Verse 1
Job 3:1. After this Job opened
his mouth — The days of mourning
being now over, and no hopes
appearing of Job’s amendment,
but his afflictions rather
increasing, he bursts into a
severe lamentation; he wishes he
had never existed, or that his
death had immediately followed
his birth; life under such a
load of calamity appearing to
him the greatest affliction.
Undoubtedly Satan, who had been
permitted to bring the
fore-mentioned calamities upon
him, and to torment his body so
dreadfully, had also obtained
liberty to assault his mind with
various and powerful
temptations. This he now does
with the utmost violence,
injecting hard thoughts of God,
as being severe, unjust, and his
enemy; that he might shake his
confidence and hope, and produce
that horror and dismay, which
might issue in his cursing God.
For, as is justly observed by
Mr. Scott, unless we bring these
inward trials into the account,
during which we may conclude
that he was deprived of all
comfortable sense of God’s
favour, and filled with a dread
of his wrath, we shall not
readily apprehend the reason of
the change that took place in
his conduct, from the entire
resignation manifested in the
preceding chapters, to the
impatience which appears here,
and in some of the subsequent
parts of this book. But this
consideration solves the
difficulty: the inward conflict
and anguish of his mind, added
to all his outward sufferings,
caused the remaining corruption
of his nature to work so
powerfully, that at length it
burst forth in many improper
expressions. And cursed his day
— His birth-day, as is evident
from Job 3:3. In vain do some
endeavour to excuse this and the
following speeches of Job, who
afterward is reproved by God,
and severely accuses himself for
them, Job 38:2; Job 40:4; Job
42:3; Job 42:6. And yet he does
not proceed so far as to curse
God, and therefore makes the
devil a liar: but although he
does not break forth into direct
reproaches of God, yet he makes
indirect reflections upon his
providence. His curse was
sinful, both because it was
vain, being applied to what was
not capable of receiving
blessing or cursing, and because
it reflected blame on God for
bringing that day into
existence, and for giving him
life on that day. Some other
pious persons, through a similar
infirmity, when immersed in deep
troubles, have vented their
grief in the same unjustifiable
way. See Jeremiah 20:14.
Verse 3
Job 3:3. Here the metrical part
of this book begins, which in
the original Hebrew is broken
into short verses, and is very
beautiful, thus: שׂאבד יום אולד
בו— Jobad jom ivaled bo, והלילה
אמר הרה גבר— Vehalailah amar
horah geber.
Let the day perish wherein I was
born, And the night which said,
A man child is conceived.
Let the day perish, &c. — So far
from desiring, according to the
general and prevailing custom,
that my birth-day should be
celebrated; that any singular
tokens of joy and gratulation
should be expressed on it, in
remembrance of my coming into
the world, my earnest and
passionate desire is, that it
may not so much as be reckoned
one of the days of the year, but
that both it and the remembrance
of it may be utterly lost. And
the night in which it was said —
With joy and triumph, as happy
tidings, There is a man-child
conceived — Or rather, brought
forth, as the word הרה, harah,
signifies, (1 Chronicles 4:17,)
for the exact time of conception
is commonly unknown to women
themselves, and certainly is not
wont to be reported among men,
as this day is supposed to be.
Indeed, this latter clause is
only a repetition of the former,
expressing that, whether it was
day or night when he was born,
he wished the time to be
forgotten. Heath translates the
words, And the night which said,
See, a man-child is born; and he
observes, from Schultens, “that
the bearing of a son was
considered a matter of great
consequence among the Arabians;
the form of their appreciation
of happiness to a new-married
woman being, ‘May you live
happy, and bring forth male
children.’“
Verse 4
Job 3:4. Let that day be
darkness — I wish the sun had
never risen on that day; or,
which is the same thing, that it
had never been: and whensoever
that day returns, instead of the
cheering and refreshing beams of
light arising upon it, I wish it
may be covered with gross, thick
darkness, and rendered black,
gloomy, and uncomfortable; let
not God regard it from above —
From heaven, by causing the
light of heaven to visit it; or,
let God make no more inquiry
after it than if such a day had
never been. Dr. Waterland
renders it, Let not God take
account of it.
