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Text -- Job 7:1-4 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
The Brevity of Life
7:1 “Does not humanity have hard service on earth? Are not their days also like the days of a hired man? 7:2 Like a servant longing for the evening shadow, and like a hired man looking for his wages, 7:3 thus I have been made to inherit months of futility, and nights of sorrow have been appointed to me. 7:4 If I lie down, I say, ‘When will I arise?’, and the night stretches on and I toss and turn restlessly until the day dawns.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Servant | NEPHTHALIM | Life | Job | JOB, BOOK OF | HIRELING | Employee | Death | DAY AND NIGHT | DAWN; DAWNING | Complaint | Afflictions and Adversities | 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 , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Job 7:1 - -- Job is here excusing what he cannot justify, his passionate longing for death.

Job is here excusing what he cannot justify, his passionate longing for death.

Wesley: Job 7:1 - -- Is there not a time limited by God, wherein man shall live in this sinful, and miserable world? And is it a crime in me, to desire that God would brin...

Is there not a time limited by God, wherein man shall live in this sinful, and miserable world? And is it a crime in me, to desire that God would bring me to that joyful period? Our time on earth is limited and short, according to the narrow bounds of this earth. But heaven cannot be measured, nor the days of heaven numbered.

Wesley: Job 7:1 - -- Whose time is short, being but a few years, or days, whose condition is full of toil and hardship.

Whose time is short, being but a few years, or days, whose condition is full of toil and hardship.

Wesley: Job 7:2 - -- That is, the sun - set, the time allotted for his rest.

That is, the sun - set, the time allotted for his rest.

Wesley: Job 7:3 - -- This so respects not so much the desire of an hired servant, as the ground of it, his hard toil and service.

This so respects not so much the desire of an hired servant, as the ground of it, his hard toil and service.

Wesley: Job 7:3 - -- God, hath given me this as my lot and inheritance.

God, hath given me this as my lot and inheritance.

Wesley: Job 7:3 - -- So he calls them rather than days, to note the tediousness of his affliction.

So he calls them rather than days, to note the tediousness of his affliction.

Wesley: Job 7:3 - -- Empty and unsatisfying.

Empty and unsatisfying.

Wesley: Job 7:3 - -- He mentions nights, because that is the saddest time for sick and miserable persons; the darkness and solitude of the night being of themselves uncomf...

He mentions nights, because that is the saddest time for sick and miserable persons; the darkness and solitude of the night being of themselves uncomfortable, and giving them more opportunity for solemn and sorrowful reflections.

JFB: Job 7:1 - -- Better, "a warfare," hard conflict with evil (so in Isa 40:2; Dan 10:1). Translate it "appointed time" (Job 14:14). Job reverts to the sad picture of ...

Better, "a warfare," hard conflict with evil (so in Isa 40:2; Dan 10:1). Translate it "appointed time" (Job 14:14). Job reverts to the sad picture of man, however great, which he had drawn (Job 3:14), and details in this chapter the miseries which his friends will see, if, according to his request (Job 6:28), they will look on him. Even the Christian soldier, "warring a good warfare," rejoices when it is completed (1Ti 1:18; 2Ti 2:3; 2Ti 4:7-8).

JFB: Job 7:2 - -- Hebrew, "pants for the [evening] shadow." Easterners measure time by the length of their shadow. If the servant longs for the evening when his wages a...

Hebrew, "pants for the [evening] shadow." Easterners measure time by the length of their shadow. If the servant longs for the evening when his wages are paid, why may not Job long for the close of his hard service, when he shall enter on his "reward?" This proves that Job did not, as many maintain, regard the grave as a mere sleep.

JFB: Job 7:3 - -- Months of comfortless misfortune.

Months of comfortless misfortune.

JFB: Job 7:3 - -- Literally, "to be heir to." Irony. "To be heir to," is usually a matter of joy; but here it is the entail of an involuntary and dismal inheritance.

Literally, "to be heir to." Irony. "To be heir to," is usually a matter of joy; but here it is the entail of an involuntary and dismal inheritance.

JFB: Job 7:3 - -- For days, to express its long duration.

For days, to express its long duration.

