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Text -- Job 5:25-27 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
5:25 You will also know that your children will be numerous, and your descendants like the grass of the earth. 5:26 You will come to your grave in a full age, As stacks of grain are harvested in their season. 5:27 Look, we have investigated this, so it is true. Hear it, and apply it for your own good.”
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Wisdom | Righteous | Presumption | Old Age | Longevity | Job | Happiness | God | GAMES | Faith | Eliphaz | ELIPHAZ (2) | DEATH | Children | Age | Afflictions and Adversities | AGE; OLD AGE | AGE, OLD | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

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

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Job 5:25 - -- By assurance from God's promises, and the impressions of his Spirit; and by experience in due time.

By assurance from God's promises, and the impressions of his Spirit; and by experience in due time.

Wesley: Job 5:26 - -- In a mature and old, but vigorous age, as the word implies. It is a great blessing, to live to a full age, and not to have the number of our years cut...

In a mature and old, but vigorous age, as the word implies. It is a great blessing, to live to a full age, and not to have the number of our years cut short. Much more, to be willing to die, to come chearfully to the grave: and to die seasonably, just in the bed - time, when our souls are ripe for God.

Wesley: Job 5:27 - -- This is no rash or hasty conceit, but what both I and my brethren have learned by deep consideration, long experience, and diligent observation.

This is no rash or hasty conceit, but what both I and my brethren have learned by deep consideration, long experience, and diligent observation.

Wesley: Job 5:27 - -- Know it for thyself; (So the word is) with application to thy own case. That which we thus hear and know for ourselves, we hear and know for our good.

Know it for thyself; (So the word is) with application to thy own case. That which we thus hear and know for ourselves, we hear and know for our good.

JFB: Job 5:25 - -- (Psa 72:16). Properly, "herb-bearing seed" (Gen 1:11-12).

(Psa 72:16). Properly, "herb-bearing seed" (Gen 1:11-12).

JFB: Job 5:26 - -- So "full of days" (Job 42:17; Gen 35:29). Not mere length of years, but ripeness for death, one's inward and outward full development not being premat...

So "full of days" (Job 42:17; Gen 35:29). Not mere length of years, but ripeness for death, one's inward and outward full development not being prematurely cut short, is denoted (Isa 65:22).

JFB: Job 5:26 - -- Not literally, but expressing willingness to die. Eliphaz speaks from the Old Testament point of view, which made full years a reward of the righteous...

Not literally, but expressing willingness to die. Eliphaz speaks from the Old Testament point of view, which made full years a reward of the righteous (Psa 91:16; Exo 20:12), and premature death the lot of the wicked (Psa 55:23). The righteous are immortal till their work is done. To keep them longer would be to render them less fit to die. God takes them at their best (Isa 57:1). The good are compared to wheat (Mat 13:30).

JFB: Job 5:26 - -- Literally, "ascends." The corn is lifted up off the earth and carried home; so the good man "is raised into the heap of sheaves" [UMBREIT].

Literally, "ascends." The corn is lifted up off the earth and carried home; so the good man "is raised into the heap of sheaves" [UMBREIT].

JFB: Job 5:27 - -- Literally, "for thyself" (Psa 111:2; Pro 2:4; Pro 9:12).

Literally, "for thyself" (Psa 111:2; Pro 2:4; Pro 9:12).

Clarke: Job 5:25 - -- Thine offspring as the grass - Thou shalt have a numerous and permanent issue.

Thine offspring as the grass - Thou shalt have a numerous and permanent issue.

Clarke: Job 5:26 - -- Thou shalt come to thy grave - Thou shalt not die before thy time; thou shalt depart from life like a full-fed guest; happy in what thou hast known,...

Thou shalt come to thy grave - Thou shalt not die before thy time; thou shalt depart from life like a full-fed guest; happy in what thou hast known, and in what thou hast enjoyed

Clarke: Job 5:26 - -- Like as a shock of corn - Thou shalt completely run through the round of the spring, summer, autumn, and winter of life; and thou shalt be buried li...

Like as a shock of corn - Thou shalt completely run through the round of the spring, summer, autumn, and winter of life; and thou shalt be buried like a wholesome seed in the earth; from which thou shalt again rise up into an eternal spring!

Clarke: Job 5:27 - -- Lo this, we have searched it - What I have told thee is the sum of our wisdom and experience on these important points. These are established maxims...

