Verse 1
Job 12:1. And Job answered —
Greatly vexed that his friends
should entertain so firm an
opinion of his being a wicked
man, and that they should press
him so hard with their maxim,
“that affliction was a
demonstration of guilt,” he can
no longer refrain from answering
them with great sharpness. He
taxes them with self-conceit;
their maxims he treats as mean
and poor, the contrary of which
was evident to all observing
persons; good men were
frequently in distress, while
robbers and public plunderers
enjoyed their ill-gotten wealth
in perfect security, Job 12:2-6.
This was so notorious, that it
was impossible it could have
escaped their observation, Job
12:7. This was indeed the work
of Jehovah, who was all-wise and
all- powerful, and no one could
call him to account. All this he
was as sensible of as they could
be, for which reason he was the
more desirous to argue the point
with God, Job 13:1-10. And, as
for them, if they would pretend
to be judges, they should take
great care to be upright ones;
since God would by no means
excuse corruption of judgment,
though it should be in his own
behalf; and his all-seeing eye
would penetrate their motives,
though ever so closely concealed
from human view; and in his
sight all their maxims of
wisdom, on which they seemed so
much to value themselves, would
be regarded as dross and dung.
That he was not in the least
apprehensive of bringing his
cause to an issue; because he
was satisfied that the Almighty,
far from oppressing him by dint
of power, would rather afford
him strength to go through his
defence; and he was persuaded
the issue would be favourable to
him, Job 12:11-19. He,
therefore, challenges any one
among them to declare himself
the accuser; secure enough as to
that point, as he was sensible
they could not make good their
charge. He again ends with a
tender expostulation with the
Almighty, begging he might have,
before his death, an opportunity
of publicly vindicating his
innocence, since afterward he
could have no hope of doing it,
Job 12:20 to the end of chap.
14. — Heath.
Verse 2
Job 12:2. No doubt but ye are
the people — You, of all people,
are the most eminent for wisdom;
the only men living of
distinguished knowledge and
prudence. You have engrossed all
the reason of mankind, and each
of you has as much wisdom as a
whole people put together. And
wisdom shall die with you — All
the wisdom which is in the world
lives in you, and will be
utterly lost when you die. When
wise and good men die, it is a
comfort to think that wisdom and
goodness do not die with them:
it is folly to think that there
will be a great, irreparable
loss of us when we are gone,
since God has the residue of the
Spirit, and can raise up others
more fit to do his work.
Verse 3
Job 12:3. But I have an
understanding — Hebrew, a heart,
which is often put for the
understanding: God hath given me
also the knowledge and ability
to judge of these matters. I am
not inferior to you — In these
things; which he speaks, not in
a way of boasting, but for the
just vindication both of himself
and of that cause of God, which,
for the substance of it, he
maintained rightly, as God
himself attests, Job 42:6. Who
knoweth not such things — The
truth is, neither you nor I have
any reason to be puffed up with
our knowledge of these things;
for the most barbarous nations
know that God is infinite in
wisdom, and power, and justice.
But this is not the question
between you and me.
Verse 4
Job 12:4. I am as one mocked of
his neighbour — שׂחק לרעהו אהיה,
sechok leregnehu ehjeh,
literally, a jest to his friend,
I am. Thus Jeremiah complains, I
was a derision to all my people,
Lamentations 3:14. Who calleth
upon God, and he answereth him —
This is applied by Sol. Jarchi,
and the commentators in general,
to Job’s neighbour or friend;
intimating that such a one,
addressing himself to God,
received a favourable answer;
when Job himself had no
satisfactory return paid to his
loud cries and importunate
complaints. But the words are
capable of a very different
construction if we refer them to
Job, and not to his friend, and
as containing the mocking words
thrown out against him: Thus, He
calleth (say they) upon God; but
doth he answer him? — He is loud
and importunate in protesting
his innocence; in clearing and
vindicating himself; in
appealing to the tribunal of
Heaven. But to what purpose? Are
his importunities and clamours
received, his solemn
protestations heard or admitted?
