Verse 1
Job 10:1. My soul is weary of my
life — My soul is weary of
dwelling in this rotten and
miserable body; or, I am, from
my heart or soul, weary of my
life. Sol. Jarchi’s comment is,
My soul loathes itself because I
am alive. The Hebrew, however,
נקתה נפשׁי בחיי, naketa napshi
bechaji, may be properly
rendered, My soul is cut off
while I live; that is, I am dead
while I live; I am in a manner
buried alive. I will leave my
complaint upon myself — I will
continue to complain: and will
take upon my self the hazard of
so doing, and be willing to bear
it. Let what will come on me, I
must give my sorrows vent. Thus
Ab. Ezra, “I will not restrain
my grief, but leave or suffer it
to take its course.” I will
speak in the bitterness of my
soul — My extreme misery forceth
my complaints from me.
Verse 2
Job 10:2. I will say unto God,
Do not condemn me — Hebrew, אל
תרשׁיעני, al tarshigneeni, Do
not pronounce me to be a wicked
man; as my friends do; neither
deal with me as such, as I
confess thou mightest do, by thy
sovereign power, and in rigorous
justice: O discover my integrity
by removing this stroke, for
which my friends condemn me.
Wherefore — For what ends and
reasons, and for what sins; for
I am not conscious to myself of
any peculiar sins by which I
have deserved to be made the
most miserable of all men. When
God afflicts, he contends with
us: when he contends with us,
there is always a reason for it.
And it is desirable to know what
that reason is, that we may
forsake whatever he has a
controversy with us for.
Verse 3
Job 10:3. Is it good unto thee?
— Dost thou take any pleasure in
it, that those shouldest
oppress? — By thy absolute and
irresistible power, without
regard to that justice and
clemency by which thou usest to
govern mankind. Shouldest
despise the work of thy hands —
Show thy contempt of thy
creatures, either by denying
them protection, or by
destroying them. And shine upon
the counsel of the wicked — That
is, by the methods of thy
providence seem to favour the
practices of wicked men, to whom
thou givest prosperity and
success, while thou frownest
upon me and other good men. Far
be it from Job to think that God
did him wrong. But he is at a
loss to reconcile his
providences with his justice.
And so other good men have often
been, and will be, until the day
shall declare it.
Verse 4
Job 10:4. Hast thou eyes of
flesh? — No. Eyes of flesh
cannot see in the dark: but
darkness hideth not from God.
Eyes of flesh are but in one
place at a time, and can see but
a little way. But the eyes of
the Lord are in every place, and
run to and fro through the whole
earth. Eyes of flesh will
shortly be darkened by age, and
shut up by death. But the eyes
of God are ever the same, nor
does his sight ever decay. Or
seest thou as man — Man sees the
outside only, and judges by
appearances: but thou seest my
heart.
Verse 5
Job 10:5. Are thy days as the
days of man? — Man’s time is
short and uncertain, and
therefore he must improve it,
and diligently search out the
crimes of malefactors, lest by
death he lose the opportunity of
doing justice: but thou art
eternal, and seest at one view
all men’s hearts, and all their
actions, present and to come;
and therefore thou dost not need
to proceed with me in this
manner, by making so long a
scrutiny into my heart and life.
Verse 6-7
Job 10:6-7. That thou inquirest,
&c., and searchest after my sin
— Keeping me so long upon the
rack, to compel me to accuse
myself. Thou knowest I am not
wicked — That is a hypocrite, or
an ungodly man, as my friends
account me. There is none that
can deliver, &c. — Thou art the
supreme ruler of the world;
therefore I must wait thy time,
and throw myself on thy mercy,
in submission to thy sovereign
will. “It would be injurious to
the character of Job,” says Mr.
Peters, “should we interpret in
a severe and rigorous sense, as
it is certain his friends too
often did, his frequent
protestations of his innocence,
and his bold appeals to the
supreme Judge to prove and try
him; for where he is thus
strenuous in asserting his
integrity, it is only in
opposition to the notion which
those mistaken friends had
entertained of him, namely, that
he had been guilty of some gross
sins, which he had the art to
hide from the world, but that he
was in reality a wicked man, and
a hypocrite in his behaviour.
This is what Job utterly denies
and disclaims, though he nowhere
arrogates to himself perfect
innocence or freedom from sin.”
Verse 8
Job 10:8. Thy hands have made
me, &c., round about — That is,
all of me; all the faculties of
my soul, and all the parts of my
body, which are now overspread
with sores and ulcers; I am
wholly thy creature and
workmanship, made by thee and
for thee. Yet thou dost destroy
me — Hebrew, תבלעני,
teballegneeni, swallow me up;
namely, without any eminent
provocation of mine; as if thou
didst delight in doing and
undoing, in making and then
destroying thy creatures.
Verse 9
Job 10:9. Remember, thou hast
made me as the clay — I was
formed by thee as a potter makes
a vessel of clay; so this may
note both the frailty of man’s
nature, which of itself decays
and perishes, and doth not need
such violent shocks to overthrow
it; and the excellence of the
divine artifice commended from
the meanness of the materials;
which is an argument why God
should not destroy it. And will
thou bring me? &c. — Or, rather,
without an interrogation, thou
wilt bring me into dust again —
Out of which I was made: I must
die by the course of nature, and
by the sentence of thy law; and,
therefore, while I do live, give
me some ease and comfort.
Verse 10
Job 10:10. Hast thou not poured
me out as milk? — Thus he
modestly and accurately
describes God’s admirable work
in forming the fœtus in the
womb, out of a small and liquid
substance, gradually coagulated
and condensed, as milk is
curdled into cheese, into the
exquisite frame of man’s body.
