Verse 1
Job 19:1. Then Job answered and
said — “Tired with the little
regard paid by the three friends
to his defence, and finding them
still insisting on their general
maxims, Job desires them calmly
to consider his case; to reflect
that his failings, whatever they
were, had not been at all
prejudicial to them; but if, on
the strength of their general
principle, they thought
themselves warranted from his
sufferings to infer his guilt,
he desires them to take notice
that this was God’s particular
infliction, Job 19:2-7; that he
insisted on his innocence, and
desired nothing but to bring his
cause to an issue, which was, as
yet, denied him, Job 19:8-20;
that God’s inflictions were
indeed very grievous; and, to
excite their compassion, he
makes here a very moving
description of them; but tells
them that should be a reason why
they should pity him, and not
add to the load by their unkind
suspicions and cruel treatment,
Job 19:21-22; that he was so far
from retracting his plea, that
he was desirous it should remain
for ever on record, Job
19:23-24. — Heath. For he was
assured a day was coming in
which all his afflictions would
be fully recompensed, and in
which they would wish that they
had treated him in a more
friendly manner; though he
questioned whether that would
suffice to avert God’s judgments
from them.” — Dodd.
Verse 2-3
Job 19:2-3. And break me in
pieces with words — With mere
empty words, void of sense or
argument; with your impertinent
and unedifying discourses and
bitter reproaches. These ten
times have ye reproached me —
That is, many times, a certain
number being put for an
uncertain. Ye make yourselves
strange — You carry yourselves
like strangers to me, are not
affected with my calamities, and
condemn me as if you had never
known my integrity and piety.
Verse 4-5
Job 19:4-5. Be it that I have
erred, &c. — If I have sinned, I
myself suffer for my sins, and
therefore deserve your pity
rather than your reproaches. If
you will magnify yourselves, &c.
— Use imperious and contemptuous
speeches against me; or seek
praise from others by
outreasoning me: and plead
against me my reproach — Declaim
against me, and allege my
calamities, which have made me
contemptible, as an argument to
prove me a hypocrite, and
condemn me as such.
Verse 6-7
Job 19:6-7. Know now — Consider
well, that God hath overthrown
me — Hath grievously afflicted
me in various ways, and
therefore it ill becomes you to
aggravate my miseries. Hebrew,
עותני, gnivetani; hath perverted
me; either my state and
condition, as has now been said:
or my right and cause. He
oppresseth me with power, and
will not give me a fair hearing,
as it follows, Job 19:7. This is
a harsh reflection on God: but
such thoughts and expressions
have sometimes proceeded from
good men when they have been
under sore afflictions and
temptations, which was now Job’s
case. And hath compassed me with
his net — With afflictions on
every side, so that I cannot
escape, nor obtain freedom to
plead with him as I desire.
Behold, I cry out of wrong —
Hebrew, אצעק חמס, etsgnack
chamas, literally, I cry out
injury! violence! namely, from
my friends, who show me no pity,
but condemn me without cause,
and rob me of my good name; or
from the Sabeans and Chaldeans,
who have plundered me of my
substance. Perhaps he also meant
to complain that God himself
treated him with rigorous
justice, and not according to
the mercy and benignity which he
was wont to show to upright and
good men. I cry aloud, but there
is no judgment — Neither God nor
man relieves or pities me. God,
for a time, may seem to turn
away his ear from his people, to
be angry at their prayers, and
overlook their appeals to him,
and they must be excused if in
that case they complain
bitterly. Wo unto us if God be
against us.
Verse 8-9
Job 19:8-9. He hath fenced up my
way, &c. — So that I can see no
means or possibility of getting
out of my troubles. He hath set
darkness in my paths — So that I
cannot discern what course I
ought to take. He hath stripped
me of my glory — That is, of my
estate, and children, and
authority, and all my comforts.
And taken the crown from my head
— All mine ornaments.