Lo this, we have searched it - What I have told thee is the sum of our wisdom and experience on these important points. These are established maxims, which universal experience supports

Know - understand, and reduce them to practice for thy good. Thus ends Eliphaz, the Temanite, "full of wise saws and ancient instances;"but he miserably perverted them in his application of them to Job’ s case and character. They contain, however, many wholesome truths, of which the wise in heart may make a very advantageous practical use

The predatory excursions referred to in Job 5:23 were not unfrequent among our own barbarous ancestors. An affecting picture of this kind is drawn by Shakespeare, from Holinshed’ s Chronicles, of the case of Macduff, whose castle was attacked in his absence by Macbeth and his wife and all his children murdered. A similar incident was the ground of the old heroic ballad of Hardicanute. When the veteran heard that a host of Norwegians had landed to pillage the country, he armed, and posted to the field to meet the invading foe. He slew the chief in battle, and routed his pillaging banditti. While this was taking place, another party took the advantage of his absence, attacked his castle, and carried off or murdered his lovely wife and family; which, being perceived on his return by the war and age-worn chief, is thus affectingly described by the unknown poet: -

Loud and chill blew the westlin wind,
Sair beat the heavy shower

Mirk grew the nicht eir Hardyknute
Wan neir his stately tower

His tower that us’ d with torches bleise
To shine sae far at night

Seim’ d now as black as mourning weid,
Nae marvel, sair he sich’ d

"Thair’ s nae light in my lady’ s bowir,
Thair’ s nae light in my hall

Nae blink shynes round my Fairly fair,
Nor ward stands on my wall

"What bodes it, Thomas! Robert! say?"
Nae answer - speaks their dreid

"Stand back, my sons, I’ ll be your gyde;"
But bye they pass’ d with speid

"As fast I haif sped owr Scotland’ s foes"
There ceis’ d his brag of weir

Sair schamt to mind ocht but his dame,
And maiden Fairly fair

Black feir he felt; but what to feir
He wist not yet with dreid

Sair schook his body, sair his limbs,
And all the warrior fled

The ending of this poem is lost; but we here see that the castle of Hardicanute was surprised, and his family destroyed, or carried off, while he and his sons had been employed in defeating the invading Norwegians. Thank God! civilization, the offspring of the spread of Christianity, has put an end to these barbarous practices among us; but in the East, where Christianity is not, they flourish still. Britons! send out your Bible and your missionaries to tame these barbarians; for whom heathenism has done nothing, and the Koran next to nothing. Civilization itself, without the Bible, will do as little; for the civilized Greeks and Romans were barbarians, fell and murderous; living in envy and malice, hateful, hating one another, and offering hundreds at a time of human victims to their ruthless deities. Nothing but Christianity ever did, or even can, cure these evils.

Defender: Job 5:27 - -- This arrogant assertion by Eliphaz indicates two things have happened previously. First, the evil spirit so impressed him with his deceptive message t...

This arrogant assertion by Eliphaz indicates two things have happened previously. First, the evil spirit so impressed him with his deceptive message that Eliphaz was confident he was conveying divinely inspired advice to Job. Secondly, he had convinced Bildad and Zophar that this was the message they should unitedly give Job."

TSK: Job 5:25 - -- thy seed : Job 42:13-16; Gen 15:5; Lev 26:9; Deu 28:4; Psa 112:2, Psa 127:3-5, Psa 128:3-6 great : or, much. as the grass : Psa 72:16

thy seed : Job 42:13-16; Gen 15:5; Lev 26:9; Deu 28:4; Psa 112:2, Psa 127:3-5, Psa 128:3-6

great : or, much.

as the grass : Psa 72:16

TSK: Job 5:26 - -- in a full age : Job 42:16, Job 42:17; Gen 15:15, Gen 25:8; Psa 91:16; Pro 9:11, Pro 10:27 cometh : Heb. ascendeth

in a full age : Job 42:16, Job 42:17; Gen 15:15, Gen 25:8; Psa 91:16; Pro 9:11, Pro 10:27

cometh : Heb. ascendeth

TSK: Job 5:27 - -- we have searched : Job 8:8-10, Job 12:2, Job 15:9, Job 15:10, Job 15:17, Job 32:11, Job 32:12; Psa 111:2; Pro 2:3-5 for thy good : Heb. for thyself, J...

we have searched : Job 8:8-10, Job 12:2, Job 15:9, Job 15:10, Job 15:17, Job 32:11, Job 32:12; Psa 111:2; Pro 2:3-5

for thy good : Heb. for thyself, Job 22:2; Deu 10:13; Pro 9:12

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Job 5:25 - -- Thou shalt know also that thy seed shall be great - Margin, "much."That is, thy posterity shall be numerous. This was one of the blessings supp...

