Verse 1
Job 5:1. Call now, &c. — Wouldst
thou know the reason why I
relate to thee this night
vision? I do it with an intent
that thou mayest apply it to
thyself, and thy present
circumstances. Thou hast heard
how weak and imperfect the best
of men must be in comparison
with God, but if this does not
satisfy thee, if thou dost not
believe what has been advanced,
thou mayest inquire of others.
Try, therefore, if there be any
one that will defend thee in
these thy bold expostulations
with God. Thou mayest find fools
or wicked men that will do it,
but not one of the children of
God. There is no good man but is
of my opinion; and if an angel
should appear to thee as one did
to me, thou wouldst receive no
other information but this.
Verse 2
Job 5:2. For wrath killeth the
foolish man, &c. — That is, say
some, a man’s wrath and
impatience prey upon his spirit,
and so hasten his death. But the
meaning seems rather to be, as
Bishop Patrick observes, that
“God in his anger and
indignation destroys the wicked,
and such as err from his
precepts.” It is probable that
Eliphaz intended to distinguish
Job by the characters of foolish
and silly one, to insinuate that
all his misfortunes were owing
to his folly and weakness, or to
his sins and vices. By the
foolish is meant the rash and
inconsiderate man, who does not
weigh things impartially; and by
the silly one, the man who, for
want of true wisdom, is soon
deceived with false opinions,
and with appearances of present
things.
Verse 3
Job 5:3. I have seen the foolish
taking root — I have observed
the wicked man, whom I term
foolish, as being destitute of
true, that is, of heavenly,
wisdom, not only prosperous for
the present, but, as it seemed,
firm and secure for the future,
being strongly fortified with
power and riches, and children
too, so that there was no
likelihood or apparent danger of
a change; but suddenly — In a
moment, before any one’s
expectation; I cursed his
habitation — I saw, by the event
which followed his prosperity,
that he was a man under a divine
curse, and that, notwithstanding
the seeming depth and strength
in which he vainly promised
himself a permanent, unshaken
situation for many years, all
his hopes were built on a weak
and false foundation. Thus
Eliphaz answers an objection
concerning the present seeming
prosperity of the wicked, which
he confesses that he himself had
sometimes observed, but which,
he insists, was of short
duration, destructive judgments
from God unexpectedly
overwhelming them.
Verse 4
Job 5:4. His children — Whose
greatness he designed in all his
enterprises, supposing his
family would be established for
ever; are far from safety — Are
exposed to dangers and
calamities, and can neither
preserve themselves, nor the
inheritance which their fathers
left them. There is no question
but he glances here at the death
of Job’s children; and they are
crushed in the gate — That is,
in the place of judicature, to
which they are brought for their
offences, and where they find
severe judges, and few or no
friends; because, being wickedly
educated, and trusting to their
own greatness, they had been
insolent and injurious to all
their neighbours; as also
because those many persons, whom
their powerful fathers had
defrauded or oppressed, seek for
justice and the recovery of
their rights, which they easily
obtain, against persons who
plainly declared, by their
actions, that they neither
feared God nor regarded man, and
therefore were hated by all
sorts of people. Neither is
there any to deliver them — They
can find no advocates or
assistants who are either able
or willing to help them: for, as
their hand was formerly against
every man, so now every man’s
hand is against them. Justice,
therefore, takes hold on them,
and will not let them escape.
Verse 5
Job 5:5. Whose harvest — Which
they confidently expected to
reap after all their cost and
labour; The hungry eateth up —
The hungry Sabeans, or the poor,
whose necessities make them
greedy and ravenous to eat it
all up; so that he can never
recover it, or any thing in
recompense of it. As if he had
said, They may cultivate their
ground with the utmost care, and
sow it with the choicest seed,
in expectation of reaping, at
the usual time, the fruits of
their labour; but when once the
sentence of the judge is
declared against them, behold,
instead of carrying in, and
filling their barns and
store-houses with the great and
plentiful increase, their field
is laid open to the hungry poor,
who soon devour their whole
harvest. And take it even out of
the thorns — That is, out of the
fields, notwithstanding the
strong thorn-hedges wherewith it
is enclosed and fortified; and
in spite of all the dangers or
difficulties which may be in
their way. They will take it,
though they be scratched and
wounded by the thorns about it.
