Verse 1
Job 14:1. Man that is born of a
woman — A weak creature; and,
withal, corrupt and sinful, and
of that sex by which sin and all
other calamities were brought
into the world. Is of few days —
Few at the most, in comparison
with the days of the first
patriarchs, much more in
comparison with the days of
eternity. Man is now a
short-lived creature in himself,
and withers so soon of his own
accord, that he needs no violent
hand to cut him off. And full of
trouble — Liable to a variety of
miseries. He is not only
troubled, but full of trouble,
Hebrew, שׂבע רגז, sebang rogez,
satur trepidę corporis et animi
commotionis, full of disquietude
and commotion in mind and body;
exposed to labour and toil,
affliction and pain, grief and
fear: a day seldom passing
without some cause of vexation
and distress, some disorder,
some calamity or other. And,
therefore, Job intimates, man is
a fitter object for God’s
compassion than for his anger or
severity.
Verse 2
Job 14:2. He cometh forth like a
flower — Tender and delicate,
fair and beautiful, his
faculties and members opening
and expanding themselves by
degrees; and is cut down — By
the scythe of some spreading
malady; or cropped by the rude
hand of some ruthless distemper;
or nipped and withered by the
frost of some wasting weakness
and decay. He fleeth also as a
shadow — Which, being caused by
the sun, follows its motions,
and is in perpetual variation,
until, at last, it quite
vanishes and disappears. “The
flower,” says Henry, “is fading,
and all its beauty soon withers
and is gone. The shadow is
fleeting, and its very being
will soon be lost in the shadows
of night. Of neither do we make
any account, in neither do we
put any confidence.”
Verse 3
Job 14:3. And dost thou open
thine eyes on such a one? — Dost
thou, the infinite Jehovah, the
self-existent, independent, and
supreme Lord of all, the
Almighty, open thine eyes on
such an insignificant and
helpless creature? Dost thou,
the immutable, the eternal God,
behold and take account of such
a frail, changeable, and
short-lived being? Dost thou,
ever- blessed and most holy,
regard such an infirm, polluted,
and miserable object? Dost thou
take any thought or care about
him? Is he not infinitely
beneath thy notice? And dost
thou stoop so low as even to
observe his ways, yea, all his
ways? And bringest me into
judgment with thee — Pleadest
with me by thy judgments, and
thereby, in a manner, forcest me
to plead with thee. Dost thou
bring me, such a worthless worm
as I am, into judgment with
thee, who art so quick-sighted
to discover the least failing,
so holy to hate it, so just to
condemn it, so mighty to punish
it? The consideration of our
inability to contend with God,
of our own sinfulness and
weakness, should engage us to
pray, Lord, enter not into
judgment with thy servant.
Verse 4
Job 14:4. Who can bring a clean
thing out of an unclean? — I
confess I am an unclean
creature, and therefore liable
to be abhorred by thy holiness,
and condemned by thy justice, if
thou wilt deal rigorously with
me. But, remember, this is not
my peculiar case, but the common
lot of every man, who descended
from sinful parents, and, being
infected with original
corruption, must unavoidably be
unclean. Why, then, dost thou
inflict such peculiar and
extraordinary judgments upon me
for that which is common to all
men? And although my natural
corruption do not excuse my
actual sins, yet I hope it may
procure some mitigation of my
punishment, and move thy divine
pity to deal less severely with
me. Observe, reader, clean
children can no more come from
unclean parents, nor clean
performances from an unclean
principle, than pure streams can
proceed from an impure spring,
or grapes from thorns. Our
habitual corruption is derived,
with our nature, from our
progenitors, and is therefore
bred in the bone: and our blood
is not only attainted by a legal
conviction, but tainted with an
hereditary disease. And hence
flow all actual transgressions,
which are the natural product of
habitual corruption. This holy
Job here laments, as all that
are sanctified do, tracing the
streams up to the fountain. The
Chaldee paraphrase reads this
verse, Who can make a man clean
that is polluted with sin?
Cannot one? that is, God: or,
who but God, who is one, and
will spare him? God can change
the skin of the Ethiopian, and
to him we ought to direct our
prayer, saying, It is the
prerogative of thy grace to
bring a clean thing out of an
unclean, and that grace I humbly
implore.