JFB: Job 7:3 - -- Literally, "they have numbered to me"; marking well the unavoidable doom assigned to him.

Literally, "they have numbered to me"; marking well the unavoidable doom assigned to him.

JFB: Job 7:4 - -- Literally, "When shall be the flight of the night?" [GESENIUS]. UMBREIT, not so well, "The night is long extended"; literally, "measured out" (so Marg...

Literally, "When shall be the flight of the night?" [GESENIUS]. UMBREIT, not so well, "The night is long extended"; literally, "measured out" (so Margin).

Clarke: Job 7:1 - -- Is there not an appointed time to man - The Hebrew, with its literal rendering, is as follows: הלא צבא לאנוש עלי ארץ halo tsaba le...

Is there not an appointed time to man - The Hebrew, with its literal rendering, is as follows: הלא צבא לאנוש עלי ארץ halo tsaba leenosh aley arets , "Is there not a warfare to miserable man upon the earth?"And thus most of the versions have understood the words. The Septuagint: Ποτερον ουχι πειρατηριον εστι ὁ βιος ανθρωπου επι της γης ; "Is not the life of man a place of trial upon earth?"The Vulgate: Militia est vita hominis super terram , "The life of man is a warfare upon earth?"The Chaldee is the same. N’ y a-t-il pas comme un train de guerre ordonne aux mortels sur la terre? "Is there not a continual campaign ordained for mortals upon the earth?"French Bible. The German and Dutch the same. Coverdale: Is not the life off man upon earth a very batayle? Carmarden, Rouen, 1566: Hath man any certayne tyme upon earth? Syriac and Arabic: "Now, man has time upon the earth." Non e egli il tempo determinato a l’ huomo sopra la terra ?""Is there not a determined time to man upon the earth?"Bib. Ital., 1562. All these are nearer to the true sense than ours; and of a bad translation, worse use has been made by many theologians. I believe the simple sentiment which the writer wished to convey is this: Human life is a state of probation; and every day and place is a time and place of exercise, to train us up for eternal life. Here is the exercise, and here the warfare: we are enlisted in the bands of the Church militant, and must accomplish our time of service, and be honorably dismissed from the warfare, having conquered through the blood of the Lamb; and then receive the reward of the heavenly inheritance.

Clarke: Job 7:2 - -- Earnestly desireth the shadow - As a man who labors hard in the heat of the day earnestly desires to get under a shade, or wishes for the long eveni...

Earnestly desireth the shadow - As a man who labors hard in the heat of the day earnestly desires to get under a shade, or wishes for the long evening shadows, that he may rest from his labor, get his day’ s wages, retire to his food, and then go to rest. Night is probably what is meant by the shadow; as in Virgil, Aen. iv., ver. 7

Humentemque Aurora polo dimoverat Umbram

"The morning had removed the humid shadow, i.e., night, from the world.

Where Servius justly observes

Nihil interest, utrum Umbram an Noctem dicat: Nox enim Umbra terrae est

"It makes no difference whether he says shadow or night; for night is the shadow of the earth."

Clarke: Job 7:3 - -- So am I made to possess - But night is no relief to me, it is only a continuance of my anxiety and labor. I am like the hireling, I have my appointe...

So am I made to possess - But night is no relief to me, it is only a continuance of my anxiety and labor. I am like the hireling, I have my appointed labor for the day. I am like the soldier harassed by the enemy: I am obliged to be continually on the watch, always on the look out, with scarcely any rest.

Clarke: Job 7:4 - -- When I lie down - I have so little rest, that when I do lie down I long for the return of the light, that I may rise. Nothing can better depict the ...

When I lie down - I have so little rest, that when I do lie down I long for the return of the light, that I may rise. Nothing can better depict the state of a man under continual afflictions, which afford him no respite, his days and his nights being spent in constant anguish, utterly unable to be in any one posture, so that he is continually changing his position in his bed, finding ease nowhere: thus, as himself expresses it, he is full of tossings.

TSK: Job 7:1 - -- Is there : Job 14:5, Job 14:13, Job 14:14; Psa 39:4; Isa 38:5; Joh 11:9, Joh 11:10 an appointed time : or, a warfare, Ecc 8:8 like the days : Job 14:6...