Verse 10
Job 19:10. He hath destroyed me
on every side — In all respects,
my person, and family, and
estate. And I am gone — I am a
lost and dead man. My hope hath
he removed — All my hopes of the
present life, but not of the
life to come; like a tree —
Which, being once plucked up by
the roots, never grows again.
Hope in this life is a perishing
thing. But the hope of good men,
when it is cut off from this
world, is but removed like a
tree, transplanted from this
nursery to the garden of God.
Verse 12
Job 19:12. His troops come
together — My afflictions, which
are but God’s instruments and
soldiers marching under his
conduct; and raise up their way
against me — Cast up a bank, or
make a trench about me, as an
army besieging a place; or raise
a causeway or path, as pioneers
usually do, in low and marshy
grounds, for the march of an
army: that is, God removes all
impediments out of the way, and
lays me open to troubles and
calamities of every kind.
Verse 13
Job 19:13. He hath put my
brethren far from me, &c. — I
looked for some support and
comfort from my kindred and
friends, but they were so
astonished at the number and
dreadfulness of my calamities
that they fled from me as a man
accursed of God: and as for my
neighbours, who formerly much
courted my acquaintance: they
keep aloof from me, as if they
had never known me. As we must
see the hand of God in all the
injuries we receive from our
enemies, so likewise in all the
slights and unkindnesses we
receive from our friends.
Verse 14
Job 19:14. My kinsfolk — Whom
nature inclined to love and
befriend me; have failed — To
perform the offices of humanity
which they owed me: and my
familiar friends — To whom I was
united by a stronger bond than
that of nature; have forgotten
me — Have neglected and
disregarded me as much as if
they had quite forgotten the
friendship there was between us.
Verse 15-16
Job 19:15-16. They that dwell in
my house — Hebrew, גרי ביתי,
garei beethei, peregrini domus
meæ, the sojourners of my house,
that is, those that formerly
were kindly entertained at my
house, whether strangers,
widows, or the fatherless; nay,
the people of my family, even my
maids, who, by reason of their
sex, have commonly more tender
and compassionate hearts than
men, count me for a stranger —
Have forgotten the respect they
owe, and were wont to pay to me,
and regard my commands and
concerns no more than if I were
a stranger to whom they had no
relation. I called my servant —
To do some servile office; and
he gave me no answer — He
regarded not what I said; no,
not when I besought him, as if
he had been my master.
Verse 17
Job 19:17. My breath is strange
to my wife, &c. — I am become so
loathsome that my wife will not
come near me, though I have
conjured her to do it, by the
dear memory of our children,
those common pledges of our
mutual love. Houbigant
translates the verse, My wife
abhors even my breath: the
children of my body fly far from
my offensive smell: and he
observes, that “we are nowhere
told that all the children of
Job perished, but only such as
were feasting in their eldest
brother’s house.” It must be
observed, however, that when the
messenger informed Job of the
destruction of his family, the
answer which he gave, namely,
Naked came I, &c., supposes that
there were none who survived
that calamity. Some are of
opinion that those whom Job
calls his children were
grandchildren. The LXX. take
them for the children of
concubines. Sol. Jarchi supposes
they were his domestics: but the
Hebrew text here does not
necessarily imply that there
were any children of his then in
existence. For there is nothing
for the word sake; it is
literally, I entreated for the
children of my body, which may
mean, as interpreted above, for,
or by the memory of our
children, namely, the children
now dead. The general
interpretation here supposes
that Job’s breath, by reason of
his sores and ulcers, was so
offensive that his wife could
not bear to come near him; but
the words do not necessarily
imply that: for, as he had just
said before, I entreated my
servant with my mouth; so, when
he immediately adds, My breath
is strange: &c., he might mean
no more than that his breath or
voice was strange also to his
wife: that is, she had as little
regard to what he said as the
servant who gave him no answer
when he was called. See
Chappelow, who thus paraphrases
the passage: “When my servant
gave no attention, I called to
my wife; but neither did she
regard me, though I particularly
mentioned to her (as an
aggravation of my calamities,
and to move her compassion) the
loss of my children, whom I had
begotten.”