Thou shalt know also that thy seed shall be great - Margin, "much."That is, thy posterity shall be numerous. This was one of the blessings supposed to be connected with the favor of God; see the notes at Isa 53:10.

And thine offspring as the grass of the earth - On the meaning of the word here rendered offspring, see the notes at Isa 48:19. Nothing is more common in the Scriptures, than to compare a prosperous and a happy man to a green and flourishing tree; see Psa 1:3; Psa 92:12-14. The idea here is, that the righteous would have a numerous and a happy posterity, and that the divine favor to them would bc shown by the blessing of God on their children; compare Psa 128:1, Psa 128:3.

Blessed is every one that feareth the Lord,

That walketh in his ways.

Thy wife shall be a fruitful vine by the side of thine house;

Thy children like olive-plants round about thy table.

Barnes: Job 5:26 - -- Thou shalt come to thy grave in full age - That is, thou shalt have long life; thou shalt not be cut down prematurely, nor by any sudden calami...

Thou shalt come to thy grave in full age - That is, thou shalt have long life; thou shalt not be cut down prematurely, nor by any sudden calamity. It is to be remembered that long life was regarded as an eminent blessing in ancient times; see the notes at Isa 65:22.

Like as a shock of corn cometh in in his season - Margin, "ascendeth."As a sheaf of grain is harvested when it is fully ripe. This is a beautiful comparison, and the meaning is obvious. He would not be cut off before his plans were fully matured; before the fruits of righteousness had ripened in his life. He would be taken away when he was ripe for heaven - as the yellow grain is for the harvest. Grain is not cut down when it is green; and the meaning of Eliphaz is, that it is as desirable that man should live to a good old age before he is gathered to his fathers, as it is that grain should be suffered to stand until it is fully ripe.

Barnes: Job 5:27 - -- Lo this - All this that I have said; the truth of all the remarks which I have made. We have searched it - We have by careful observation...

Lo this - All this that I have said; the truth of all the remarks which I have made.

We have searched it - We have by careful observation of the course of events come to these conclusions. These are our views of the providence of God, and of the principles of his government, as far as we have had the opportunity of observing, and they are well worthy of your attention. The sentiments in these two chapters indicate close and accurate observation; and if we think that the observation was not always wholly accurate, or that the principles were carried further than facts would warrant, or that Eliphaz applied them with somewhat undue severity to the case of Job, we are to remember that this was in the infancy of the world, that they had few historical records, and that they had no written revelation. If they were favored with occasional revelations, as Eliphaz claimed (Job 4:12 ff), yet they were few in number, and at distant intervals, and the divine communications pertained to but few points.

Though it may without impropriety be maintained that some of the views of Eliphaz and his friends were not wholly accurate, yet we may safely ask, Where among the Greek and Roman sages can views of the divine government be found that equal these in correctness, or that are expressed with equal force and beauty? For profound and accurate observation, for beauty of thought and sublimity of expression, the sage of Teman will not fall behind the sages of Athens; and not the least interesting thing in the contemplation of the book of Job, is the comparison which we are almost of necessity compelled to make between the observations on the course of events which were made in Arabia, and those which were made by the philosophers of the ancient pagan world. Is it improper to suppose that one design of this book was to show how far the human mind could go, with the aid of occasional revelations on a few points, in ascertaining the principles of the divine administration, and to demonstrate that, after all, the mind needed a fuller revelation to enable man to comprehend the truths pertaining to the kingdom of God? "Hear it for thy good."Margin, as in Hebrew "thyself."These principles are such that they are of importance for you to understand and to apply.

Poole: Job 5:25 - -- Thou shalt know partly by assurance from God’ s promises, and the impressions of his Spirit; and partly by experience in due time. Thy seed sha...

Thou shalt know partly by assurance from God’ s promises, and the impressions of his Spirit; and partly by experience in due time.

Thy seed shall be great thy posterity, which God will give thee instead of those which thou hast lost, shall be high, and honourable, and powerful. Or, shall be many.

Thine offspring which shall come out of thy own loins as branches out of a tree, as the word signifies. And this word seems added to the former to restrain and explain it, by showing that he did not speak of his spiritual seed, as Abraham’ s seed is in part understood, but of the fruit of his own body. As the grass of the earth ; both for its plentiful increase, and for its flourishing greenness.