His trust and confidence (he
would have us to believe) are
entirely on God; but is he eased
of his troubles; is he delivered
from his miseries? Thus the Jews
mocked our Lord Jesus: “He
trusted in God; (said they;) let
him deliver him now, if he will
have him.” “This man calleth for
Elias; let us see whether Elias
will come and save him.” The
just upright man is laughed to
scorn — The words have a
peculiar beauty, being spoken
with much religious concern and
modesty; for Job does not say,
I, a just and upright man, am
made a laughing-stock; but he
delivers himself in general
terms; the just and upright man,
&c. His meaning however is,
that, notwithstanding all their
hard censures and reproaches, he
must still believe himself to
be, through God’s grace, a just
and upright man; and must say
that, as such, he was derided by
them.
Verse 5
Job 12:5. He that is ready to
slip with his feet — The just
man, last mentioned, who is
ready to fall, or has already
fallen into trouble; is as a
lamp despised — That is, like a
lamp or torch, which, while it
shines clearly in a dark night,
is very useful and comfortable;
but when it is almost extinct,
or when the light of the morning
approaches, is neglected and
despised, as that which is
unnecessary, troublesome, and
offensive. So the same man, who,
while his feet stood fast in a
prosperous condition, was
magnified and honoured by all,
and he shone as a lamp; when he
appears to be ready to slip with
his feet, and to fall into
adversity and trouble, is looked
upon as a lamp going out, or as
the snuff of a candle, which we
throw to the ground and tread
upon: Despised in the thought of
him that is at ease — That is,
in the opinion of a man that
lives in great ease and outward
happiness; which generally make
people forget and despise those
who are in affliction. Heath
interprets the verse thus: In
calamity contempt is ready in
the thought of the insolent, for
those whose feet are tottering.
The words being transposed in
the English version, Chappelow
thinks, if they be taken in the
order in which they occur in the
Hebrew, their meaning becomes
more manifest. It is thus: A
lamp, despised in the opinion of
an indolent man, is prepared for
the slips of the foot: that is,
he who is a lamp or light to
enlighten and instruct other
people, though despised by those
who are indolent, as if they
wanted no instruction, is
prepared for the several
accidents of life, (the trials
or troubles,) which are as
natural and common to man as it
is natural for him sometimes to
stumble or slip with his foot.
Here also Job’s words are
general, without a particular
application to himself, though
doubtless he spoke them with
reference to his own distressed
circumstances.
Verse 6
Job 12:6. The tabernacles of
robbers prosper — Job’s friends
had all supposed that wicked men
cannot prosper long in the
world. This Job opposes, and
maintains that God herein acts
as sovereign, and reserves that
exact distribution of rewards
and punishments for the other
world. As if he had said, Thy
opinion, O Zophar, (see Job
11:14, &c.,) is confuted by
daily experience; which shows
that very wicked, injurious, and
impudent oppressors, tyrants,
and robbers, are so far from
always meeting with those
disappointments and miseries of
which thou spakest as being
their certain portion, that they
frequently succeed in their
iniquitous and daring
enterprises, flourish in wealth
and glory, and fill their houses
with the goods of others, which
they violently took away; of
which the Chaldeans and Sabeans
(Job 1:15; Job 1:17) are a
present and striking evidence.
And they that provoke God are
secure — They, whose common
practice it is to despise and
provoke God, are confident and
safe, apparently living without
danger or fear. Into whose hands
God bringeth abundantly — So far
is God from crushing such
persons, that he seems to favour
them with wonderful success; by
his providence, puts into their
hands the opportunities which
they seek, of enriching
themselves by injustice and
oppression, and the persons and
goods of other more righteous
men, for which they lie in wait.
Verse 7
Job 12:7. Ask now the beasts,
and they shall teach thee — If
thou observest the beasts, and
their properties, actions, and
events, from them thou mayest
learn this lesson: namely, that
which Zophar had uttered with so
much pomp and gravity, (Job
11:7-9,) concerning God’s
unsearchable wisdom, almighty
power, and absolute sovereignty:
thou dost not need, says Job, to
go into heaven or hell to know
it; but thou mayest learn it
even from the brute creatures.
The beasts of the earth, the
fowls of the air, the fishes of
the sea, all animals, and even
plants, fruits, and flowers, are
daily and hourly evidences to
us, of the being and infinite
perfections of God. The
wonderful contrivance and
admirable mechanism manifested
in their formation, the
preparation made for their
wants, the exact adaptation of
their organs to the particular
mode of life for which they are
intended; the wonderful
regularity observed in their
propagation: these things as
plainly tell us, they are the
work of God, as if they all had
intelligible voices and declared
it to us. Some commentators
suppose that Job referred here
to the greater and stronger
brute creatures, preying on the
lesser and weaker, as a fact
illustrative of his argument
respecting the power and
prosperity of robbers,
oppressors, and tyrants; and to
the inferior animals in general,
ministering to the pride,
luxury, and indulgence of
ungodly men; the earth and its
richest produce being their
property, and all nature
drudging, as it were, to gratify
their lusts. But the following
verses seem rather to lead to
the interpretation first
mentioned, which certainly is
the more instructive use of the
words.