Verse 18
Job 19:18. Yea, young children
despised me — Or, the wicked, as
in the margin; and as the word
עויליםalso signifies, being
derived from עול, gniv-vel,
inique egit, he acted unjustly.
Some render it, fools, reading
אוילים, evilim, from אול. If we
take the word in any of these
senses, we must think that Job
had good reason to complain,
whether he was despised by
children, by wicked men, or by
fools. I arose, and they spake
against we — To show my respect
to them, though they were my
inferiors, I rose from my seat,
or I stood up, as the word
אקומה, akumah, means. I did not
disoblige, or provoke them, by
any uncivil behaviour toward
them; but was very courteous and
condescending to them, and yet
they made it their business to
speak against me, and give me
abusive words in return for my
courtesy.
Verse 19
Job 19:19. All my inward friends
abhorred me — מתי סודי, methei
sodi, The men of my secret, or
council; my intimates and
confidants, to whom I imparted
all my thoughts, counsels, and
concerns. And they whom I loved
— Sincerely and fervently; are
turned against me — So ill do
they requite me. He does not
say, they who loved me, for had
their love been sincere it would
have continued, and manifested
itself toward him in his
affliction as well as in his
prosperity.
Verse 20
Job 19:20. My bone — Or, bones,
the singular collectively being
put for the plural: cleaveth to
my skin — Namely, immediately,
the flesh next to the skin being
consumed. The sense is,
Afflictions have so wasted me,
that I am little more than skin
and bone. And to my flesh — Or,
As to my flesh; as closely as it
does to those remainders of my
flesh, which are left in my
inward parts. And I am escaped
with the skin of my teeth — I am
scarcely free from sores in any
part of my skin, except that of
my gums, which holdeth and
covereth the roots of my teeth.
Schultens says, that “it seems
to be a proverbial expression,
for those who lie beaten and
covered with wounds from head to
foot, and whose mouths also are
broken with blows, so that,
being half dead, they are
scarcely able to breathe.” Heath
and Le Clerc render the verse,
My bones pierce through my skin,
and my flesh and my teeth slip
out from my gums.
Verse 21
Job 19:21. Have pity, have pity
upon me, O ye my friends — For
such you have been, and still
pretend to be; and, therefore,
fulfil that relation; and, if
you will not help me, yet, at
least, pity me. “Nothing can be
more pathetic,” says Dr. Dodd,
“than the repetition in this
passage, as well as the
immediate application to his
friends; as if he had said,
‘You, at least, with whom I have
enjoyed so intimate and friendly
a correspondence; you, who more
especially should exert the
tender office of consolation, do
you have some pity upon me,
since the hand of God hath so
fearfully afflicted me.’“
Verse 22
Job 19:22. Why do you persecute
me as God? — As if you had the
same infinite knowledge which
God hath, whereby you could
search my heart, and know my
hypocrisy, and the same
sovereign authority, to say and
do what you please with me. And
are not satisfied with my flesh
— That is, with the consumption
and torment of my whole body,
but add to it the vexation of my
spirit, by grievous censures and
reproaches, and are like wolves
and lions, which are not
contented with devouring the
flesh of their prey, but also
break their bones.
