; I have spoken repeatedly; and am confounded at my want of respect for my Ma...
I will proceed no farther - I shall attempt to justify myself no longer; I have spoken repeatedly; and am confounded at my want of respect for my Maker, and at the high thoughts which I have entertained of my own righteousness. All is impurity in the presence of thy Majesty.
Defender -> Job 40:2
Defender: Job 40:2 - -- There is a pause in God's monologue on creation at this point. God rebukes Job mildly for presuming to question His actions, even when he didn't under...
There is a pause in God's monologue on creation at this point. God rebukes Job mildly for presuming to question His actions, even when he didn't understand them, and Job accepts the rebuke and confesses his sin."

TSK: Job 40:2 - -- Shall : Job 9:3, Job 33:13; Ecc 6:10; Isa 45:9-11, Isa 50:8; 1Co 10:22
instruct : Isa 40:14; 1Co 2:16
he that reproveth : Job 3:11, Job 3:12, Job 3:20...
Shall : Job 9:3, Job 33:13; Ecc 6:10; Isa 45:9-11, Isa 50:8; 1Co 10:22
instruct : Isa 40:14; 1Co 2:16
he that reproveth : Job 3:11, Job 3:12, Job 3:20, Job 3:23, Job 7:12, Job 7:19-21, Job 9:17, Job 9:18, Job 9:32-35, Job 10:3-7, Job 10:14-17, Job 13:21-27; Job 14:16, Job 14:17, Job 16:11-21, Job 19:6-11, Job 27:2, Job 30:21; Eze 18:2; Mat 20:11; Rom 9:19-23, Rom 11:34-36

TSK: Job 40:4 - -- Behold : Job 42:6; Gen 18:27, Gen 32:10; 2Sa 24:10; 1Ki 19:4; Ezr 9:6, Ezr 9:15; Neh 9:33; Psa 51:4, Psa 51:5; Isa 6:5, Isa 53:6, Isa 64:6; Dan 9:5, D...
Behold : Job 42:6; Gen 18:27, Gen 32:10; 2Sa 24:10; 1Ki 19:4; Ezr 9:6, Ezr 9:15; Neh 9:33; Psa 51:4, Psa 51:5; Isa 6:5, Isa 53:6, Isa 64:6; Dan 9:5, Dan 9:7; Luk 5:8, Luk 15:18, Luk 15:19, Luk 18:13; 1Ti 1:15
what : Job 9:31-35, Job 16:21, Job 23:4-7, Job 31:37
I will : Job 21:5, Job 29:9; Jdg 18:19; Psa 39:9; Pro 30:32; Mic 7:16; Hab 2:20; Zec 2:13

TSK: Job 40:5 - -- but I will not : Job 34:31, Job 34:32; Rom 3:19
twice : Job 33:14; 2Ki 6:10; Psa 62:11
but I will proceed : Jer 31:18, Jer 31:19

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Job 40:1 - -- Moreover, the Lord answered Job - The word "answered"is used here as it is often in the Scriptures, not to denote a reply to what had been imme...
Moreover, the Lord answered Job - The word "answered"is used here as it is often in the Scriptures, not to denote a reply to what had been immediately said, but to take up or continue an argument. What God said here was designed as a reply to the spirit which Job had so frequently manifested.

Barnes: Job 40:2 - -- Shall he that contendeth with the A mighty instruct him? - Gesenius renders this, "Contending shall the reprover of God contend with the Almigh...
Shall he that contendeth with the A mighty instruct him? - Gesenius renders this, "Contending shall the reprover of God contend with the Almighty?"Prof. Lee, "Shall one by contending with the Almighty correct this?"On the grammatical construction, see Gesenius on the word
He that reproveth God - Or rather, "He that is disposed to carry his cause before God,"as Job had often expressed a wish to do. The word used here (
Let him answer it - Or rather, "Let him answer him."That is, Is he now ready to answer? There is now an opportunity for him to carry his cause, as he wished, directly before God. Is he ready to embrace the opportunity, and to answer now what the Almighty has said? This does not mean, then, as the common version would seem to imply, that the man who reproves God must be held responsible for it, but that Job, who had expressed the wish to carry his cause before God, had now an opportunity to do so. That this is the meaning, is apparent from the next verses, where Job says that he was confounded, and had nothing to say.