Verse 5-6
Job 14:5-6. Seeing his days are
determined — Limited to a
certain period. The number of
his months is with thee —
Exactly known to thee, and in
thy power and disposal. Thou
hast appointed his bounds, &c. —
Thou hast appointed a certain
end of his days, beyond which he
cannot prolong his life. Turn
from him, that he may rest —
Withdraw thine afflicting hand
from him, that he may have some
present ease and comfort. Till
he shall accomplish, as a
hireling, his day — Give him
some respite till he finish his
course, and come to the period
of his life, which thou hast
allotted him, as a man appoints
a set time to a hired servant;
which period will be as welcome
to him as the end of his day of
labour and toil is to the
hireling. This idea is implied
in the word ירצה, jertzeh, here
rendered, he shall accomplish.
Which properly means, he shall
be pleased, or delighted. And
the sense seems to be, As the
poor mercenary rests and
rejoices when he has finished
the work of the day, and
received his wages; so must that
be an acceptable and joyful
time, which puts a period to the
life and sufferings of a man
sinking under the burden of
numerous and heavy troubles, and
which introduces him into a
state of perfect rest and
endless felicity.
Verses 7-10
Job 14:7-10. For there is hope
of a tree, if it be cut down —
If the body of a tree be cut
down, and only the stem or stump
be left in the ground, yet there
is hope; that it will sprout
again — Hebrew, יחליŠ, jachalip,
will yet renew itself, will
revive and flourish as the
spring comes on. Though the root
wax old — Begin to wither and
decay; and the stock thereof die
— Namely, in outward appearance;
yet, through the scent of water
— By means of water; scent or
smell being here figuratively
ascribed to a tree. The moisture
of the earth, and the rain of
heaven, have sufficient
influence upon it to revive it,
and cause it to bud; and bring
forth boughs like a plant — As
if it were a tree newly planted.
But man dieth and wasteth away —
Man, though a far nobler
creature, is in a much worse
condition, as to this world, for
when once he loseth his present
life he never recovers it. Two
words are here used for man,
גבר, geber, a mighty man: though
mighty, he dies: אדם, adam, a
man of earth: being made of
earth, he returns to it. He
dieth and wasteth away: before
death he is dying daily,
continually wasting away; in
death he gives up the ghost: the
spirit leaves the body and
returns to God, the Father of
spirits, who gave it. After
death, where is he? — Not where
he was; his place knows him no
more: his body, all that is
visible of him, is rotting away
in the grave. But where is the
thinking, intelligent principle,
the self-conscious being, the
proper man? Is this nowhere?
Yes, it is somewhere; and it is
a very awful consideration to
think where they are that have
given up the ghost, and where we
shall be when we give it up. It
is gone into the world of
spirits; gone into eternity,
gone to return no more to this
world.
Verse 11
Job 14:11. As the waters fail
from the sea — This may mean,
either, 1st, As the waters go,
or flow out from the sea, and
return not thither again,
Ecclesiastes 1:7 : or, 2d, As
waters, that is, some portion of
the waters, are exhaled from the
sea by the sun, or are received
and sunk into the dry and
thirsty earth: or, 3d, As the
waters of the sea fail, when the
sea forsakes the place into
which it used to flow; and the
flood decayeth and drieth up —
As a flood, or a river, or a
pond (for the word signifies any
considerable confluence of
waters) in a great drought
decayeth, and is dried up, in
which cases the same waters
never return to their former
places, so it is with man; when
once the fountain of his life is
dried up he dies, and never
revives again as to the present
life.
Verse 12
Job 14:12. So man lieth down —
In his bed the grave, sleeping
the sleep of death. And riseth
not till the heavens be no more
— That is, until the time of the
general resurrection and
restitution of all things, when
these visible heavens shall pass
away, and be no more, at least
in the same form in which they
are now. This whole paragraph is
interpreted in a somewhat
different way by a late writer.
“After a tree is cut down, we
see, nevertheless, the old stock
flourish again, and send forth
new branches; and shall man
then, when he once expires, he
extinct for ever? Is there no
hope that he shall revive, and
be raised again hereafter? Yes,
there is, according to the
doctrine delivered to us by our
ancestors: but then they inform
us, at the same time, that this
resurrection shall not be but
with the dissolution and
renovation of the world, Job
14:11-12. The waters go off from
the sea, and the flood (the
river) will decay and dry up.