Verse 23-24
Job 19:23-24. O that my words
were now written! — Either, 1st,
All his foregoing discourses
with his friends, which he was
so far from disowning or being
ashamed of, that he was desirous
all ages should know them, that
they might judge between him and
them, and decide whose cause was
better, and whose arguments were
stronger: or, rather, 2d, The
words which he was now about to
speak, containing a remarkable
confession of his faith. O that
they were printed in a book! —
Or, rather, inserted, or
recorded (as the word יחקו,
jochaku, signifies) in a
register. The word printed is
certainly used very improperly
here, as being a term expressive
of an art invented only about
three hundred and fifty years
ago: and, “especially as it does
not, even by an improper
expression,” as Dr. Dodd justly
observes, “convey the idea of
Job, which was the perpetuating
his words; records, to which Job
refers, being written, not
printed among us. Observe,
reader, that which Job wished
for, God granted. His words are
written in God’s book, are
entered and preserved in the
divine records. So that,
wherever those records are read,
there shall this glorious
confession be declared for a
memorial of him. That they were
graven with an iron pen — Of
which there is also mention
Jeremiah 17:1; and lead — Job
here alludes to the ancient
custom of graving the letters on
stone or marble, and then
filling them up with lead, to
render the inscription more
legible and lasting. The LXX.
however, do not seem to have
understood Job thus, but rather
to have supposed that he meant
the recording of his words, by
engraving them on plates of
lead. Their words are, εν
γραφειω σιδηρω και μολιβω η εν
πετραις εγγλυφηναι, To be
engraven with an iron pen and
lead, (that is, upon lead,) or
on the rocks. And it is very
probable it was customary in
those times to engrave
inscriptions on plates of lead
as well as on stones. One of
these ways of engraving must
have been intended by Job; for
it would be absurd to suppose,
that he meant to have the
inscription cut on stone with a
leaden pen, which could make no
impression on so hard a
material.
Verse 25
Job 19:25. For I know, &c. — Job
proceeds now to assign the
reason of his confidence in the
goodness of his cause, and of
his willingness to have the
matter depending between him and
his friends published and
submitted to any trial. I know
that my Redeemer liveth — I have
no knowledge, nor confidence,
nor hope of being restored to
the prosperities of this life;
yet this one thing I know, which
is much more comfortable and
considerable, and therein I
rejoice, though I be now a dying
man, and in a desperate
condition for this life; I know
that I have a living and
powerful Redeemer to plead my
cause, and vindicate my person
from all severe and unjust
censures, and to give sentence
for me: a Redeemer, whom I call
mine, because I have a
particular interest in him, and
he hath a particular care of me.
Hebrew, ידעתי גאלי חי, jadangti
goali chai, I know my living
Redeemer; that is, My Redeemer
is living, is now living, and I
know him: I am acquainted,
truly, experimentally, and
savingly acquainted with him,
because he hath revealed himself
to me, and hath given me an
understanding to know him.
Remember, reader, this knowledge
of him, this acquaintance with
him, is absolutely necessary to
thy salvation. But what
Redeemer, and what deliverance,
does Job speak of in this and
the two following verses?
Answer: Some late interpreters
understand this passage
metaphorically, of God’s
delivering Job out of his
afflictions and troubles, and
restoring him to his former
splendour and happiness in this
world; it being, they say, a
usual thing in Scripture, to
call eminent dangers and
calamities death, and great and
glorious deliverances a
quickening or resurrection. But
most interpreters, both ancient
and modern, understand it of
Christ, and of his resurrection,
and of Job’s resurrection to
life by his power and goodness.