And the robber swalloweth up
their substance — The word צמים,
tzammim, here rendered robber,
occurs but once more, namely,
Job 18:9, where Bildad, taking
it for granted that Job must be
a wicked man, says the robber,
tzammim, shall prevail against
him. R. Levi derives it from
tzammah, hair, and says it
represents a man who suffers his
hair to grow long and squalid,
and appears with a terrible
countenance. It may however
signify thirsty, as derived from
another root. Either way it
points out a set of savage and
barbarous plunderers. The word
שׂאŠshaaph, rendered swalloweth
up, literally means to draw in
the air, to pant after, to
swallow greedily; and is applied
to wild beasts, snuffing up the
wind in pursuit of their prey.
The sense of the clause is, that
these robbers shall hasten with
great eagerness, shall greedily
pant after and swallow up their
entire substance, so as to leave
them in the most deplorable
condition.
Verse 6
Job 5:6. Although affliction
cometh not forth out of the dust
— The word
און, aven, here rendered
affliction, rather signifies
iniquity, and the clause is
literally, Iniquity cometh not
forth out of the dust; neither
doth trouble spring out of the
ground — That is, says Dr. Dodd,
“As the wickedness of men does
not proceed from any natural
cause, but from their own
free-will; so neither are their
miseries to be considered as the
effects of natural causes, but
as the distributions of a free
agent likewise, namely, of a
just God, who suits men’s
punishments to their crimes; and
hence man, being prone to sin,
is necessarily born to suffer,”
as is signified in the next
verse.
Verse 7
Job 5:7. Yet man is born to
trouble, &c. — He is so commonly
exposed to various troubles, as
if he were born to no other end:
affliction is become natural to
man, and is transmitted from
parents to children, as their
constant inheritance; God having
allotted this portion to mankind
for their sins. And therefore
thou takest a wrong course in
complaining so bitterly of that
which thou shouldst patiently
bear, as the common lot of
mankind. As — As naturally, and
as generally, as the sparks of
fire fly upward — Why then
should we be surprised at our
afflictions, as strange, or
quarrel with them, as hard? This
last clause, literally
translated from the Hebrew, is,
As the sons of the burning coal
raise themselves up to fly.
Instead, however, of sparks, or
the sons of the coal, the author
of the Vulgate writes, Homo
nascitur ad laborem, et avis ad
volatum, man is born for labour,
(or trouble,) and the bird for
flying; reading, עוŠ, gnoph, a
bird, for gnuph, to fly. To the
same purpose is the
interpretation of the LXX., Syr.
and Arab.
Verse 8
Job 5:8. I would seek unto God,
&c. — If I were in thy
condition, instead of accusing
the dispensations of Divine
Providence, and repining under
them, I would apply to God, by a
full and free confession of
those sins which have drawn this
sad calamity upon me, and by
sincere repentance, humiliation,
and submission to his will: to
God, who is able to do wonders,
(as he presently adds,) and who
can and will restore thee to thy
former happy state, if he sees
that thou art penitent for thy
past transgressions, and hast
reformed thy conduct. For this
is the whole purport of the
following part of his speech,
namely, to give him hopes of a
happy turn to his condition, if
he would do what he thought was
absolutely necessary to be done
in this case; make a frank
confession of those crimes which
had brought down this severe
chastisement upon him. See
Peters and Dodd. And unto God
would I commit my cause — Would
resign myself and all my
concerns to him, and humbly hope
for relief from him. And let my
cause be what it would, and my
own opinion of it ever so
favourable, I would commit it
wholly to him, and leave him to
judge and determine it.
Verse 9
Job 5:9. Which doth great things
and unsearchable — Here Eliphaz
enters upon a discourse of the
infinite perfection of God’s
nature and works; which he does
as an argument to enforce the
exhortation to seek and commit
his cause to God, Job 5:8,
because God was infinitely able
either to punish him yet far
worse, if he continued to
provoke him, or to raise him
from the dust, if he humbly
addressed himself to him: and
that, by a representation of
God’s excellence and glory, and
of that vast disproportion which
was between God and Job, he
might convince Job of his great
sin in speaking so boldly and
irreverently of him. Marvellous
things — Which (though common,
and therefore neglected and
despised, yet) are matter of
wonder to the wisest men. The
works of nature are mysteries:
the most curious searches come
far short of full discoveries;
and the works of Providence are
still more deep and
unaccountable.