Verse 5
Job 3:5. Let darkness and the
shadow of death — Let the most
dismal darkness, like that of
the place of the dead, which is
a land of darkness, and where
the light is darkness, Job
10:21-22; or darkness so gross
and palpable, that its horrors
are insupportable; stain it —
Take away its beauty and glory,
and render it abominable as a
filthy thing; or, rather,
challenge or claim it, as the
word יגאלהו, jigaluhu, here
used, may properly be rendered,
the verb גאל, gaal, signifying,
primarily, to avenge, redeem,
rescue, deliver, claim, possess.
Indeed, as Houbigant justly
observes, “There enters nothing
of pollution into the idea of
darkness.” Let a cloud dwell
upon it, &c. — Let the thickest
clouds wholly possess it, and
render it terrible to men. Dr.
Waterland renders the last
clause, Let the blackness make
it hideous.
Verse 6
Job 3:6. As for that night, let
darkness seize upon it —
Constant and extraordinary
darkness, without the least
glimmering of light from the
moon or stars; darkness to the
highest degree possible. Thus,
as Job had thrown out his
resentment against the day in
which he was both, so now the
severity of his censure falls on
his birth-right; and his style,
we find, increases and grows
stronger. Our translation,
indeed, makes no difference in
the expression of darkness;
namely, “Let that day be
darkness; as for that night, let
darkness seize upon it.” But the
Hebrew is very different: for
חשׁךְ, choshec, is applied to
the day, and אפל, ophel, to the
night, which latter word
signifies a much greater degree
of darkness than the former. See
Joel 2:2; in the Hebrew, where
the latter word, אפלה, ophelah,
means thick and terrible
darkness. Let it not be joined
unto the days of the year —
Reckoned as one, or a part of
one of them. Or rather, Let it
not rejoice among the days, &c.,
for יחד, jechad, from חדה,
chadah, lętari, to rejoice, may
properly be so rendered. Joy
here, and terror Job 3:5, are
poetically and figuratively
ascribed to the day or night,
with respect to men who may
either rejoice or be affrighted
therein. Let it not rejoice,
that is, let it be a sad, and,
as it were, a funeral day. Let
it not come into the number of
the months — May every month be
looked upon as perfect and
complete without taking that
night or day into the number.
Verse 7
Job 3:7. Let that night be
solitary — Destitute of all
society of men, meeting and
feasting together. Let it afford
no entertainment or pleasure of
any kind; let no joyful voice
come therein — No music, no
harmony of sound be heard, no
cheerful or pleasing voice
admitted! Let no expressions of
joy be so much as once
attempted, however engaging and
affecting they may be.
Verse 8
Job 3:8. Let them curse it that
curse the day — That is, their
birth-day: when their
afflictions move them to curse
their own birth-day, let them
remember mine also, and bestow
some curses upon it; who are
ready to raise up their mourning
— Who are full of sorrow, and
always ready to pour out their
cries, and tears, and
complaints. A late writer
paraphrases this verse as
follows: “So little am I
concerned to have my birth-night
celebrated by any public
demonstrations of joy, by any
solemn blessing or giving of
thanks, that I would rather
choose to hire a set of those
men, whose business it is to
curse the days that are esteemed
inauspicious, and who are always
ready on such occasions. Let
them be produced, and let them
apply all their skill in raising
their mournful voices to the
highest pitch: and let them
study to find out proper
expressions to load it with the
highest and heaviest
imprecations.” If the reader
will consult Poole and Dodd on
the passage, he will find some
reasons adduced which go to
justify this exposition; but for
which we have not room here.
Verse 9
Job 3:9. Let the stars of the
twilight thereof, &c. — That
adorn the heavens with so much
beauty and lustre, never be seen
that night. Let it look for
light, but have none — Let it
wait with the greatest
impatience for some pleasing
refreshment from thick, heavy
clouds hanging over it; but let
not the smallest degree of light
appear; neither let it see the
dawning of the day — Neither let
it perceive the least glimpse of
those bright rays, which, with
so much swiftness, issue from
the rising sun.