And this seems most probable,
for many reasons: 1st, Because a
proper and literal
interpretation of any passage of
Scripture is always to be
preferred before the
metaphorical, where it suits
with the text and with other
passages. 2d, Because the Hebrew
word, גאל, goel, here used,
although sometimes used of God,
absolutely or essentially
considered, yet most properly
agrees to Jesus Christ: for this
word is primarily spoken of the
next kinsman, whose office it
was to redeem, by a price paid,
the sold or mortgaged estate of
his deceased kinsman, Leviticus
25:25; and to revenge his death,
Numbers 35:12, and to maintain
his name and honour by raising
up a seed to him, Deuteronomy
25:5. All which most fitly
agrees to Christ, who is our
nearest kinsman and brother, as
having taken our nature upon
him, Hebrews 2:11; who hath
redeemed that everlasting
inheritance which our first
parents had utterly lost, by the
price of his own blood; and hath
revenged the death of mankind
upon the contriver of it, the
devil, by destroying him and his
kingdom; and hath taken a course
to preserve our name, and
honour, and persons, to
eternity. 3d, Because Job was so
far from having a firm
confidence, such as is here
expressed, that he had not the
least degree of hope of any such
temporal restoration as that
which his friends promised him,
as we have often observed in his
former discourses, as Job 16:22;
Job 17:12-13. And, therefore,
that hope which every righteous
man hath in his death, and which
Job often professes that he had,
must necessarily have been fixed
on his happiness in a future
life. 4th, Because this is a
more lofty and spiritual strain
than any in Job’s former
discourses; which generally
savour of dejection and
diffidence, and either declare
or increase his grief; whereas,
this puts him into another and
much better temper. And,
therefore, it is well observed,
that after he uttered these
expressions we meet not with any
such impatient or despairing
passages as we had before, which
shows that he was now inspired
with new life and comfort. 5th,
Because this well agrees with
several other passages in this
book; wherein Job declares that,
although he had no hope as to
this life, and the comforts
thereof, yet he had a hope
beyond death, which made him
profess, Though he slay me, yet
will I trust in him, Job 13:15.
Trust in him for what? Surely,
for comfort and happiness.
Where? Not in this life, for
that he supposes to be lost;
therefore it must have been in
the next life. And this was one
reason why he so vehemently
desired death, because he knew
it would bring him unto God, and
unto true felicity. And this his
hope and confidence in God, and
in his favour to him, Job
opposes to those foul and false
aspersions which his friends had
cast upon him, as if he had
forsaken God, and cast off all
fear of him, and hope in him.
But it is objected, How is it
credible, that Job, in those
ancient times, and in that dark
state of the church, should know
these great mysteries of
Christ’s incarnation, and of the
resurrection and life to come?
Answer, 1st, The mystery of the
Messiah’s incarnation was
revealed to Adam by that first
and noted promise, that the seed
of the woman should bruise the
serpent’s head, Genesis 3:15;
which, being the only foundation
of his hopes, for the recovery
and salvation of himself and of
all his posterity, he would
doubtless carefully and
diligently explain, as need
required, to those that
descended from him. 2d, That the
ancient patriarchs and prophets
were generally acquainted with
these doctrines is undeniably
evident, from Hebrews 11. and 1
Peter 1:9-12. 3d, Particularly
Abraham, from whom Job is
supposed to have descended, had
the promise made to him, that
Christ should come out of his
loins, Genesis 12:3; and is said
to have seen Christ’s day, and
to have rejoiced to see it, John
8:56; and had his hopes and
desires fixed upon a divine and
heavenly city and country,
Hebrews 11:10; Hebrews 11:16.
And as Abraham knew and believed
these things himself, so it is
manifest that he taught them to
his children and servants,
Genesis 18:19, and to his
kindred and others, as he had
occasion; and, therefore, it
cannot seem strange that Job
professes his faith and hope in
these things.
That my Redeemer liveth — I am a
dying man, and my hopes as to
this life are dying, but he
liveth, and that for ever; and,
therefore, though I die, yet he
both can and will make me to
live again in due time, though
not in this world, yet in the
other, which is much better.