Verse 10
Job 5:10. Who giveth rain upon
the earth — He begins with this
ordinary work of God, in which
he implies that there is
something wonderful, as indeed
there is, in the rise of it from
the earth, in the strange
hanging of that heavy body in
the air, and in the distribution
of it as God sees fit; and how
much more in the hidden paths of
Divine Providence! And sendeth
waters upon the fields — When
the scorching heat of the sun is
so strong and intense as to dry
up and consume almost every herb
of the field, every green thing
upon the face of the earth, God,
in great compassion, opens the
windows of heaven, and pours
down a gracious, refreshing, and
long- wished-for rain; by which
wonderful supply the springs and
rivers, which were much
exhausted, and, in a manner, had
quite disappeared, do now rise
and swell to their usual height;
nay, are not only full, but
overflow, so as to reach several
distant places which waited, as
it were, for refreshment from
those superabundant treasures.
Verse 11
Job 5:11. To set up on high
those that be low — The
consequences which proceed from
the fore-mentioned happy change,
from God’s sending a refreshing
rain upon the earth, after a
long drought are inexpressibly
great and beneficial. Those who
had been reduced to straits and
difficulties, and, by the
pressing necessities arising
therefrom, had been brought very
low, and obliged to submit to
mean and laborious employments,
are now enabled to lift up their
heads with joy, and appear in a
very different condition. That
those who mourn may be exalted
to safety — That through the
blessings of Providence flowing
in upon them, like a plentiful
stream of water upon a barren
and thirsty land, they may be
raised from their former state
of extreme poverty and want, and
may find themselves placed in a
comparatively safe and
comfortable situation, without
any apparent reason to fear a
relapse into their former
difficulties and distresses.
Thus he gives Job another
example of God’s great and
wonderful works, to comfort and
encourage him to seek unto him,
forasmuch as he could easily
raise him from the depth of his
distress, however great, as he
was wont to raise others in the
like condition.
Verse 12
Job 5:12. He disappointeth the
devices of the crafty — On the
contrary, he defeats the
craftiest designs of evil and
subtle men to exalt themselves.
They may place a great deal of
confidence in their own
abilities, and, without any
regard to the overruling hand of
Providence, may imagine that
their good or bad success in the
world depends wholly on their
own wisdom and efforts: they may
form deep and secret designs;
and, to the utmost stretch of
their knowledge and foresight,
may contrive and project
measures which will have the
most plausible appearance of
accomplishing their purpose. But
after all this dexterous
management, should the Almighty
once interpose, and throw an
obstacle in their way, all their
crafty devices are frustrated,
and their promising expectations
vanish away. So that their hands
cannot perform their enterprise
— Hebrew, תושׁיה, tushijah, a
word of an extensive meaning,
implying that which is solid and
substantial, or which is wise,
good, and virtuous. Instead of
executing any thing of moment,
any thing advantageous or
praiseworthy; instead of having
the satisfaction of seeing a
prosperous event of their
best-formed counsels, they
quickly perceive with what weak
hands they have been labouring,
and that all their aspiring
attempts are vain and fruitless.
Verse 13-14
Job 5:13-14. He taketh the wise
in their own craftiness — Men
wise to do evil, or wise in the
opinion of the world; he not
only deceives their hopes and
counsels, but turns those
counsels against themselves. And
the counsel of the froward —
Hebrew, Of the perverse, or
wrestlers, such as wind and turn
every way, as wrestlers do, and
will leave no means untried to
accomplish their designs: is
carried headlong — That is,
tumbled down and broken, and
that by their own precipitation
and haste. Such is their malice,
that they cannot proceed
leisurely and wisely, but are
eager, and venturous, and rash,
and so make more haste than good
speed in their wicked designs:
or, the meaning may be, The
event will show that such
deceitful cunning, though never
so coolly and sedately digested,
will deserve no better name than
precipitate rashness and
infatuation. They meet with
darkness in the day-time — In
plain things they run into gross
mistakes, and choose those
courses which are worst for
themselves. Darkness often
denotes misery, but here
ignorance or error. And grope in
the noon-day — Like blind men to
find their way, not knowing what
to do. They trip in the plainest
way, and see not their danger,
when it is visible to every body
but themselves.