Is there : Job 14:5, Job 14:13, Job 14:14; Psa 39:4; Isa 38:5; Joh 11:9, Joh 11:10

an appointed time : or, a warfare, Ecc 8:8

like the days : Job 14:6; Lev 25:50; Deu 15:18; Isa 21:16; Mat 20:1-15

TSK: Job 7:2 - -- earnestly desireth : Heb. gapeth after, Psa 119:131, Psa 143:6 the shadow : Jer 6:4 as an hireling : Lev 19:13; Deu 24:15; Mal 3:5; Jam 5:4

earnestly desireth : Heb. gapeth after, Psa 119:131, Psa 143:6

the shadow : Jer 6:4

as an hireling : Lev 19:13; Deu 24:15; Mal 3:5; Jam 5:4

TSK: Job 7:3 - -- months of : Job 29:2; Psa 6:6, Psa 39:5; Ecc 1:14

TSK: Job 7:4 - -- When : Job 7:13, Job 7:14, Job 17:12, Job 30:17; Deu 28:67; Psa 6:6, Psa 77:4, Psa 130:6 night : etc. Heb. evening be measured tossings : Psa 109:23; ...

When : Job 7:13, Job 7:14, Job 17:12, Job 30:17; Deu 28:67; Psa 6:6, Psa 77:4, Psa 130:6

night : etc. Heb. evening be measured

tossings : Psa 109:23; Isa 54:11

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Job 7:1 - -- Is there not an appointed time to man upon earth? - Margin, or, warfare. The word used here צבא tsâbâ' means properly a host, an ...

Is there not an appointed time to man upon earth? - Margin, or, warfare. The word used here צבא tsâbâ' means properly a host, an army, see the notes, Isa 1:9; then it means warfare, or the hard service of a soldier; notes, Isa 40:2. Here it means that man on the earth was enlisted, so to speak, for a certain time. He had a certain and definite hard service to perform, and which he must continue to discharge until he was relieved by death. It was a service of hazard, like the life of a soldier, or of toil, like that of one who had been hired for a certain time, and who anxiously looked for the period of his release. The object of Job in introducing this remark evidently is, to vindicate himself for the wish to die which he had expressed. He maintains that it is as natural and proper for man in his circumstances to wish to be released by death, as for a soldier to desire that his term of service might be accomplished, or a weary servant to long for the shades of the evening. The Septuagint renders it, "Is not the life of man upon the earth peirateerion "- explained by Schleusner and rendered by Good, as meaning a band of pirates. The Vulgate renders it, militia - miltary service. The sense is, that the life of man was like the hard service of a soldier; and this is one of the points of justification to which Job referred in Job 6:29-30. He maintains that it is not improper to desire that such a service should close.

The days of an hireling - A man who has been hired to perform some service with a promise of a reward, and who is not unnaturally impatient to receive it. Job maintained that such was the life of man. He was looking forward to a reward, and it was not unnatural or improper to desire that that reward should be given to him.

Barnes: Job 7:2 - -- As a servant earnestly desireth - Margin, gapeth after. The word here שׁאף shâ'aph means to breathe hard, to pant, to blow, and the...

As a servant earnestly desireth - Margin, gapeth after. The word here שׁאף shâ'aph means to breathe hard, to pant, to blow, and then to desire earnestly.

The shadow - This may refer either to a shade in the intense heat of the day, or to the night. Nothing is more grateful in oriental countries, when the sun pours down intensely on burning sands, than the shadow of a tree, or the shade of a projecting rock. The editor of the Pictorial Bible on this verse remarks, "We think we can say, that next to water, the greatest and deepest enjoyment we could ever realize in the hot climates of the East was, when on a journey, any circumstance of the road brought us for a few minutes under some shade. Its reviving influence upon the bodily frame, and consequently upon the spirits, is inconceivable by one who has not had some experience of the kind. Often also during the hall of a caravan in the open air, when the writer has been enabled to secure a station for repose under the shelter of a rock or of an old wall, has his own exultation and strong sense of luxurious enjoyment reminded him of this and other passages of Scripture, in which shade is mentioned as a thing punted for with intense desire."Probably here, however, the reference is to the shades of night, the time when darkness falls upon the earth, and the servant is released from his toil. It is common in all languages to speak of night as enveloped with shadows. Thus, Virgil, En. iv. 7:

Humentemque aurora polo dimoverat urnbram .