Barnes: Job 40:4 - -- Behold, I am vile: what shall I answer thee? - " Instead of being able to argue my cause, and to vindicate myself as I had expected, I now see t...
Behold, I am vile: what shall I answer thee? - " Instead of being able to argue my cause, and to vindicate myself as I had expected, I now see that I am guilty, and I have nothing to say."He had argued boldly with his friends. He had, before them, maintained his innocence of the charges which they brought against him, and had supposed that he would be able to maintain the same argument before God. But when the opportunity was given, he felt that he was a poor, weak man; a guilty and miserable offender. It is a very different thing to maintain our cause before God, from what it is to maintain it before people; and though we may attempt to vindicate our own righteousness when we argue with our fellow-creatures, yet when we come to maintain it before God we shall be dumb. On earth, people vindicate themselves; what will they do when they come to stand before God in the judgment?
I will lay mine hand upon my mouth - An expression of silence. Catlin, in his account of the Mandan Indians, says that this is a common custom with them when anything wonderful occurs. Some of them laid their hands on their mouths and remained in this posture by the hour, as an expression of astonishment at the wonders produced by the brush in the art of painting; compare Job 21:5, note; Job 29:9, note.

Barnes: Job 40:5 - -- Once have I spoken - That is, in vindicating myself. He had once spoken of God in an irreverent and improper manner, and he now saw it. Bu...
Once have I spoken - That is, in vindicating myself. He had once spoken of God in an irreverent and improper manner, and he now saw it.
But I will not answer - I will not now answer, as I had expressed the wish to do. Job now saw that he had spoken in an improper manner, and he says that he would not repeat what he had said.
Yea, twice - He had not only offended once, as if in a thoughtless and hasty manner, but he had repeated it, showing deliberation, and thus aggravating his guilt. When a man is brought to a willingness to confess that he has done wrong once, he will be very likely to see that he has been guilty of more than one offence. One sin will draw on the remembrance of another; and the gate once open, a flood of sins will rush to the recollection. It is not common that a man can so isolate a sin as to repent of that alone, or so look at one offence against God as not to feel that he has been often guilty of the same crimes.
But I will proceed no further - Job felt doubtless that if he should allow himself to speak again, or to attempt now to vindicate himself, he would be in danger of committing the same error again. He now saw that God was right; that he had himself repeatedly indulged in an improper spirit, and that all that became him was a penitent confession in the fewest words possible. We may learn here:
(1) That a view of God is fitted to produce in us a deep sense of our own sins. No one can feel himself to be in the presence of God, or regard the Almighty as speaking to him, without saying, "Lo I am vile? There is nothing so much fitted to produce a sense of sinfulness and nothingness as a view of God.
(2) The world will be mute at the day of judgment. They who have been most loud and bold in vindicating themselves will then be silent, and will confess that they are vile, and the whole world "will become guilty before God."If the presence and the voice of God produced such an effect on so good a man as Job, what will it not do on a wicked world?
(3) A true penitent is disposed to use but few words; "God be merciful to me a sinner,"or, "lo, I am vile,"is about all the language which the penitent employs. He does not go into long arguments, into metaphysical distinctions, into apologies and vindications, but uses the simplest language of confession, and then leaves the soul, and the cause, in the hands of God.
(4) Repentance consists in stopping where we are, and in resolving to add no more sin. "I have erred,"is its language. "I will not add to it, I will do so no more,"is the immediate response of the soul. A readiness to go into a vindication, or to expose oneself to the danger of sinning again in the same way, is an evidence that there is no true repentance. Job, a true penitent, would not allow himself even to speak again on the subject, lest he should be guilty of the sin which he had already committed.
(5) In repentance we must be willing to retract our errors, and confess that we were wrong - no matter what favorite opinions we have had, or how tenaciously and zealously we have defended and held them. Job had constructed many beautiful and eloquent arguments in defense of his opinions; he had brought to bear on the subject all the results of his observation, all his attainments in science, all the adages and maxims that he had derived from the ancients, and from a long contact with mankind, but he was now brought to a willingness to confess that his arguments were not solid, and that the opinions which he had cherished were erroneous. It is often more difficult to abandon opinions than vices; and the proud philosopher when he exercises repentance has a more difficult task than the victim of low and debasing sensuality. His opinions are his idols. They embody the results of his reading, his reflections, his conversation, his observation, and they become a part of himself. Hence, it is, that so many abandoned sinners are converted, and so few philosophers; that religion spreads often with so much success among the obscure and the openly wicked, while so few of the "wise men of the world"are called and saved.