Verse 9
Job 12:9. Who knoweth not in all
these — Or, by all these brute
creatures; that the hand of the
Lord hath wrought this — That
God, by his power and wisdom,
hath created and ordered all
that is in them, or that is done
by and among them. Job meant in
these verses to express his firm
opinion that all animate and
inanimate nature clearly bore
testimony to the creating power
and overruling providence of
God: see Nehemiah 9:6. This is
the only time that we meet with
the name Jehovah in all the
discourses between Job and his
friends. For God in that age was
more known by the name of
Shaddai, the Almighty.
Verse 10
Job 12:10. In whose hand is the
soul — That is, the life, or the
principle of life; of every
living thing — That is, of all
irrational animals, of which he
spake, Job 12:7, opposed to man
in the last words of this verse.
He means, in whose absolute
power it is to give life or to
take it away, when and how it
seemeth good to him; and the
breath of all mankind — Or, the
spirit, as the word רוח, ruach,
here used, commonly means; that
is, the immortal soul, which is
no less a creature, and in God’s
power to dispose of it, than the
animal soul or life of brutes.
Verse 11
Job 12:11. Doth not the ear try
words? &c. — Doth not the mind
distinguish truth from
falsehood, and wisdom from
folly, as exactly as the palate
distinguishes a sweet from a
bitter taste? These words may
either be considered as the
conclusion of the foregoing
discourse, or as a preface to
the following. And he thereby
demands from his friends the
liberty of judging for himself
of what they had said, and
invites them to use the same
liberty with respect to what he
had advanced; wishing them to
hear and judge of his words
candidly and impartially, that
they and he might agree in
disavowing what should appear to
be false or foolish, and in
owning what was true and
important.
Verse 12
Job 12:12. With the ancient is
wisdom — These words contain a
concession of what Bildad had
said (Job 8:8-9,) and a joining
with him in that appeal; but
withal, an intimation that this
wisdom was but imperfect, and
liable to many mistakes; and
indeed mere ignorance and folly,
if compared with the divine
wisdom, of which he speaks in
the following verses. And
therefore that antiquity ought
not to be received against the
truths of the most wise God.
Verse 13
Job 12:13. With him is wisdom —
That is, with God. Perfect
wisdom is only in him, and all
wisdom in the world cometh from
him, who giveth to young and old
as it pleaseth him. The ancients
were not wise without his gift
and grace, and with that a
younger man may be wiser than
the ancients. He hath counsel —
Practical wisdom to guide and
govern all the affairs of the
world; and understanding — A
perfect knowledge of all persons
and things. “Job shows, in the
following verses, that the
affairs of the world, and the
fortunes of men, are subject to
such variety of changes, that
all human reason and wisdom must
be silent with respect to them;
since the same calamities
involve the good and the wicked,
and seem rather to flow from the
supreme dominion and
unsearchable will of God, than
to be distributed according to
the rule of exact justice.” —
Schultens and Dodd.
Verse 14
Job 12:14. Behold, he breaketh
down — Houses, castles, cities;
and it cannot be built again —
It is not in the power of any
creature to repair what he
designs utterly to destroy. He
shutteth up a man — In prison,
or in straits and troubles; and
there can be no opening —
Without his permission and
providence. Yea, he shuts up in
the grave, and none can break
open those sealed doors. He
shuts up in hell, in chains of
darkness, and none can pass that
great gulf.
Verse 15
Job 12:15. He withholdeth the
waters — Which are reserved in
the clouds, that they may not
fall upon the earth; and they
dry up — Namely, the waters upon
the earth, springs, brooks, and
rivers dry up, as after the
general deluge, to which here is
a manifest allusion.
Verse 16
Job 12:16. With him is strength,
&c. — He doth the things
mentioned in the foregoing and
following verses so powerfully,
that no creature can resist him
and hinder his operations; and
so wisely, that none can prevent
him or frustrate his counsels.