Poole: Job 5:26 - -- In a full age in a mature and old, but vigorous, age, as the word implies. Thou shalt not be cut off by a hand of violence before thy time, as thy so...

In a full age in a mature and old, but vigorous, age, as the word implies. Thou shalt not be cut off by a hand of violence before thy time, as thy sons and other wicked men have been; but shalt die in a good old age , as did Abraham, Gen 25:8 , and Moses, Deu 34:7 .

As a shock of corn cometh in as a heap or stack of corn is brought in , to wit, to the barn. Heb. ascendeth , or riseth ; which word is very proper and usual in this case; for a stack of corn is said to rise, when by the addition of new heaps and handfuls it is raised to a higher pitch. Or, is cut off , as this same word is used, Psa 102:24 . Cut me not off , &c., Heb. Make me not to ascend ; and thus it is fitly used both of the corn, which when it is cut up ascends, or is lifted up from the earth, on which it lay, and is advanced into stacks and high heaps, either in the barn or in the field; and of man, who when he dies his spirit goeth upward to heaven, as is implied even there where in the person of an epicure it is questioned, Ecc 3:21 .

In his season in harvest, when the corn is ripe.

Poole: Job 5:27 - -- It is not my single opinion, but my brethren concur with me, as thou wilt hear from their own mouths. This is no rash or hasty conceit, but what we ...

It is not my single opinion, but my brethren concur with me, as thou wilt hear from their own mouths. This is no rash or hasty conceit, but what we have learned by deep consideration and hard study, long experience and diligent observation, both of God’ s word, so far as he hath been pleased to reveal himself, and of the course and methods of his providence and dealing with men in the world.

Know thou it for to us thou seemest by thy words and carriage to be wholly, or in a great part, ignorant of these things. For thy good ; let the advantage which will come unto thee by following this counsel remove thy prejudice against it.

Haydock: Job 5:26 - -- Abundance. "With loud lamentations." (De Dieu) --- "In full age, like as a shock of corn cometh in its season." (Protestants) --- After a life s...

Abundance. "With loud lamentations." (De Dieu) ---

"In full age, like as a shock of corn cometh in its season." (Protestants) ---

After a life spent in happiness, thy memory will not be obliterated. Many shall bewail thy loss. (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 5:27 - -- Which thou. Septuagint, "And what we have heard: but do thou reflect with thyself what thou hast done." (Haydock) --- What had been revealed to El...

Which thou. Septuagint, "And what we have heard: but do thou reflect with thyself what thou hast done." (Haydock) ---

What had been revealed to Eliphaz was very true. Yet his conclusions were unwarrantable. (Calmet) ---

How confidently does he speak of his own knowledge, and how great must have been his disappointment, when God condemned him of folly, and sent him to be the prayers of that very man whom he now considered as a wretched sinner! (Haydock)

Gill: Job 5:25 - -- Thou shalt know also that thy seed shall be great,.... Not his seed sown in the earth, and the increase of that, but his children, as the next clause...

Thou shalt know also that thy seed shall be great,.... Not his seed sown in the earth, and the increase of that, but his children, as the next clause explains it, as Bar Tzemach well observes; and designs either their greatness in worldly things, in wealth and riches, in honour and dignity, in power and authority, or else their numbers; for the word may be rendered "much" or "many" n, a multitude of children being reckoned a great temporal blessing; but this seems rather intended in the following words:

and thine offspring as the grass of the earth; as numerous as the spires of grass, which can no more be told than the stars of the heavens, or the sand of the sea, by which the same thing, a numerous progeny, is sometimes illustrated: this is to be understood not of his immediate offspring, but his descendants in successive ages and generations, and which should be as beautiful as the grass of the earth when in its verdure; pointing at the comeliness of their persons, their honour and dignity raised unto, the largeness of their substance, the greatness of their prosperity, and flourishing circumstances they should be in; though it may also denote the original of them, amidst all, being of the earth and earthy, and their frailty and fading condition; for which reason all flesh is said to be as grass, and men are frequently compared unto it, see Psa 90:5.

Gill: Job 5:26 - -- Thou shalt come to thy grave in a full age,.... Or, "go into thy grave" o, which is represented as a house to enter into and dwell in; and so the wis...