The meaning of Job is, that as a servant looked impatiently for the shades of the evening when he would be dismissed from toil, so he longed for death.

And as an hireling looketh - That is, he anxiously desires his work to be finished, and expects the reward of his labors. So Job looked to the reward of a life of toil and piety. Is there not here an undoubted reference to a future state? Is it not manifest that Job looked to some recompense in the future world, as real and as sure, as a hired servant looks for the reward of his toils when his work is done?

Barnes: Job 7:3 - -- So am I made to possess - Hebrew I am made to inherit. The meaning is, that such sad and melancholy seasons now were his only portion. Mon...

So am I made to possess - Hebrew I am made to inherit. The meaning is, that such sad and melancholy seasons now were his only portion.

Months of vanity - That is, months which were destitute of comfort; in other words, months of affliction. How long his trials had continued before this, we have no means of ascertaining. There is no reason, however, to suppose that his bodily sufferings came upon him all at once, or that they had not continued for a considerable period. It is quite probable that his expressions of impatience were the result not only of the intensity, but the continuance of his sorrows.

And wearisome nights are appointed to me - Even his rest was disturbed. The time when care is usually forgotten and toil ceases, was to him a period of sleepless anxiety and distress - עמל ‛âmâl . The Septuagint renders it, nights of pangs ( νύκτες ὀδυνῶν nuktes odunōn ), expressing accurately the sense of the Hebrew. The Hebrew word עמל ‛âmâl is commonly applied to intense sorrow, to trouble and pain of the severest kind, such as the pains of parturition; see the notes at Isa 53:11.

Barnes: Job 7:4 - -- When I lie down - I find no comfort and no rest on my bed. My nights are long, and I am impatient to have them passed, and equally so is it wit...

When I lie down - I find no comfort and no rest on my bed. My nights are long, and I am impatient to have them passed, and equally so is it with the day. This is a description which all can understand who have been laid on a bed of pain.

And the night be gone - Margin, evening be measured. Herder renders this, "the night is irksome to me."The word rendered night ( ערב ‛ereb ) properly means the early part of the night, until it is succeeded by the dawn. Thus, in Gen 1:5,"And the evening ( ערב ‛ereb ) and the morning were the first day."Here it means the portion of the night which is before the dawning of the aurora - the night. The word rendered "be gone"and in the margin "be measured"( מדּד mı̂ddad ), has been variously rendered. The verb מדד mâdad means to stretch, to extend, to measure; and, according to Gesenius, the form of the word used here is a noun meaning flight, and the sense is, "when shall be the flight of the night?"He derives it from נדד nâdad to move, to flee, to flee away. So Rosenmuller explains it. The expression is poetic, meaning, when shall the night be gone?

I am full of tossings to and fro - ( נדדים nâdûdı̂ym ). A word from the same root. It means uneasy motions, restlessness. He found no quiet repose on his bed.

Unto the dawning - נשׁף nesheph , from נשׁף nâshaph , to breathe; hence, the evening twilight because the breezes blow, or seem to breathe, and then it means also the morning twilight, the dawn. Dr. Stock renders it, "until the morning breeze."

Poole: Job 7:1 - -- Like the days of an hireling whose time is limited and short, being but for a few years, Isa 16:14 21:16 , and sometimes but for days, Job 14:6 Mat 2...

Like the days of an hireling whose time is limited and short, being but for a few years, Isa 16:14 21:16 , and sometimes but for days, Job 14:6 Mat 20:1,2 , and whose condition is full of toil and hardship.

Poole: Job 7:2 - -- The shadow i.e. the sun-set, or the night, the time allotted for his rest and repose, Psa 104:23 . And why may not I also desire the time of my rest?...

The shadow i.e. the sun-set, or the night, the time allotted for his rest and repose, Psa 104:23 . And why may not I also desire the time of my rest?

The reward of his work Heb. his work ; which is oft put for the reward of it, as Lev 19:13 Isa 40:10 49:4 . Or, the end of his work.

