Verse 1
Job 20:1. Then answered Zophar —
Here Zophar, although he had
nothing new to advance, hastily
interrupts Job, being extremely
provoked by his threatening them
with the judgments of God, and
in his speech appears to be
hurried by his passion beyond
all bounds. He tells him it is
in vain to tax their suspicions
with unkindness; for it was of
public notoriety, agreeable to
the universal experience of
mankind, ever since the
creation, that suffering was the
portion of the wicked. He then,
under colour of describing the
wicked man, and his destiny,
charges Job with the most
enormous crimes, and marks him
out as a person in whom God had
given an example of the justice
of his providence; and concludes
with a plain intimation, that he
was thoroughly persuaded that
Job was that very wicked man,
that oppressor of the poor,
which they had from the
beginning suspected him to be.
Verse 2
Job 20:2. Therefore — For this
thy severe sentence; do my
thoughts cause me to answer — I
thought to have troubled myself
and thee with no further
discourses, but these words of
thine make my former thoughts to
return again, and so provoke me,
that I am not able any longer to
forbear speaking.
Verse 3
Job 20:3. I have heard — Or,
Shall I hear? Namely, with
patience, and without a reply?
Who can endure it? The check of
my reproach — That is, thy
shameful and opprobrious
reproofs of us, as if we, and
all thy friends, were void of
all humanity and natural
affection toward thee, and were
haters and persecutors of thee;
and as if we were guilty of very
heinous crimes, and might expect
God’s vengeance upon us. And the
spirit of my understanding —
That is, my soul or mind,
causeth me to answer —
Constraineth me to speak. Or,
the words רוח מבינתי, ruach
mibbinathi, may be rendered, my
spirit, or mind, because of my
understanding, that is, out of,
or because of, that certain
knowledge which I have of this
matter from consideration and
experience. I speak not from
passion, but from certain
knowledge.
Verse 4-5
Job 20:4-5. Knowest thou not
this — Which I am now about to
say; of old — From the
experience of all former ages;
since man was placed upon the
earth — Since the world was
made, and there were any men to
observe God’s government of it;
that the triumphing of the
wicked is short — Hebrew, מקרוב,
mikarob, is from near, that is,
from, or for a little time; they
have not long enjoyed it, and it
will shortly vanish. And the joy
of the hypocrite but for a
moment — This he adds by way of
reflection upon Job, who, though
he cleared himself of gross
wickedness, yet, he judged, was
guilty of deep hypocrisy.
Verses 6-9
Job 20:6-9. Though his
excellency mount up to the
heavens — Though he be advanced
to great dignity and authority
in the world. He shall perish
like his own dung — Which men
cast away with contempt and
abhorrence. They who have seen
him — With admiration at his
felicity; shall say, Where is
he? — He is nowhere to be found;
he is utterly gone and lost. He
shall fly away as a dream —
Which, for the present, affects
the fancy, but hath nothing
solid or permanent in it, for as
soon as a man awakes all
vanishes, and the remembrance of
it is quickly lost. Neither
shall his place any more behold
him — That is, it shall not
acknowledge or contain him. A
figure called prosopopœia, as
Job 7:10. Or, neither shall it
(that is, the eye, last
mentioned) behold him any more
in his place.
Verse 10
Job 20:10. His children shall
seek to please the poor —
Either, 1st, To get some small
relief from them in their
extreme necessity. Or, rather,
2d, Lest they should revenge
themselves on them for the great
and many injuries which their
father did them, or should seek
to the magistrate for
reparation. His hands shall
restore their goods — By the
sentence of the judge, to whom
the oppressed poor will appeal,
notwithstanding all the
endeavours of their oppressors
to dissuade them from so doing.
Verse 11
Job 20:11. His bones — That is,
his whole body, even the
strongest parts of it; are full
of the sin of his youth — Of the
punishment of it. He shall feel
the sad effects of his youthful
sins in his riper years, as
riotous sinners commonly do.
Which shall lie down with him in
the dust — He shall carry his
diseases and pains, brought upon
him by his sins, to the grave:
or, rather, they will carry him
thither, and prove the causes of
his immature death; and the very
putrefying of his body in the
grave is to him the effect of
sin, so that his iniquity is
upon his bones even there.
Verses 12-14
Job 20:12-14. Though wickedness
be sweet in his mouth — Though
it greatly please him while he
is committing it; though he hide
it under his tongue — As an
epicure doth a sweet morsel,
which he keeps and rolls about
his mouth, that he may longer
enjoy the pleasure of it. Though
he be highly pleased with the
gratification of his lusts, and
cleave to his sinful pleasures
in hearty love, resolving to
hold them fast, and improve them
to the greatest delight and
advantage; though he spare it —
Will not part with his sin, but
gratifies and obeys his sinful
inclinations, instead of
subduing and mortifying them;
but keeps it still within his
mouth — That he may enjoy all
the sweetness of it. Yet his
meat in his bowels is turned —
From sweet to bitter; it is the
gall of asps within him —
Exceeding bitter and pernicious.