Barnes: Job 40:6 - -- Then answered the Lord unto Job out of the whirlwind - See the notes at Job 38:1. God here resumes the argument which had been interrupted in o...
Then answered the Lord unto Job out of the whirlwind - See the notes at Job 38:1. God here resumes the argument which had been interrupted in order to give Job an opportunity to speak and to carry his cause before the Almighty, as he had desired, see Job 40:2. Since Job had nothing to say, the argument, which had been suspended, is resumed and completed.
Poole: Job 40:2 - -- Shall Job, who presumed to contend with me in judgment, and to dispute the reasonableness and equity of my proceedings, give me instructions or dire...
Shall Job, who presumed to contend with me in judgment, and to dispute the reasonableness and equity of my proceedings, give me instructions or directions how to manage my own affairs, and govern my creatures? He justly mentions his almightiness, as a convincing argument of his justice. For how can he be unjust to his creatures, who hath no obligation to them, and never did nor can receive any thing from them; and who hath an absolute, sovereign, and uncontrollable dominion over them; and who being infinitely and necessarily perfect, and all-sufficient within himself, can neither have any inclination to unrighteousness, which is an imperfection, nor any temptation to it from any need he hath of it to accomplish his designs, which he can do by his own omnipotence, or front any advantage accruing to him by it.
That reproveth God that boldly censureth his ways or works; which thou hast done.
Let him answer it let him answer my former and further questions at his peril.

Poole: Job 40:4 - -- I am vile what am I, a mean and contemptible creature that should presume to contend with my Maker and Judge? I confess my fault and folly.
What sha...
I am vile what am I, a mean and contemptible creature that should presume to contend with my Maker and Judge? I confess my fault and folly.
What shall I answer thee? I neither desire nor am able to dispute with thee. I will for the future bridle my tongue, and instead of contesting with thee, do here humbly and willingly submit myself to thee.

Poole: Job 40:5 - -- I will not answer or speak again ; answering being oft put for speaking. I will contend no more with thee.
Yea, twice i.e. ofttimes, or again and ...
I will not answer or speak again ; answering being oft put for speaking. I will contend no more with thee.
Yea, twice i.e. ofttimes, or again and again, the definite number being used indefinitely.
I will proceed no further in such bold and presumptuous expressions and accusations of thy providence towards me. Vain therefore are the excuses which some interpreters make for Job, as if he were faultless in his foregoing discourses, when both God chargeth him with faultiness therein, and Job himself confesseth it.

Poole: Job 40:6 - -- The whirlwind was renewed when God renewed his charge upon Job, whom he intended to humble more thoroughly than yet he had done. Both this and the ne...
The whirlwind was renewed when God renewed his charge upon Job, whom he intended to humble more thoroughly than yet he had done. Both this and the next verse are repeated out of Job 38:1,3 , where they are explained.
Haydock: Job 40:3 - -- Judgment. Job had frequently acknowledged that God could not be in the wrong. But he had expressed himself in to forcible language, of which God ma...
Judgment. Job had frequently acknowledged that God could not be in the wrong. But he had expressed himself in to forcible language, of which God makes him, as it were, ashamed. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "rejectest thou not my decision? yea, dost thou think that I have judged thee in a different manner, in order that thou mayst appear just?" (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 40:6 - -- Scatter. Septuagint is shorter: (Calmet) "Send angels or messengers in wrath, and humble every insulting person. 7. Extinguish the proud, destro...
Scatter. Septuagint is shorter: (Calmet) "Send angels or messengers in wrath, and humble every insulting person. 7. Extinguish the proud, destroy the wicked at once. 8. Hide them in the earth together, and fill their faces with shame." (Haydock)
Gill: Job 40:1 - -- Moreover the Lord answered Job,.... The Lord having discoursed largely of the works of nature, in order to reconcile the mind of Job to his works of p...
Moreover the Lord answered Job,.... The Lord having discoursed largely of the works of nature, in order to reconcile the mind of Job to his works of providence, stopped and made a pause for a little space, that Job might answer if he thought fit; but he being entirely silent, the Lord began again:
and said; as follows:

Gill: Job 40:2 - -- Shall he that contendeth with the Almighty instruct him?.... Is he capable of it? He ought to be that takes upon him to dispute with God, to object o...
Shall he that contendeth with the Almighty instruct him?.... Is he capable of it? He ought to be that takes upon him to dispute with God, to object or reply to him; that brings a charge against him, enters the debate, and litigates a point with him; which Job wanted to do. But could he or any other instruct him, who is the God of knowledge, the all wise and only wise God; who gives man wisdom, and teaches him knowledge? What folly is it to pretend to instruct him! Or can such an one be "instructed?" as the Targum: he is not in the way of instruction; he that submits to the chastising hand of God may be instructed thereby, but not he that contends with him; see Psa 94:12. Or should he be one that is instructed? no, he ought to be an instructor, and not one instructed; a teacher, and not one that is taught; he should be above all instruction from God or man that will dispute with the Almighty, The word for instruct has the signification of chastisement, because instruction sometimes comes that way; and then the sense either is, shall a man contend with the Almighty that chastises him? Does it become a son or a servant to strive against a parent or a master that corrects him? Or does not he deserve to be chastised that acts such a part? Some derive the word from one that signifies to remove or depart, and give the sense, shall the abundance, the all sufficiency of God, go from him to another, to a man; and so he, instead of God, be the all sufficient one? Or rather the meaning of the clause is, has there not been much, enough, and more than enough said, Job, to chastise thee, and convince thee of thy mistakes? must more be said? is there any need of it?
he that reproveth God, let him answer it; he that reproves God, for his words, or works, or ways, finding fault with either of them, ought to answer to the question now put; or to any or all of those in the preceding chapters, and not be silent as Job now was.

Gill: Job 40:3 - -- Then Job answered the Lord,.... Finding that he was obliged to answer, he did, but with some reluctance:
and said; as follows:
Then Job answered the Lord,.... Finding that he was obliged to answer, he did, but with some reluctance:
and said; as follows:

Gill: Job 40:4 - -- Behold, I am vile,.... Or "light" a; which may have respect either to his words and arguments, which he thought had force in them, but now he saw they...
Behold, I am vile,.... Or "light" a; which may have respect either to his words and arguments, which he thought had force in them, but now he saw they had none; or to his works and actions, the integrity of his life, and the uprightness of his ways, which he imagined were weighty and of great importance, but now being weighed in the balances of justice were found wanting; or it may refer to his original meanness and distance from God, being dust and ashes, and nothing in comparison of him; and so the Septuagint version is, "I am nothing"; see Isa 40:17; or rather to the original vileness and sinfulness of his nature he had now a sight of, and saw how he had been breaking forth in unbecoming expressions concerning God and his providence: the nature of man is exceeding vile and sinful; his heart desperately wicked; his thoughts, and the imaginations of them, evil, and that continually; his mind and conscience are defiled; his affections inordinate, and his understanding and will sadly depraved; he is vile in soul and body; of all which an enlightened man is convinced, and will acknowledge;
what shall I answer thee? I am not able to answer thee, who am but dust and ashes; what more can I say than to acknowledge my levity, vanity, and vileness? he that talked so big, and in such a blustering manner of answering God, as in Job 13:22; now has nothing to say for himself;
I will lay mine hand upon my mouth; impose silence upon himself, and as it were lay a restraint upon himself from speaking: it looks as if there were some workings in Job's heart; he thought he could say something, and make some reply, but durst not, for fear of offending yet more and more, and therefore curbed it in; see Psa 39:1.