And, though I am now highly
censured and condemned by my
friends as a great dissembler
and secret sinner, whom God’s
hand hath found out; yet there
is a day coming wherein my cause
shall be pleaded, and my name
and honour vindicated from all
these reproaches, and my
integrity brought to light. And
that he shall stand in the
latter day — In the days of the
Messiah, or of the gospel, which
are often called the latter or
last days, or times, as Isaiah
2:2; Hosea 3:5; Joel 2:28;
compared with Acts 2:17; 1
Timothy 4:1; and 2 Timothy 3:1;
Hebrews 1:1. Or at the day of
the general resurrection and
judgment, which, as those holy
patriarchs well knew, and firmly
believed, was to be at the end
of the world; for this was the
time when Job’s resurrection, of
which he here speaks, was to
take place. So that, in these
words, Job may either be
considered as professing his
faith in the incarnation of the
Messiah; that, as certainly as
he then lived, as God was in
existence, and had been from
eternity, he should, in due
time, be made man, and stand in
human nature upon the earth: or,
that he should rise out of the
dust, and stand up the
first-fruits of them that sleep,
by his resurrection. Or he may
refer to the day of general
resurrection and final judgment,
which, as those holy patriarchs
well knew and firmly believed,
was to be at the end of the
world; and which is often termed
the last day: see John 6:39-54;
John 11:24; John 12:48; 1 Peter
1:5. Then shall Christ appear
and stand upon the earth, or
dust, as עפר, gnaphar, properly
means; namely, the dust in which
his saints and members lie or
sleep, whom he will raise up out
of it. And therefore he is fitly
said to stand upon the dust, or
the grave, or death; because
then he will subdue and put
that, among other enemies, under
his feet, as it is expressed 1
Corinthians 15:25 : or, as the
Hebrew, ואחרון על עפר יקום,
vaacharon gnal gnaphar jakum,
may properly be rendered, The
last, or he, the last, shall
arise, or stand up against the
dust, and fight with it, and
rescue the bodies of the saints,
which are held in it as
prisoners, from its dominion and
territories.
Verse 26
Job 19:26. And though after my
skin, &c. — The style of this
and other poetical books of the
Scripture is concise and short,
and therefore many words are to
be understood in some places to
complete the sense. The meaning
here is, Though my skin be now,
in a great measure, consumed by
sores, and the rest of it,
together with this body, shall
be devoured by worms, which may
seem to make my case quite
desperate, yet in my flesh —
Hebrew, מבשׁרי, mibbeshari, out
of my flesh, or, with my flesh,
that is, with eyes of flesh, or
bodily eyes; my flesh, or body,
being raised from the grave and
reunited to my soul: (which is
very fitly added, to show that
he did not speak of a mental or
spiritual, but of a corporeal
vision, and that after his
death:) shall I see God — The
same whom he called his
Redeemer, (Job 19:25,) who
having taken flesh, and
appearing in his flesh or body,
with and for Job upon the earth,
might well be seen with his
bodily eyes. Nor is this
understood of a simple seeing of
him, but of that glorious and
beatifying vision of God which
is promised to all God’s people.
Verse 27
Job 19:27. Whom I shall see — In
the manner before and after
expressed. No wonder that he
repeats it again, because the
meditation of it was most sweet
to him; for myself — For my own
benefit and comfort, as the
phrase is often used. Or, which
is of much the same importance,
on my behalf, to plead my cause
and vindicate me from all your
reproaches. Mine eyes shall
behold, and not another —
Namely, for me, or in my stead.
I shall not see God by another’s
eyes, but by my own, and by this
self-same body which now I have.
Hebrew, ולא זר, velo zar, not a
stranger, that is, this
privilege shall be granted to
me, and to all other sincere
servants of God, but not to such
as are strangers to God and his
people, being alienated from him
and his service. And, if I were
such a one as you suppose me to
be, I could never hope to enjoy
that happiness. Though my reins
be consumed within me — This I
do confidently expect, though at
present my case seems hopeless,
my very inward parts being
consumed with grief; and though,
as I have said, the grave and
the worms will consume my whole
body. Or, without though, for
which there is nothing in the
Hebrew, My reins are consumed
within me: which may be
considered as a passionate
exclamation, such as we find
Genesis 48:18, and often in the
book of Psalms, arising from his
confident expectation of this
his unspeakable happiness, and
expressing his vehement desire
and longing for that blessed
time and state. The intelligent
reader will be glad to see
father Houbigant’s translation
of these three important verses,
which is as follows: Job 19:25,
For I know that my Redeemer
liveth, and that he shall
hereafter arise over the dust:
Job 19:26, And that even I,
after my skin is consumed, shall
behold my God in my flesh: Job
19:27, Yes, I shall behold him:
my eyes, and not another’s,
shall see him. This my hope is
reposed in my bosom.