He had said the same thing
before, (Job 12:13,)
but he repeats it here to
prepare the way for the
following events, which are
eminent instances both of his
power and wisdom. The deceived
and the deceiver are his —
Wholly subject to his disposal.
He governs the deceiver, and
sets bounds to his deceits, how
far they shall extend: he also
overrules all this to his own
glory, and the accomplishment of
his righteous designs of trying
the good and punishing wicked
men, by giving them up to
believe lies. Yet God is not the
author of any error or sin, but
only the wise and holy governor
of it.
Verse 17
Job 12:17. He leadeth
counsellors away spoiled — The
wise counsellors, or statesmen,
by whom the affairs of kings and
kingdoms are ordered, he leadeth
away as captives in triumph,
being spoiled either of that
wisdom which they had, or seemed
to have; or of that power and
dignity which they had enjoyed.
And maketh the judges fools — By
discovering their folly, and by
infatuating their minds, and
turning their own counsels to
their ruin.
Verse 18
Job 12:18. He looseth the bond
of kings — He takes from them
the power and authority
wherewith they ruled their
subjects; ruled them with
rigour, perhaps tyrannised over
and enslaved them: and he
divests them of that majesty
which he had stamped upon them,
and by which they kept their
people in awe. These God can,
and often does, take away from
them, and thereby free the
people from their bonds, of
which we have abundance of
instances in the history of
different nations; and girdeth
their loins with a girdle — He
reduces them to a mean and
servile condition; which is thus
expressed, because servants used
to gird up their garments,
(which, after the manner of
those parts of the world, were
loose and long,) that they might
be fitter for attendance upon
their masters: he not only
deposes them from their thrones,
but brings them into slavery.
Verse 20
Job 12:20. He removeth away the
speech of the trusty — Of those
wise and experienced counsellors
that were trusted by the
greatest princes. He either,
1st, Takes away from them the
gift of utterance, or restrains
them in the use of it; so that
they are not able to express
their thoughts with such
clearness and force as they used
to do. Or, 2d, He brings the
affairs of their employers into
such straits and difficulties,
that they know not what to say
or advise. Or, 3d, He takes away
their understanding, which
should suggest and direct their
speech, as it here follows. Or,
4th, He permits them to betray
their trust, and either not to
speak when they ought, or to
speak otherwise than they ought,
and to use their understanding
and eloquence, not to direct,
but to deceive and so to destroy
their princes and other
superiors.
Verse 21-22
Job 12:21-22. He poureth
contempt upon princes — That is,
he makes them contemptible to
their subjects and others; and
weakeneth the strength of the
mighty — The word מזיח, meziach,
here rendered strength, occurs
also Psalms 109:19, where it is
translated girdle. The clause
might here have been rendered,
He looseth the girdle of the
mighty, a phrase which signifies
weakness, Isaiah 5:27; as the
girding of the girdle denotes
strength and power, Isaiah
22:21; Isaiah 45:5. Both these
phrases are taken from the
quality of their garments,
which, being loose and long,
disabled a man for walking or
working. He discovereth deep
things out of darkness — That
is, the most secret and crafty
counsels of princes: which are
contrived and carried on in the
dark.
Verses 23-25
Job 12:23-25. He increaseth the
nations, &c. — What he had
hitherto said of princes, he now
applies to nations and people,
whom God either increases or
diminishes as he pleases. He
enlargeth the nations — He
multiplies them so that they are
forced to send forth colonies
into other lands; and
straiteneth them again —
Diminishes them by war, famine,
or pestilence: or, as ינחם,
janchem, more properly
signifies, leadeth them in, or
bringeth them back, namely, into
their own land, and confineth
them there. So that whole
nations, as well as their
princes, are perfectly under his
power, and he enlarges their
bounds, or reduces them into
more narrow limits, as he
pleaseth. He taketh away the
heart of the chief of the people
— Deprives them both of courage
and judgment, and causeth them
to wander in a wilderness; that
is, fills them with confusion,
uncertainty, and perplexity of
mind, so that they know not
which way to turn themselves.
They grope in the dark — Like
men that cannot see their way.
And he maketh them to stagger
like a drunken man — Who reels
hither and thither without any
certainty. So they sometimes
take one course, and sometimes
another, as resolving to try all
experiments, and indeed not
knowing what to do. All their
counsels and motions are as
unsteady and fluctuating as
those of a man intoxicated. |