And man lieth down and riseth
not till the heavens be no more;
(till then) they shall not awake
nor be raised out of their
sleep.” The meaning seems to be,
that as we see every thing in
flux, and subject to change, so
the whole shall one day be
changed. The sea itself will at
length be quite absorbed; and
the running rivers, which now
flow perpetually, as if supplied
by everlasting springs, will
nevertheless, in time, quite
cease and disappear. This
visible frame of things shall be
dissolved, and the present
heavens themselves shall be no
more: and then, and not before,
comes the resurrection and
general judgment.
Verse 13
Job 14:13. O that thou wouldest
hide me in the grave — The grave
is not only a resting-place, but
a hiding-place to the children
of God: Christ has the key of
the grave to open and let in
now, and to let out at the
resurrection. God hides his
people in the grave as we hide
our treasure in a place of
secrecy and safety; and he that
hides will find what he has hid,
and nothing shall be lost. O
that thou wouldst hide me, not
only from the storms and
troubles of this life, but for
the bliss and glory of a better
life; let me lie in the grave
reserved for immortality, in
secret from all the world, but
not from thee, not from those
eyes which saw my substance when
first curiously wrought in the
lowest parts of the earth,
Psalms 139:15-16. Thus, it was
not only in a passionate
weariness of this life that he
wished to die, but in a pious
assurance of a better life, to
which at length he should arise.
Until thy wrath be past — As
long as our bodies lie in the
grave there are some effects of
God’s wrath against sin, but
when the body is raised, that
wrath is wholly past, and death,
the last enemy, is totally
destroyed. That thou wouldest
appoint me a set time — Not only
fix a time when thou wilt end my
sufferings and my life, but when
thou wilt remember my flesh
lodged in the grave, as thou
didst remember Noah and every
living thing in the ark, Genesis
8:1. The bodies of the saints
shall not be forgotten in the
dust; there is a time appointed,
a set time, for their being
inquired after.
Verse 14
Job 14:14. If a man die, shall
he live again? — He shall not in
this world, but he shall in
another and better; and,
therefore, all the days of my
appointed time will I wait —
Hebrew, צבאי, tsebai, of my
warfare, namely, with my
spiritual enemies, or of my
service and suffering, or of the
station and place God has
assigned me. The idea which the
word conveys is partly, at
least, that of a post or station
given a man by God to maintain,
till he be released from it, and
called to a better state; as if
Job had said, Whatever station
or condition God shall please to
appoint me, either here or in
the intermediate state, I shall
still wait in earnest
expectation for the future
renovation and resurrection;
here evidently intended by the
change which he expected to
come. “I must insist upon it,”
says Mr. Peters. “that Job, in
this verse, declares very
clearly his hope of a future
resurrection. I know it is a
common opinion, that by the
change here mentioned, is meant
the change of death; but the
sense above given suits best
with the context, as also with
the Hebrew word חליפה, chalipah,
which properly signifies a
change for the better, a
renewal.” Houbigant renders the
beginning of this verse, For
though a man die, yet he shall
revive again; and, therefore, I
will wait, &c, observing, in
agreement with Mr. Peters, that
nothing can be so absurd as to
suppose the words contain any
doubt of a future life.
Verse 15
Job 14:15. Thou shalt call and I
will answer thee — 1st, At
death, thou shalt call my body
to the grave and my soul to
thyself, and I will cheerfully
answer, Here I am. Gracious
souls readily answer death’s
summons, and appear to his writ.
Their spirits are not forcibly
required of them, as was that of
the rich man, Luke 12:20, but
willingly resigned by them, and
the earthly tabernacle not
violently pulled down, but
voluntarily laid down. 2d, At
the resurrection thou shalt call
me out of the grave by the voice
of the archangel, and I will
answer and come at thy call. For
thou wilt have a desire to the
work of thy hands — A love for
the soul, which thou hast made,
and new-made by thy grace; and
for the body, which is also the
work of thy hands, and to which
thou wilt have a desire, having
prepared glory for it in a world
of glory.
Verse 16-17
Job 14:16-17. For now — Or
rather, But now, for this seems
to be added by way of
opposition, as if he had said, I
believe thou wilt pity, help,
and deliver me, and even
wonderfully change my person,
state, and place; but, for the
present, it is far otherwise
with me. Thus Job returns to his
complaints; and, though he is
not without hope of future
felicity, he finds it hard to
get over his present grievances.
Thou numberest my steps — Thou
makest a strict inquiry into all
my actions, that thou mayest
find out all my errors. Dost
thou not watch over my sin? —
The Hebrew should rather be
rendered, Do not watch over, or
take notice of, my sin, as the
Chaldee paraphrast writes. Thus
the vulgar Latin, Parce peccatis
meis, Spare my sins; that is,
forbear to punish me for them.