Verse 28
Job 19:28. But ye should say —
Therefore, because this is my
case, and my faith and hope are
in God, it would become you, and
it is your duty on this account,
to say, Why persecute we him? —
We are blameworthy that we have
persecuted him with such bitter
invectives, and we will do so no
more; seeing the root of the
matter — Hebrew, דבר, dabar, of
the word; is found in me — That
is, since my heart is sincere
and upright before God, and the
root, or foundation, of true
religion is in me. Cum veritas
ipsa inveniatur in me, since the
truth itself is found in me. —
Vatablus. The root of all true
religion is living faith in that
Redeemer of whom Job had just
spoken, and in the truth and
grace of God in and through him;
faith working by love,
overcoming the world, and
purifying the heart; faith
disarming death of its sting,
and inspiring us with a lively,
patient, joyful, and grateful
hope of eternal life, such as
Job had just expressed. This is
the root of the matter, other
things are but leaves in
comparison of it. This, which
implies the whole of godliness
and righteousness, is the one
thing needful. Let us see to it
that this be found in us. And,
with respect to others, let us
believe that many have this root
of the matter in them, who are
not in every thing of our mind,
and who have their follies,
weaknesses, and mistakes: and
let us be aware that it is at
our peril if we persecute any
such. Wo be to him that offends
or causes to stumble and fall
one of these little ones. God
will resent and revenge it. Job
and his friends differed in
their views concerning the
methods of Divine Providence,
but they agreed in the root of
the matter; and, therefore, it
was their duty not to have
censured and persecuted, but to
have lived in love with each
other.
Verse 29
Job 19:29. Be ye afraid of the
sword — Of some considerable
judgment to be inflicted on you,
which is called the sword; as
Deuteronomy 32:41, and
elsewhere. That is, if ye
continue to persecute me. So
Houbigant understands him,
interpreting these words in
connection with the preceding,
thus: But if ye shall say, Let
us persecute him, and devise
some cause of accusation against
him: then be afraid for
yourselves from the threatening
sword. Job may be considered,
however, as threatening them
with punishment on account of
their past uncharitable and
unrighteous judgment of him, and
severe treatment of him. For
wrath bringeth the punishment of
the sword — That wrath, or fury,
which is in your hearts, and
breaks forth from your lips
against me, deserves and will
certainly bring upon you the
punishment of the sword, that
is, a dreadful judgment from
God. The Hebrew word here
rendered punishment, עונות,
gnavonoth, properly means
iniquities, but is sometimes
used, by a metonymy, for the
punishment of iniquities, which
our translators judged was its
meaning here. The sense,
however, is good, if the word be
rendered literally, thus: Wrath
(the sin of wrath, or anger
against man, especially against
one in affliction) bringeth, or
implies, iniquities of the
sword, that is, iniquities fit
to be punished by the sword, or
by some eminent judgment. Thus,
Job 31:19, An iniquity of the
judges, means an iniquity to be
punished by the judges, as our
translation has it. That ye may
know there is a judgment — I
give you this admonition, that
you may know in time, and may
seriously consider it for your
good, that there will be a time
of judgment, when God will call
men to an account for all their
hard speeches and miscarriages,
and particularly for their rash
and uncharitable censures of
their brethren, Matthew 7:1;
Romans 14:4; James 4:11; either
in this life, or at that last
and dreadful day of the general
resurrection and judgment, of
which I have just spoken. God
sees and observes, and will
judge all your words and
actions, and therefore do not
flatter yourselves with vain
hopes of impunity. |