Poole: Job 7:3 - -- This so respects not so much the desire and expectation of a hired servant, which is expressed Job 7:2 , as the ground and reason of it, which is pl...

This so respects not so much the desire and expectation of a hired servant, which is expressed Job 7:2 , as the ground and reason of it, which is plainly implied there, to wit, his hard toil and service, which makes him thirst after rest.

I am made to possess God, by his sovereign power and providence, hath given me this as my lot and inheritance. Months ; so he calls them rather than days, to note either the irksomeness and tediousness of his affliction, whereby every day seemed a month to him; or their length and continuance, which, as some infer from hence, had now been upon him some months.

Of vanity empty and unsatisfying, or false and deceitful, not giving me that ease and rest which they promised me, and I expected.

Wearisome nights: he mentions nights, because that is the saddest time for sick and miserable persons; the darkness and solitude of the night being of themselves uncomfortable, and giving them more opportunity for solemn and sorrowful thoughts and reflections upon their own miseries.

Poole: Job 7:4 - -- When I lie down to get some rest and sleep. The night , Heb. the evening ; the part put for the whole, as it is Gen 1:5 . To and fro from side to...

When I lie down to get some rest and sleep. The night , Heb. the evening ; the part put for the whole, as it is Gen 1:5 .

To and fro from side to side in the bed, as men in grievous pains of body or anxiety of mind use to be.

Unto the dawning of the day so this Hebrew word is used also 1Sa 30:17 ; Psa 119:147.

Haydock: Job 7:1 - -- Warfare. Hebrew, "is it not determined" (Haydock) for some short space, as the Levites had to serve from 30 to 50 years of age; (Numbers iv. 3., and...

Warfare. Hebrew, "is it not determined" (Haydock) for some short space, as the Levites had to serve from 30 to 50 years of age; (Numbers iv. 3., and viii. 25.) and the days of a hireling are also defined and short, Isaias xvi. 14. (Amama) ---

No soldier or hireling was ever treated so severely as Job. Yet they justly look for the term of their labours. Septuagint have Greek: peiraterion. Old Vulgate tentatio. "Is not the life of man a temptation?" (Calmet) ---

Palæstra, school, or time given to learn the exercise of a soldier and wrestler; or of one who has to prepare himself for a spiritual warfare, and for heaven. (Haydock) ---

Are we not surrounded with dangers? and may we not desire to be set at liberty? The Vulgate is very accurate, (Calmet) and includes all these senses. (Haydock) ---

A soldier must be obedient even unto death, and never resist his superior. (Worthington) ---

Hireling, who has no rest till the day is spent. (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 7:3 - -- And have. Hebrew, "they have appointed for me." (Calmet) --- God treats me with more severity, as even the night is not a time of rest for me, and...

And have. Hebrew, "they have appointed for me." (Calmet) ---

God treats me with more severity, as even the night is not a time of rest for me, and my months of service are without any present recompense. (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 7:4 - -- And again. Hebrew, "and the night be completed, I toss to and fro," (Haydock) or "I am disturbed with dreams, (Calmet) till day break." Vulgate ins...

And again. Hebrew, "and the night be completed, I toss to and fro," (Haydock) or "I am disturbed with dreams, (Calmet) till day break." Vulgate insinuates that night and day are equally restless to a man in extreme pain. (Haydock) ---

As I find no comfort, why may I not desire to die? (Menochius) ---

I desire to be dissolved, as being much better, said St. Paul. [Philippians i. 23.]

Gill: Job 7:1 - -- Is there not an appointed time to man upon earth?.... There is a set time for his coming into the world, for his continuance in it, and for his going...