Verse 10
Job 3:10. Because it shut not up
my mother’s womb — Because it
did not confine me to the dark
prison of the womb, but suffered
me to escape from thence; nor
hid sorrow from mine eyes —
Because it did not keep me from
entering into this miserable
life, and seeing or experiencing
those bitter sorrows under which
I now groan.
Verse 11-12
Job 3:11-12. Why died I not from
the womb? — It would surely have
been far better, and much
happier for me, had I either
expired in the womb where I
received my life, or it had been
taken from me the very moment my
eyes saw the light of this
world. Why did the knees prevent
me? — Why did the midwife or
nurse receive and lay me upon
her knees, and not suffer me to
fall upon the bare ground, till
death had taken me out of this
sorrowful world, into which
their cruel kindness hath
betrayed me? Why did the breasts
prevent me from perishing
through hunger, or supply me
that I should have what to suck?
— Thus Job unthankfully despises
these wonderful mercies of God
toward poor, helpless infants.
Verse 13-14
Job 3:13-14. For now should I
have lain still, and been quiet
— Free from those torments of
body, and that anguish of mind,
which now oppress me. With kings
and counsellors of the earth — I
had then been as happy as the
proudest monarchs, who, after
all their great achievements, go
down into their graves; which
built desolate places for
themselves — Who distinguished
themselves for a while, and to
show their great wealth and
power, and to leave behind them
a glorious name, and perpetuate
their memories, with great
labour and expense erected
pompous and magnificent
buildings; and, to render
themselves the more famous,
raised them up in places which
seemed before to be forsaken,
and abandoned to entire
desolation.
Verse 15-16
Job 3:15-16. Or with princes
that had gold, &c. — My repose
and security from worldly
anxieties would have been the
same with that of those princes
who were once celebrated for
their wealth, and whose birth
entitled them to large treasures
of gold and silver. Or as a
hidden — That is, undiscerned
and unregarded; untimely birth —
Born before the due time, and
therefore extinct. I had not
been — To wit, in the land of
the living, of which he here
speaks; as infants which never
saw light — As those fœtuses
that were never quickened, and
come to nothing, or those
infants which are stifled and
dead before their birth.
Verse 17
Job 3:17. There the wicked cease
from troubling — In the grave
the great oppressors and
troublers of the world cease
from their vexatious rapines and
murders; and there the weary be
at rest — Those who were here
molested, and tired out with
their tyrannies, oppressions,
and injuries, now quietly sleep
with them.
Verse 18
Job 3:18. There the prisoners
rest together — That is, one as
well as another; they who were
lately deprived of their
liberty, kept in the strongest
chains and closest prisons, and
condemned to the most hard and
miserable slavery, rest as well
as those who were captives in
much better circumstances. They
hear not the voice of the
oppressor — Or exactor, or
taskmaster, (as the word נגשׁ,
nogesh, is translated Exodus
5:6,) who urges and forces them,
by cruel threatenings and
stripes, to labour beyond their
strength. Job does not here take
into consideration their eternal
state after death, of which he
speaks hereafter, but only their
freedom from worldly troubles,
which is the sole matter of his
present discourse.
Verse 19
Job 3:19. The small and great
are there — It should rather be
rendered, are equal there;
persons of all qualities and
conditions, whether higher or
lower, are in the same
circumstances. There is no
distinction in the grave, but
the meanest and most despised
peasant is in a situation equal
to that of his rich and powerful
neighbour. The man of birth and
fortune appears there to no
advantage: he commands no place;
he usurps no authority; neither
does he lord it over the poorest
or meanest of the human race.
And the servant is free from his
master — The most contemptible
slave, who was entirely subject
to the impositions and exactions
of his owner, has got his
discharge, and is now free from
the power of him that tyrannized
over him: a good reason this,
why those who have power should
use it moderately, and why those
that are in subjection should
take it patiently.
Verse 20
Job 3:20. Wherefore is light
given — למה יתן, lama jitten;
why doth he give, or hath he
given, light, namely, the light
of life, to him that is in
misery, whose life is a scene of
sorrow and distress, loaded and
pressed with numberless
calamities? and life unto the
bitter in soul — Unto those
whose life itself is very bitter
and burdensome, whose souls are
full of heaviness, being
overpowered with the weight of
affliction? Why doth he obtrude
his favours upon those that
abhor them?