Verse 15
Job 5:15. But he saveth the
poor, &c. — According to the
order in which the words stand
in the Hebrew, the translation
is, But he saveth from the
sword, from their mouth, and
from the hand of the mighty, the
poor. Schultens thinks it should
be interpreted, from the sword
which proceedeth out of their
mouth, meaning, their cutting
and killing reproaches. A sense
this which is approved by
Buxtorf, and which receives no
small confirmation from divers
passages of Scripture, in which
reproachful language is
stigmatized by the name of a
sword. See Psalms 57:4; Psalms
64:3. Dr. Waterland’s
translation of the verse is to
the same purpose. But he saveth
the poor from destruction by
their mouth, and from the hand
of the mighty. The general sense
undoubtedly is, that God saveth
such as, being poor, are
defenceless, and therefore flee
to him for refuge, from the
censures, slanders,
threatenings, and deceitful
insinuations of their enemies;
from the false swearing of
witnesses, and the unrighteous
sentences of corrupt judges, by
which things their characters,
or estates, or lives, may be
exposed to great hazards.
Verse 16
Job 5:16. So the poor, &c. —
Hebrews ותהי לדל, vatehi ladal,
even to the poor there is hope:
Dal signifies one who is
deprived of his strength or
power, either by poverty or
sickness: in Arabic, He who is
submissive, and humbles himself
in a low, abject manner. Here
the interpretation seems to be,
Even the abject, contemptible
man hath hope; that is, obtains
what he hoped for from God, to
whom he had committed his cause.
And iniquity — Iniquitous men,
the abstract term being put for
the concrete, as pride, deceit,
injustice, are put for proud,
deceitful, unrighteous men,
Jeremiah 13:9; 2 Peter 3:13.
Stoppeth her mouth — They are
silenced and confounded, finding
not only the poor are got out of
their snares, but that the
oppressors themselves are
insnared in them.
Verse 17
Job 5:17. Behold — Consider, for
what I am saying, though most
true and important, will not be
believed, without serious
consideration. Eliphaz concludes
his discourse with giving Job a
comfortable hope of deliverance
from his troubles, and of
restoration to his former, or
even a greater state of
prosperity, if he humbled
himself before God. Happy is the
man — Hebrews blessednesses,
various kinds and degrees of
happiness belong to that man
whom God rebukes. The reason is
plain, because afflictions are
pledges of God’s love, which no
man can buy too dear; and are
necessary to purge out sin, and
thereby to prevent infinite and
eternal miseries. Without
respect to this, the proposition
could not be true. And therefore
it plainly shows, that good men
in those ancient times had the
belief and hope of everlasting
blessedness. Despise not — Do
not abhor it as a thing
pernicious, refuse it as a thing
useless, or slight it as an
unnecessary thing: but more is
designed than is expressed.
Reverence the chastening of the
Lord: have an humble, awful
regard to his correcting hand,
and study to answer the design
of it. The Almighty — Who is
able to support and comfort thee
in thy troubles, and deliver
thee out of them; and also to
add more calamities to them, if
thou art obstinate and
incorrigible.
Verse 18-19
Job 5:18-19. For he maketh sore,
&c. — God’s usual method is
first to wound and then to heal,
first to convince and then to
comfort, first to humble and
then to exalt. And he never
makes a wound too great, too
deep, for himself to cure. He
will deliver thee — If thou seek
to him by prayer and repentance;
in six troubles — In distresses,
manifold and repeated. Here he
applies himself to Job directly.
Yea, in seven there shall no
evil touch thee — Thou shalt
have a good issue out of all thy
troubles, though they be both
great and many.
Verse 20
Job 5:20. In famine he shall
redeem thee from death — From
that terrible kind of death.
Eliphaz might think that Job
feared perishing by want, as
being so poor, that he needed
the contributions of his friends
for his relief. And in war from
the sword — These things he
utters with more confidence,
because the rewards or
punishments of this life were
more constantly distributed to
men in the Old Testament,
according to their good or bad
behaviour, than they are now:
and, because it was his opinion,
that great afflictions were the
certain evidences of wickedness;
and, consequently, that great
deliverances would infallibly
follow upon true repentance.