He longed to go hence, to that
world where God’s wrath would be
past, because now he was under
the continual tokens of it; as a
child, under the severe
discipline of the rod, longs to
be of age! As if he had said, O
that my change were come! for
now thou seemest to number my
steps, and watch over my sin,
and seal it up in a bag, Job
14:17, as writings, or other
choice things are preserved,
that they may be all brought
forth upon occasion, and not one
of them forgotten; or, as bills
of endictment are kept safe to
be produced against the
prisoner. Thou keepest all my
sins in thy memory. But herein
Job speaks rashly; or, rather,
this verse ought to be rendered,
in conformity with what was
observed concerning a clause of
the last, Do not seal up my
transgressions in a bag, nor
note my iniquities in thy
register.
Verse 18-19
Job 14:18-19. As the mountain
falling cometh to naught, &c. —
As when a great mountain falls,
by an earthquake or inundation,
it moulders away like a fading
leaf, (as the Hebrew ward
signifies,) and as the rock,
when, by the violence of winds
or earthquakes, it is removed
out of its place, and thrown
down, is never re-advanced; and
as the waters, by continual
droppings, wear away the stones,
so that they can never be made
whole again; and as thou wastest
away, by a great and violent
inundation, the things which
grow out of the dust of the
earth, herbs, and fruits, and
plants, which once washed away
are irrecoverably lost; in like
manner thou destroyest the hope
of man: when man dies, all hope
of his living again in this
world is lost. Thus, as before
he declared the hopelessness of
man’s restoration from death to
this animal life, by way of
opposition to such things as
did, in a manner, rise from
death to life, Job 14:7-10; so
now he declares the same thing,
by way of similitude to such
things as, being once lost and
gone, are past all hopes of
recovery.
Verse 20
Job 14:20. Thou prevailest for
ever against him — When once
thou takest away this life, it
is gone for ever; for he speaks
not here of man’s future and
eternal life in another world.
And he passeth — That is, he
dieth: man’s death is often
called a passage or a going, to
intimate that it is not an
annihilation, but only a
translation of him into another
place and state. Thou changest
his countenance — That is, his
visage, which, by death and its
harbingers, is quite altered,
both in colour and shape. When a
man has been a few days sick,
how apparent is the change in
his countenance! and much more
when he has been a few minutes
dead! The countenance that was
majestic and awful, becomes mean
and despicable; that which was
lovely and amiable, becomes
ghastly and frightful! Where
then is the admired beauty? Nay,
the approach of death will
frequently, through discomposing
the mind, make the strongest and
stoutest to change countenance:
it will make the most cheerful
and smiling countenance to look
grave and serious, and the most
bold and daring to look pale and
timorous. By changing his
countenance, may also be meant
changing the face and state of
his affairs, as to worldly
riches, pleasures, and honours;
all which he leaves behind him.
Thou sendest him away — To his
long home, by death.
Verse 21
Job 14:21. His sons come to
honour — Hebrews יכבדו, jicbedu:
increase either in number or in
greatness. The LXX. render it,
πολλων δε γενομενων, become
many; and the word ויצערו,
vejitzgnaru, and they are
brought low, they interpret in
the opposite sense, εαν δε
ολιγοι γενωνται, if they be
diminished, or become few. He
knoweth it not, &c. — Either,
1st, He is ignorant of all such
events; or, 2d, Is not concerned
nor affected with them. A dead
or dying man minds not these
things. The consideration of
this should moderate our cares
concerning our children and
families. God will know what
becomes of them or happens to
them, when we are gone. To him,
therefore, let us commit them:
with him let us leave them; and
not burden ourselves with
needless, fruitless cares
concerning them.
Verse 22
Job 14:22. But his flesh upon
him shall have pain — Or, while
his flesh is upon him; and his
soul within him — While the soul
is clothed with, or united to,
the body, he feels sharp pains
in his body, and bitter grief in
his soul. Dying work is
generally hard work; dying pangs
sore pangs. It is folly,
therefore, for men to defer
their repentance to a deathbed,
and to have that to do, which is
the one thing needful, when they
are really unfit to do any
thing. But it is true wisdom, by
making our peace with God in
Christ, and keeping a good
conscience, to treasure up
comforts, which will support and
relieve us against the pains and
sorrows of a dying hour. |