Verse 21
Job 3:21. Who long for death —
With eagerness and impatience,
as the Hebrew means. Who calls
aloud for death, as Heath
translates it. Qui ęgre
expectant, inhiant morti, who
anxiously long and gasp for
death; but it cometh not — They
long and gasp in vain. And dig
for it more than for hid
treasures — Whose thoughts and
wishes are so intent on their
dissolution, that they expect it
with as much earnestness as
miners look for their golden
treasures, who, being
indefatigable in their pursuit,
spare neither time nor labour,
but penetrate still further into
the deep caverns of the earth,
to find out and enrich
themselves with the secret,
wished-for gain. It is
observable, that Job durst not
do any thing to hasten or
procure his death.
Notwithstanding all his
miseries, he was contented to
wait all the days of his
appointed time till his change
should come, Job 14:14.
Verse 22
Job 3:22. Which rejoice
exceedingly, when they can find
the grave — To be thus impatient
of life, for the sake of the
trouble we meet with, is not
only unnatural in itself, but
ungrateful to the Giver of life,
and shows a sinful indulgence of
our own passion. Let it be our
great and constant care to get
ready for another world: and
then let us leave it to God to
order the circumstances of our
removal thither.
Verse 23
Job 3:23. Why is light given to
a man whose way is hid? — Hid
from him; who knows not his way,
that is, which way to turn
himself, what course to take to
obtain comfort in his miseries,
or to get out of them. And whom
God hath hedged in — Whom God
hath put, as it were, in a
prison, so that he can see no
way or possibility of escape;
but all refuge fails him.
Verse 24
Job 3:24. For my sighing cometh
before I eat — Hebrew, before
the face of my bread. Instead of
enjoying the satisfaction of
being refreshed with the common
necessaries that are afforded
us, and taking any pleasure in
eating and drinking, which are
granted for comfort as well as
sustenance, my cries and tears
are my meat and drink. And my
roarings are poured out like the
waters — So severe is my pain,
and so great my anguish, that
the agonies and outcries, which
are extorted from me, are of no
common sort: they are deep and
noisy; hideous and frightful,
and such as may be compared to
the loud roarings of a lion. And
though I strive, and take much
pains, to check and silence
them, yet I find it is to no
purpose; for they force their
way with irresistible violence
and incessant continuance, in
great abundance; like so many
sudden and impetuous streams of
waters, when a river breaks its
banks and overflows the adjacent
grounds.
Verse 25
Job 3:25. For the thing which I
greatly feared is come upon me —
Before this flood of misery was
poured upon me, I was indeed
under great and strong
apprehensions, which I could not
account for, of something or
other that would happen to me;
something extremely grievous and
afflicting; something as bad,
nay, worse than death itself.
For I considered the variety of
God’s providences, the
changeableness of this vain
world, the infirmities and
contingencies to which human
nature is liable in the present
life, God’s justice, and the
sinfulness of all mankind. And
it is now evident that these
fears of mine were not in vain,
for they are justified by my
present calamities. I may,
therefore, say that I have never
enjoyed any sound tranquillity
since I was born; and, of
consequence, it hath not been
worth my while to live, since
all my days have been evil, and
full of trouble and distress,
either by the fear of miseries
or by the suffering of them.
Verse 26
Job 3:26. I was not in safety,
neither had I rest, neither was
I quiet — Three expressions
denoting the same thing, which
was also signified in the verse
immediately preceding, namely,
that even in his prosperous days
he never esteemed himself
secure, or was perfectly free
from the torment of fear and
anxiety. Or, his meaning is, I
did not misbehave myself in
prosperity, abusing it by
presumption and security; but I
lived circumspectly, walking
humbly with God, and working out
my salvation with fear and
trembling. Yet trouble came — As
I feared it would. So that
between fear and calamity my
whole life has been
uncomfortable, and I had reason
to repent of it. Therefore, in
this sense also his way was hid,
and he knew not why God
contended with him. |