Verse 21-22
Job 5:21-22. Thou shalt be hid —
Protected, as in some secret and
safe place; from the scourge of
the tongue — From false
accusations, and virulent
slanders and reproaches. Neither
shalt thou be afraid of
destruction — Thou shalt have no
cause to fear it, because God
will secure thee in it and from
it: when it cometh — Namely,
upon others, near or round about
thee. Bishop Patrick’s
paraphrase on the verse is,
“False accusers shall not be
able to hurt thee; and when
whole countries are depopulated,
thou shalt be secure.” At
destruction, &c., thou shalt
laugh — With a laughter of joy
and triumph; arising from a just
security and confidence in God’s
watchful and gracious
providence. Neither shalt thou
be afraid of the beasts of the
field — The wild beasts, which
were numerous and mischievous in
those parts. As no apprehensions
of fear shall possess thee in
other heavy calamities, so
neither shalt thou be under any
dreadful consternation, should
even the most fierce and savage
beasts of the earth rise up
against and be ready to devour
thee. Perhaps it is not possible
for that peace of mind, which
arises from a good conscience
and a confidence in the divine
care and protection, to be
expressed more elegantly or
poetically than it is in this
verse. Thus, leviathan, so far
from being terrified, is said to
laugh at the shaking of a spear,
Job 41:29. And God himself, in
the same beautiful style, is
represented as disdaining the
politic intrigues of kings, and
the crafty counsels of the
rulers of the earth against his
church. He that sitteth in the
heavens shall laugh, the Lord
shall have them in derision,
Psalms 2:4.
Verse 23
Job 5:23. Thou shalt be in
league with the stones of the
field — Thou shalt be free from
any annoyance thereby, as if
they had made an inviolable
league with thee. It is a bold
metaphor, but such are frequent
in the Scriptures, as also in
other authors. And the beasts of
the field shall be at peace with
thee — This is an addition to
the former privilege; they shall
not hurt thee, Job 5:22. Nay,
they shall befriend thee, as
being at peace with thee. Our
covenant with God is a covenant
with all the creatures, that
they shall do us no hurt, but
serve and be ready to do us
good.
Verse 24
Job 5:24. And thou shalt know —
By certain and constant
experience; that thy tabernacle
shall be in peace — That is, thy
habitation, as it follows,
including also the inhabitants,
children or friends, and
servants. They shall enjoy great
safety from all their enemies,
and concord among themselves,
and prosperity in all their
concerns; all which things are
comprehended under the sweet
name of peace. And thou shalt
visit thy habitation — Shalt
order and manage thy family, and
all thy domestic and worldly
affairs, with care and
diligence; and shalt not sin —
Either by unrighteousness in thy
dealings, with thy family or
others; or by neglecting God and
his service in thy family, or by
conniving at any sin in thy
domestics, which thou canst
hinder. But because Job’s duty
does not seem to be the subject
of Eliphaz’s discourse here, but
rather his privilege, and that
in outward and worldly things,
the clause is probably better
rendered thus: And thou shalt
not err, or miscarry, or miss
thy way. Thou shalt not be
disappointed of thy hopes, or
blasted in thy endeavours, but
shalt succeed in them. “When
thou takest an account of thine
estate,” says Bishop Patrick,
“all things shall answer thine
expectation.”
Verse 25
Job 5:25. Thou shalt know — By
assurance from God’s promises,
the impressions of his Spirit,
and by experience, in due time,
that thy seed shall be great —
Thy posterity, which God shall
give thee, instead of those whom
thou hast lost, shall be high,
and honourable, and powerful:
or, shall be many, as רב, rab,
often signifies. And thine
offspring — The fruit of thy
body; (for he speaks of his
natural, not of his spiritual
seed, as Abraham’s seed is in
part to be understood;) as the
grass of the earth —
Both for its plentiful increase,
and for its flourishing
greenness.
Verse 26
Job 5:26. Thou shalt come to thy
grave in a full age: &c. — Heath
translates it, In old age shalt
thou come to the sepulchre, as
the corn is heaped upon the
thrashing-floor in its season.
Thou shalt die in a mature and
old, though 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
cheerfully to the grave; and to
die seasonably; in the best
time, when our souls are just
ripe for God.
Verse 27
Job 5:27. Lo this, we have
searched out — It is not my
single opinion, but my brethren
concur with me, as thou wilt
hear from their own mouths. And
it is no rash or hasty conceit,
but what we have learned by deep
consideration, long experience,
and diligent observation. Know
thou it for thy good — Know it
for thyself, (so the word is,)
make application of it to thine
own case. That which we thus
hear and know for ourselves, we
hear and know for our good. |