Gill: Job 40:5 - -- Once have I spoken; but I will not answer,.... Some think this refers to what he had just now said of his vileness, he had owned that, and that was al...
Once have I spoken; but I will not answer,.... Some think this refers to what he had just now said of his vileness, he had owned that, and that was all he had to say, or would say, he would give no other answer; Jarchi says, some suppose he has respect to his words in Job 9:22;
yea, twice; but I will proceed no further; the meaning seems to be, that he who had once and again, or very often, at least in some instances, spoken very imprudently and indecently, for the future would take care not to speak in such a manner: for this confession was not quite free and full; and therefore the Lord takes him in hand again, to bring him to make a more full and ingenuous one, as he does in Job 42:1.

Gill: Job 40:6 - -- Then answered the Lord unto Job out of the whirlwind,.... Some think that the whirlwind ceased while the Lord spake the words in Job 40:2; which encou...
Then answered the Lord unto Job out of the whirlwind,.... Some think that the whirlwind ceased while the Lord spake the words in Job 40:2; which encouraged Job to make the answer he did; but others are of opinion that it continued, and now increased, and was more boisterous than before. The Targum calls it the whirlwind of tribulation: comfort does not always follow immediately on first convictions; Job, though humbled, was not yet humbled enough: God will have a fuller confession of sin from him: it was not sufficient to say he was vile, he must declare his sorrow for his sin, his abhorrence of it, and of himself for it, and his repentance of it; and that he had said things of God he ought not to have said, and which he understood not; and though he had said he would answer no more, God will make him say more, and therefore continued the whirlwind, and to speak out of it; for he had more to say to him, and give him further proof of his power to his full conviction;
and said; as follows.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 40:2 The verb יִסּוֹר (yissor) is found only here, but comes from a common root meaning “to correct; to rep...



NET Notes: Job 40:6 The speech can be divided into three parts: the invitation to Job to assume the throne and rule the world (40:7-14), the description of Behemoth (40:1...
Geneva Bible: Job 40:2 Shall he that contendeth with the Almighty ( q ) instruct [him]? he that reproveth God, let him answer it.
( q ) Is this the way for a man that will ...

Geneva Bible: Job 40:4 Behold, I am ( r ) vile; what shall I answer thee? I will lay mine hand upon my mouth.
( r ) By which he shows that he repented and desired pardon fo...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 40:1-24
TSK Synopsis: Job 40:1-24 - --1 Job humbles himself to God.6 God stirs him up to shew his righteousness, power, and wisdom.16 Of the behemoth.
MHCC -> Job 40:1-5; Job 40:6-14
MHCC: Job 40:1-5 - --Communion with the Lord effectually convinces and humbles a saint, and makes him glad to part with his most beloved sins. There is need to be thorough...

MHCC: Job 40:6-14 - --Those who profit by what they have heard from God, shall hear more from him. And those who are truly convinced of sin, yet need to be more thoroughly ...
Matthew Henry -> Job 40:1-5; Job 40:6-14
Matthew Henry: Job 40:1-5 - -- Here is, I. A humbling challenge which God gave to Job. After he had heaped up many hard questions upon him, to show him, by his manifest ignorance ...

Matthew Henry: Job 40:6-14 - -- Job was greatly humbled for what God had already said, but not sufficiently; he was brought low, but not low enough; and therefore God here proceeds...
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 40:1-3 - --
1 Then Jehovah answered Job, and said:
2 Will now the censurer contend with the Almighty?
Let the instructor of Eloah answer it!
3 Then Job answ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 40:4-5 - --
4 Behold, I am too mean: what shall I answer Thee?
I lay my hand upon my mouth.
5 Once have I spoken, and will not begin again;
And twice - I wil...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 40:6 - --
6 Then Jehovah answered Job out of the storm, and said:
This second time also Jehovah speaks to Job out of the storm; not, however, in wrath, but i...
Constable: Job 38:1--42:7 - --G. The Cycle of Speeches between Job and God chs. 38:1-42:6
Finally God spoke to Job and gave revelation...

Constable: Job 38:1--40:3 - --1. God's first speech 38:1-40:2
God's first speech "transcends all other descriptions of the won...

Constable: Job 38:4--40:1 - --God's questions of Job 38:4-39:30
As Job's friends had done, God began to break Job down...

Constable: Job 40:6-7 - --God's concluding challenge to Job 40:1-2
God's first speech began and ended with a chall...