Is there not an appointed time to man upon earth?.... There is a set time for his coming into the world, for his continuance in it, and for his going out of it; this is to man "on earth", with respect to his being and abode here, not in the other world or future state: not in heaven; there is no certain limited time for man there, but an eternity; the life he will enter into is everlasting; the habitation, mansion, and house he will dwell in, are eternal; saints will be for ever with Christ, in whose presence are pleasures for evermore: nor in hell; the punishment there will be eternal, the fire will be unquenchable and everlasting, the smoke of the torments of the damned will ascend for ever and ever; but men's days and time on earth are but as a shadow, and soon gone; they are of the earth, earthly, and return unto it at a fixed appointed time, time, the bounds of which cannot be passed over: this is true of mankind in general, and of Job in particular; see Job 14:1; the word "Enosh" i, here used, signifies, as is commonly observed, a frail, feeble, mortal man; Mr. Broughton renders it "sorrowful man"; as every man more or less is; even a man of sorrows, and acquainted with griefs, is attended with them, has an experience of them: this is the common lot of mankind; and if anything more than ordinary is inflicted upon them, they are not able to bear it; and these sorrows death at the appointed time puts an end to, which makes it desirable; now, seeing there is a set time for every man's life on earth, and there was for Job's, of which he was well assured; and, by all appearance of things, and by the symptoms upon him, this time was near at hand; therefore it should not be thought a criminal thing in him, considering his extraordinary afflictions, and which were intolerable, that he should so earnestly wish the time was come; though in his more serious thoughts he determined to wait for it: some render the words, "is there not a warfare are for men on earth?" k the word being so rendered elsewhere, particularly in Isa 40:2; every man's state on earth is a state of warfare; this is frequently said by the stoic philosophers l; even so is that of natural and unregenerate men, who are often engaged in war with one another, which arise from the lusts which war in their members; and especially with the people of God, the seed of the woman, between whom and the seed of the serpent there has been an enmity from the beginning; and with themselves, with the troubles of life, diseases of body, and various afflictions they have to conflict and grapple with: and more especially the life of good men here is a state of warfare, not only of the ministers of the word, or persons in public office, but of private believers; who are good soldiers of Christ, enter volunteers into his service, fight under his banners, and themselves like men; these have many enemies to combat with; some within, the corruptions of hearts, which war against the spirit and law of their minds, which form a company of two armies in militating against each other; and others without, as Satan and his principalities and powers, the men the world, false teachers, and the like: and these are properly accoutred for such service, having the whole armour of God provided for them; and have great encouragement to behave manfully, since they may be sure of victory, and of having the crown of righteousness, when they have fought the good fight of even though they are but frail, feeble, mortal, sinful men, but flesh and blood, and so not of themselves a match for their enemies; but they are more than so through the Lord being on their side, Christ being the Captain of their salvation, and the Spirit of God being in them greater than he that is in the world; and besides, it is only on earth this warfare is, and will soon be accomplished, the last enemy being death that shall be destroyed: now this being the common case of man, to be annoyed with enemies, and always at war with them, if, besides this, uncommon afflictions befall him, as was Job's case, this must make life burdensome, and death, which is a deliverance from them, desirable; this is his argument: some choose to render the words, "is there not a servile condition for men on earth" m the word being used of the ministry and service of the Levites, Num 4:3; all men by creation are or ought to be the servants of God; good men are so by the grace of God, and willingly and cheerfully serve him; and though the great work of salvation is wrought out by Christ for them, and the work of grace is wrought by the Spirit of Christ in them, yet they have work to do in their day and generation in the world, in their families, and in the house of God; and which, though weak and feeble in themselves, they are capable of doing, through Christ, his Spirit, power, and grace: and this is only on earth; in the grave there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge; when the night of death comes, no man can work; his service, especially his toilsome service, is at an end; and as it is natural for servants to wish for the night, when their labours end, Job thought it not unlawful in him to wish for death, which would put an end to his toils and labours, and when he should have rest from them:

are not his days also like the days plan hireling? the time for which a servant is hired, whether it be for a day or for a year, or more, it is a set time; it is fixed, settled, and determined in the agreement, and so are the days of man's life on earth; and the of an hireling are few at most, the time for which he is hired is but and as the days of an hireling are days of toil, and labour, and sorrow, so are the days of men evil as well as few; his few days are full of trouble, Gen 47:9; all this and what follows is spoken to God, and not to his friends, as appears from Job 7:7.

Gill: Job 7:2 - -- As a servant earnestly desireth the shadow,.... Either the shadow of some great rock, tree, or hedge, or any shady place to shelter him from the heat ...