Verse 11
Job 10:11. Thou hast clothed me
with skin — Covered my inward
and more noble parts, which are
first formed. So he proceeds in
describing man’s formation
gradually. And fenced me with
bones — The stay and strength of
the body; and some of them, as
the scull and ribs, enclose and
defend its vital parts.
Verse 12
Job 10:12. Thou hast granted me
life — Thou didst not only give
me a curious body, but also a
reasonable soul: thou didst at
first give me life, and then
maintain it in me: both when I
was in the womb, (which is a
marvellous work of God,) and
afterward, when I was unable to
do any thing to preserve my own
life. And favour — Thou didst
not give mere life, but many
other favours, such as
nourishment by the breast,
education, knowledge, and
instruction. Thy visitation —
The care of thy providence
watching over me for my good,
and visiting me in mercy;
preserved my spirit — My life,
which is liable to manifold
dangers, if God did not watch
over us every day and moment.
Thou hast hitherto done great
things for me, given me life,
and the blessings of life, and
daily deliverances: and wilt
thou now undo all that thou hast
done? And shall I, who have been
such an eminent monument of thy
mercy, now be a spectacle of thy
vengeance.
Verse 13
Job 10:13. These things hast
thou hid in thy heart — Both thy
former favours and thy present
frowns. Both are according to
thy own will, and therefore
undoubtedly consistent with each
other, however they seem. When
God does what we cannot account
for, we are bound to believe
there are good reasons for it
hid in his heart. It is not with
us, or in our reach, to assign
the cause; but I know this is
with thee.
Verse 14
Job 10:14. If I sin — If I
commit the least sin; then thou
markest me — Thou dost not
connive at, or pass by my sins,
but dost severely and diligently
observe them all, that thou
mayest punish me. And thou wilt
not acquit me from mine iniquity
— Wilt not pardon, pity, and
help me, but art resolved to
punish me with rigour: words of
great impatience and distrust.
But he was so oppressed and
overwhelmed with his troubles
that it seems he could not look
up with any comfort or
confidence. Without were
fightings, within were fears, so
that between both he was full of
confusion.
Verse 15
Job 10:15. If I be wicked — That
is, an ungodly hypocrite, as my
friends esteem me; wo unto me —
I am truly and extremely
miserable; and, if I continue
wicked, must be eternally so.
And if I be righteous — An
upright man; yet will I not, or
yet can I not, lift up my head —
Yet I have no comfort, nor hope
of any good: so, whether I am
good or bad, all comes to one. I
am full of confusion; therefore
see thou mine affliction — I am
confounded within myself, not
knowing what to say or do. Let
my extremity move thee to pity
and help me.
Verse 16
Job 10:16. Thou huntest me as a
fierce lion — Which hunteth
after his prey with eagerness,
and, when he overtakes it, falls
upon it with great fury. Again
thou showest — Hebrews ותשׁב
תתפלא בי, vetashob tithpalla bi,
Thou turnest again: Thou art
marvellous, or, thou showest
thyself marvellous upon, in, or
against me. The lion tears its
prey speedily, and so ends its
torments; but thou renewest my
calamities again and again, and
makest my plagues wonderful,
both for kind, and extremity,
and continuance.
Verse 17
Job 10:17. Thou renewest thy
witnesses — Thy judgments, which
are the evidences both of my
sins and of thy wrath; and
increasest thine indignation —
That is, my miseries, the
effects of thine indignation.
Changes and war — Or, changes
and an army, that is, many
miseries succeeding one another,
like companies of soldiers
successively coming on to the
attack in a battle. Or, changes
may signify the various kinds,
and an army the great number of
his afflictions.
Verses 20-22
Job 10:20-22. Are not my days
few? Cease then, &c. — My life
is short, and of itself hastens
to an end; there is no need that
thou shouldest grudge me some
ease for so small a moment. Let
me alone — Or lay aside, or
remove thy hand or anger from
me. That I may take comfort a
little — Hebrews אבליגה,
abligah, et recreabo me, I shall
refresh, or strengthen myself:
shall have some respite, some
remission of my grief and pain,
some consolation. Those that are
not duly thankful for constant
ease should think how welcome
one hour’s ease would be if they
were in constant pain. Before I
go to the place whence I shall
not return — Shall not come back
into this world and life. At
death we must bid a final
farewell to this world: the body
must then be laid where it will
lie long; and the soul appointed
to that state where it must be
for ever. That had need to be
well done which is to be done
but once, and done for eternity.
Even to the land of darkness,
and the shadow of death — That
is, a dark and dismal shade.
Holy souls at death remove to a
land of light, where there is no
death; but their bodies they
leave to a land of darkness, and
the shadow of death. Of
darkness, as darkness itself,
&c. — He heaps up expressions
here to show that he has as
dreadful apprehensions of death
and the grave as other men
naturally have, so that it was
only the extreme misery he was
in that made him wish for it.
Without any order — No order is
observed in bringing people to
the grave, not the eldest are
brought first, not the richest,
not the poorest, and yet every
one in his own order, the order
appointed by the God of life.
All lie there on the same level,
and there is no distinction
between the prince and the
peasant; but the servant is
there free from his master: and
in the grave there is perpetual
night, and no succession of day.
And where the light is as
darkness — Where there is no
difference between light and
darkness; where the day is as
dark as the night; where there
is nothing but perpetual and
uninterrupted darkness. In the
grave there is no knowledge, no
comfort, no joy, no praising
God, no working out our
salvation, for the night is come
wherein no man can work. Let us
consider this, and therefore
walk and work while we have the
light with us. |