Thou shalt come to thy grave in a full age,.... Or, "go into thy grave" o, which is represented as a house to enter into and dwell in; and so the wise man calls it man's long home, and Job his house, and which is appointed for all living, Ecc 12:5; for all men must die, and so come to the grave, good men as well as bad, the righteous and the wicked: this is not to be understood literally, for the dead cannot go or come to their graves, but are carried thither, as Stephen was, and all are; but it denotes their willingness to die, who choose to be absent from the body, that they may be present with the Lord, and are desirous to depart this world, and be with him, as the Apostle Paul was; and therefore cheerfully give up the ghost, and resign their souls into the hands of Christ, desiring him to receive them; and rejoice when they observe the grave is near, and ready for them; while others have their souls demanded and required of them, and are forced to death and the grave against their wills, and are driven away in their wickedness: now this, with respect to good men, is said to be "in a full age", not "in abundance", as the Vulgate Latin version, in an abundance or fulness of wealth and honour, and with great pomp and splendour, which is not the case of all good men, but of very few; nor in the full time which God has determined and appointed men should live, which may be called "the fulness of time"; for in this every man comes to the grave, good and bad, young and old; no man dies before or lives beyond it, see Job 14:5 but in the full age of men or the common term of man's life; the highest which he usually attains unto, which is threescore years and ten, and at most fourscore, Psa 90:10; and such who die before this are said to die before their time, the usual term of life; who die before the midst of this, are said not to live out half their days, Ecc 7:17; but he that arrives to this dies in a good old age, and has filled up his days, which men, at most, ordinarily live: Mr. Broughton renders it, "in lusty old age", enjoying great health, strength, and vigour; and so Nachmanides takes the word to be compounded of כ, "as", and לח, "moist", lively, strong, and lusty; as if the sense was, that Job should die indeed in old age, but, when old, be as hearty as a young man in his full strength, and whose bones are moistened with marrow; as was the case of Moses, whose eyes were not dim, nor his natural force or radical moisture abated, Deu 34:7; but the word denotes extreme decrepit old age p, coming from the root in the Arabic language, which signifies to be of an austere, rugged, wrinkled, contracted countenance q, which is usually the case of old men: now this is to be understood, not as if every good than arrives to such an age, or that none but good men do; for certain it is, that some good persons, as Abijah, die in their youth, and many wicked men live to a great age, see Ecc 7:15; but Eliphaz here speaks suitably to the legal dispensation under which he was, in which temporal blessings were promised to good men, as shadows of spiritual things, and this of long life was a principal one, see Psa 91:16; this is illustrated by the following simile:

like as a shock of corn cometh in in his season; there is a very great resemblance between ripe corn and old age; corn, when it is in its full ear, and ripe, its ears will hang down; the stalks, being dry and withered, are weak, and not able to bear the weight of them; so old men stoop, their knees bend, the strong men bow themselves, being unable to bear the weight of the body; fields of corn, ripe for the harvest, look white, and so the hairs of a man's head in old age; the almond tree flourishes, which, when in full bloom, is a lively emblem of the hoary head: and there is a great likeness between ripe corn, and shocks and sheaves of it, and a good old man; a good man is comparable to a corn of wheat that falls into the ground, to which Christ compares himself, Joh 12:24; and to wheat the compares his saints, Mat 13:30; for their choiceness, excellency, purity, and solidity; and these, like a corn of wheat, grow up gradually in grace, in spiritual light, knowledge, faith, and experience, and at length come to maturity; the good work is performed and perfected in them, and they come to the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ; and then they are cut down with the scythe or sickle of death, which is the proper time, like corn "in his season"; which, if cut before it is ripe, would not be fit for use, and, if it stood longer, would shed and come to nothing: and then, as corn, when cut down and reaped, is put up in shocks and sheaves, which are lifted up from the earth, and made to "ascend", as the word r signifies, and are laid in carts and wagons, and carried home with expressions of joy, (hence we read of the joy of harvest,) and are laid up in the barn or granary; so the saints are carried by angels, the reapers, into Abraham's bosom, as Lazarus was, into heaven, and as all the elect will be gathered by the angels at the harvest, the end of the world; attended with their shouts and acclamations, and with expressions of joy from Gospel ministers, who now go forth bearing the precious seed of the word, and sow it in tears, but then shall return with joy, bringing their sheaves with them, see Mat 13:30.

Gill: Job 5:27 - -- Lo this, we have searched it,.... This is the concluding part of Eliphaz's first oration or speech to Job; and in order to engage his attention to it,...