As a servant earnestly desireth the shadow,.... Either the shadow of some great rock, tree, or hedge, or any shady place to shelter him from the heat of the sun in the middle of the day, which in those eastern countries is hot and scorching; and very burdensome and fatiguing it is for servants and labourers to work in fields and vineyards, or in keeping herds and flocks in such countries, and at such a time of the day; to which the allusion is in Son 1:7 Isa 25:4. Wherefore they "gape" for, or "pant" after some shady place for refreshment, as the word n used signifies; or for the shadow of the evening, or the sun setting, when the longest shadow is cast, Jer 6:4; and when the work of a servant is ended, and he retires to his house for refreshment and rest: and since now such a shadow in either sense is desirable, and not unlawful to wish for, Job suggests it ought not to be charged as a crime in him, that he should importunately desire to be in the shadow of death, or in the grave, where the weary are at rest; or to have the night come on him, when he should cease from all his toil and labour, sorrows and pains:

and as an hireling looketh for the reward of his work; or "for his work" o; either for new work, what was set him being done, or rather for the finishing of it, that he might have rest from it; or for the reward, the hire due to him upon its being done; so Job intimates he desired death with the same view, that he might cease from his works, which should follow him, and when he should have the reward of the inheritance, not in a way of debt, but of grace: nor indeed is it sinful to look or have respect unto the recompence of reward, in order to engage to go through service more cheerfully, or to endure sufferings more patiently, see Heb 11:26; for though the hireling is an emblem of a self-righteous person, that works for life, and expects it as the reward of his work, and of false teachers and bad shepherds, that take the care of the flock for filthy lucre's sake, see Luk 15:19; yet hiring is sometimes used, in a good sense, of good men, that are hired and allured by gracious promises and divine encouragements to labour in the Lord's vineyard, and may expect their reward; see Mat 20:1.

Gill: Job 7:3 - -- So am I made to possess months of vanity,.... This is not a reddition or application of the above similes of the servant and hireling, Job 7:1; for th...

So am I made to possess months of vanity,.... This is not a reddition or application of the above similes of the servant and hireling, Job 7:1; for that is to be understood, and to be supplied at the end of Job 7:2; that as those looked for the shadow and payment of hire, so Job looked for and earnestly desired death, or to be removed out of the world; besides, the things here instanced in do not answer; for Job, instead of having the refreshing shadow, had months of vanity, and instead of rest from his labours had nothing but wearisome nights, and continual tossings to and fro; whereas the sleep of a labouring man is sweet to him; and having laboured hard all day, the night is a time of rest to him; but so it was not with Job; wherefore this "so" refers to the common state and condition of mankind, in which Job was, with an addition of extraordinary afflictions upon him: the time of his afflictions, though but short, seemed long, and therefore is expressed by months; and some months might have passed from the time his calamities began to the present; since it must be some time before his friends heard of them, and more still before they could meet together and agree upon their coming, and were actually come to him; as also some time was spent in silence, and now in conversation with him; the Jews p make them to be twelve months: and these months were "months of vanity", or "empty" q ones; such as winter months, empty of all joy, and peace, and comfort; times in which he had no pleasure, no ease of body or of mind; destitute of the good things of life, and of the presence of God and communion with him; and full of trouble, sorrow, and distress: and these were "given him for an inheritance" r; were his lot and portion, which he received as an inheritance from his parents, in consequence of original sin, the source of all the troubles and miseries of human life, in common with other men; and which were allotted him by his heavenly Father, according to his sovereign will and pleasure, as all the afflictions of the Lord's people are the inheritance bequeathed them by their Father, and the legacy of their Redeemer:

and wearisome nights are appointed to me; one after another, in succession; in which he could have no sleep nor rest, through pain of body and distress of mind; and so became the more weary, through long lying down and tossings to and fro, through groans and tears, and much watching; and these were prepared for him in the purposes of God, and appointed to him in his counsels and decrees; see Job 23:14; or they "prepared" or "appointed" s; that is, "Elohim", the three Divine Persons.

Gill: Job 7:4 - -- When I lie down, I say, when shall I arise,.... Or, "then I say", &c. t; that is, as soon as he laid himself down in his bed, and endeavoured to compo...

When I lie down, I say, when shall I arise,.... Or, "then I say", &c. t; that is, as soon as he laid himself down in his bed, and endeavoured to compose himself to sleep, in order to get rest and refreshment; then he said within himself, or with an articulate voice, to those about him, that sat up with him; oh that it was time to rise; when will it be morning, that I may rise from my bed, which is of no manner of service to me, but rather increases weariness?

and the night be gone? and the day dawn and break; or "night" or "evening be measured", as in the margin, or "measures itself" u; or that "he", that is, God, or "it", my heart, "measures the evening" w, or "night"; lengthens it out to its full time: to a discomposed person, that cannot sleep, the night seems long; such count every hour, tell every clock that strikes, and long to see peep of day; these are they that watch for the morning, Psa 130:6,

and I am full of tossings to and fro unto the dawning of the day; or, "unto the twilight"; the morning twilight; though some understand it of the twilight or evening of the next day, see 1Sa 30:17; and interpret "the tossings to and fro" of the toils and labours of the day, and of the sorrows and miseries of it, lengthened out to the eve of the following day; but rather they are to be understood either of the tosses of his mind, his distressed and perplexed thoughts within him he was full of; or of the tosses of his body, his frequent turning himself upon his bed, from side to side, to ease him; and with these he was "filled", or "satiated" x; he had enough and too much of them; he was glutted and sated with them, as a man is with overmuch eating, as the word signifies.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 7:1 The שָׂכִיר (sakhir) is a hired man, either a man who works for wages, or a mercenary soldier (Jer 46:21). T...

NET Notes: Job 7:2 The word פֹּעַל (po’al) means “work.” But here the word should be taken as a metonymy, meaning t...

NET Notes: Job 7:3 The verb is literally “they have appointed”; the form with no expressed subject is to be interpreted as a passive (GKC 460 §144.g). I...

NET Notes: Job 7:4 The Hebrew term נְדֻדִים (nÿdudim, “tossing”) refers to the restless tossing and turn...

Geneva Bible: Job 7:1 [Is there] not an appointed time to man upon earth? [are not] his days also like the days of an ( a ) hireling? ( a ) Has not a hired servant some re...

Geneva Bible: Job 7:3 So am I made to possess ( b ) months of vanity, and wearisome nights are appointed to me. ( b ) My sorrow has continued from month to month, and I ha...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Job 7:1-21 - --1 Job excuses his desire of death.12 He complains of his own restlessness, and expostulates with God.

MHCC: Job 7:1-6 - --Job here excuses what he could not justify, his desire of death. Observe man's present place: he is upon earth. He is yet on earth, not in hell. Is th...

Matthew Henry: Job 7:1-6 - -- Job is here excusing what he could not justify, even his inordinate desire of death. Why should he not wish for the termination of life, which would...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 7:1-3 - -- 1 Has not a man warfare upon earth, And his days are like the days of a hireling? 2 Like a servant who longs for the shade, And like a hireling w...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 7:4-6 - -- 4 If I lie down, I think: When shall I arise and the evening break away? And I become weary with tossing to and fro unto the morning dawn. 5 My f...

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 6:1--7:21 - --2. Job's first reply to Eliphaz chs. 6-7 Job began not with a direct reply to Eliphaz but with a...

Constable: Job 7:1-6 - --Job's miserable suffering 7:1-6 "The rest of Job's speech is more like a soliloquy which...

Guzik: Job 7:1-21 - --Job 7 - In Response to Eliphaz, Job Cries Out to God A. The comfortless suffering of Job. 1. (1-5) The hard service of Job's suffering. "Is t...

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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 7 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Job 7:1, Job excuses his desire of death; Job 7:12, He complains of his own restlessness, and expostulates with God.

Poole: Job 7 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 7 Our times are like those of hirelings, restless and hopeless. Death desirable. His days are as a weaver’ s shuttle; his life is as w...

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 7 (Chapter Introduction) (Job 7:1-6) Job's troubles. (Job 7:7-16) Job expostulates with God. (Job 7:17-21) He begs release.

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 7 (Chapter Introduction) Job, in this chapter, goes on to express the bitter sense he had of his calamities and to justify himself in his desire of death. I. He complains ...

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 7 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JOB 7 In this chapter Job goes on to defend himself in an address to God; as that he had reason to complain of his extraordinary af...

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