Lo this, we have searched it,.... This is the concluding part of Eliphaz's first oration or speech to Job; and in order to engage his attention to it, observes, that what he had said was not his own single opinion, but the sentiment of the rest of his friends; and that it was the result of laborious and diligent investigation; that they had searched the records of former times, and inquired of ancient people, as well as had made the strictest observations on things during their course of life;

so it is; and the sum and amount of all was what he had declared, and which they had found to be sure and certain, the truth of the matter; that it is an undoubted truth, which should not be disputed and called in question, but to be held as a first principle, which was this; that wicked men are punished for their sins, and that good men are never greatly afflicted, at least not to such a degree as to be stripped of all the necessaries of life, and to be in a most desolate and perishing condition; and since this had been so thoroughly investigated by them, and such "a probatum est" was written upon it, he exhorts Job to

hear it; agree to it, believe it, receive it, and make a proper use of it, as he hoped he would:

and know thou it for thy good; or "for thyself" s; take it to thyself, as belonging to thee, as suitable to thy case; apply it to thyself, learn some lessons from it, and make good use of it; which is what is proposed by all that has been said.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 5:25 The word means “your shoots” and is parallel to “your seed” in the first colon. It refers here (as in Isa 34:1 and 42:5) to th...

NET Notes: Job 5:26 The word translated “in a full age” has been given an array of meanings: “health; integrity”; “like a new blade of corn&...

NET Notes: Job 5:27 With this the speech by Eliphaz comes to a close. His two mistakes with it are: (1) that the tone was too cold and (2) the argument did not fit Job...

Geneva Bible: Job 5:26 Thou shalt come to [thy] grave in ( y ) a full age, like as a shock of corn cometh in his season. ( y ) Though the children of God have not always ca...

Geneva Bible: Job 5:27 Lo ( z ) this, we have searched it, so it [is]; hear it, and know thou [it] for thy good. ( z ) We have learned these points by experience, that God ...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Job 5:1-27 - --1 Eliphaz shews that the end of the wicked is misery;6 that man is born to trouble;8 that God is to be regarded in affliction;17 the happy end of God'...

Maclaren: Job 5:7-27 - --The Peaceable Fruits Of Sorrows Rightly Borne Behold, happy is the man whom God correcteth: therefore despise not then the chastening of the Almighty...

MHCC: Job 5:17-27 - --Eliphaz gives to Job a word of caution and exhortation: Despise not thou the chastening of the Almighty. Call it a chastening, which comes from the Fa...

Matthew Henry: Job 5:17-27 - -- Eliphaz, in this concluding paragraph of his discourse, gives Job (what he himself knew not how to take) a comfortable prospect of the issue of his ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 5:22-27 - -- 22 At destruction and famine thou shalt laugh, And from the beasts of the earth thou hast nothing to fear. 23 For thou art in league with the ston...

Constable: Job 4:1--14:22 - --B. The First Cycle of Speeches between Job and His Three Friends chs. 4-14 The two soliloquies of Job (c...

Constable: Job 4:1--5:27 - --1. Eliphaz's first speech chs. 4-5 Eliphaz's first speech has a symmetrical introverted (chiasti...

Constable: Job 5:17-27 - --Eliphaz's reminder of God's blessings 5:17-27 Eliphaz concluded his speech by urging Job...

Guzik: Job 5:1-27 - --Job 4 and 5 - The First Speech of Eliphaz 4. (5:1-7) The fate of the foolish man. "Call out now; Is there anyone who will answer you? And ...

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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 5 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Job 5:1, Eliphaz shews that the end of the wicked is misery; Job 5:6, that man is born to trouble; Job 5:8, that God is to be regarded in...

Poole: Job 5 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 5 Wrath foolish: the wicked miserable, Job 5:1-5 . Evil cometh not by chance; it is natural to our condition, Job 5:6,7 . This is our motiv...

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 5 (Chapter Introduction) (Job 5:1-5) Eliphaz urges that the sin of sinners in their ruin. (Job 5:6-16) God is to be regarded in affliction. (Job 5:17-27) The happy end of Go...

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 5 (Chapter Introduction) Eliphaz, in the foregoing chapter, for the making good of his charge against Job, had vouched a word from heaven, sent him in a vision. In this cha...

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 5 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JOB 5 In this chapter Eliphaz goes on to prove, and further confirm and establish, what he had before asserted, that not good men, ...

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