Gall is most bitter; the gall of
serpents is full of poison; and
the poison of asps is most
dangerous, and, within a few
hours, kills without remedy.
Verse 15-16
Job 20:15-16. He hath swallowed
down riches — He hath got
possession of them, and thought
them to be as much his own as
the meat he had eaten. But he is
deceived. He shall vomit them up
again — Shall be compelled to
restore them: his own conscience
perhaps may make him so uneasy
in the keeping of what he has
gotten, that, for the quiet of
his own mind, he shall make
restitution, and that not with
the pleasure of a virtue, but
with the utmost reluctancy, like
the pain produced by an emetic.
God shall cast them out of his
belly — If he do not himself
voluntarily refund what he has
violently taken away, God, by
his providence, shall force him
to do it, and bring it about,
one way or other, that his
ill-gotten goods shall return to
their right owners. If man’s
hand cannot reach him, God shall
find him out. He shall suck the
poison of asps — What he sucked
so sweetly, and with so much
pleasure, shall, in the issue,
prove most ungrateful and
destructive, as the poison, or
head (for the Hebrew ראשׁ, rosh,
signifies both, and the poison
lies in the head) of asps would
be to one that sucked it. Such
is sin; such especially will all
unlawful gains be. The fawning
tongue will prove the viper’s
tongue. All the charming graces
that are thought to be in sin
will turn, when the conscience
is awakened, into so many raging
furies.
Verse 17
Job 20:17. He shall not see the
rivers, the floods, &c. — “He
shall not see them with any
pleasure. The most delightful
things of this world, and the
greatest affluence and plenty of
them, shall afford him no
enjoyment.” — Dodd. Or, rather,
he speaks metaphorically, and
means, he shall not enjoy that
abundant satisfaction and
comfort, which he promised
himself from his great riches,
or which good men, through God’s
blessing, commonly enjoy.
Verse 18
Job 20:18. That which he
laboured for shall he restore —
Expressed in Hebrew by only two
words, משׁיב יגע, meshib jagang,
literally, restituens laborem,
restoring labor: that is, the
goods which were gotten with
labour, that of others, or his
own. It may refer either to the
goods of others, of which he had
obtained possession, not without
pains and difficulty; or to his
own goods, honestly gotten by
the sweat of his brow. And this
may be intended as an
aggravation of his misery, that
he is compelled, not only to
restore other men’s goods, which
were in his hands, but to part
with his own also, to make
reparation for damages. And
shall not swallow it down — So
as to hold it: he shall not
possess it long, nor to any
important purpose. According to
his substance shall the
restitution be — That is, he
shall be forced to part with all
his property to make
compensation for his wrongs. And
he shall not rejoice therein —
He shall not enjoy what he had
gotten, because it shall be
taken from him. Houbigant’s
translation of this verse is, He
shall restore what he gained by
his labour, and shall not
consume it. His merchandise was
abundant, but he shall not enjoy
it.
Verse 19
Job 20:19. Because he hath
oppressed and forsaken the poor
— By his oppression he brought
men to utter poverty, and then
forsook them in that destitute
state, affording them no mercy
nor help. Or, the meaning is, He
made some poor by his
oppressions, and others, that
were poor, he suffered to perish
for want of that relief which he
might have afforded them. He
hath violently taken away a
house, &c. — Namely, for his own
use; which he builded not —
Which was none of his.
Verse 20
Job 20:20. Surely he shall not
feel quietness, &c. — He shall
have no peace nor satisfaction
in his mind, in all his gains,
partly because of his perpetual
fears and expectations of the
wrath of God and man, which his
guilty conscience assures him he
deserves, and partly because
they shall be speedily taken
away from him. He shall not save
of that which he desired — That
is, any part of his good and
desirable things, but he shall
forfeit and lose them all.
Verse 21-22
Job 20:21-22. There shall none
of his meat be left, &c. — For
his future use; but he shall be
stripped of all, which being
publicly known, none of his
kindred or friends shall trouble
themselves to seek for any
relics of his estate. But the
Hebrew, אין שׁריד לאכלו, een
shorid leachlo, rather means,
There shall none be left for his
meat, that is, he shall leave no
heir who shall possess or enjoy
his goods. In the fulness of his
sufficiency, &c. — In the height
of his prosperity he shall be
distressed. Every hand of the
wicked shall be upon him — So
his wickedness shall be punished
by those as wicked as himself.
Verse 23
Job 20:23. When he is about to
fill his belly — That is, when
he has enough to satisfy all his
appetites, and shall design to
indulge them in the pleasurable
enjoyment of all his gains, and
to spend his days in sensuality;
God shall cast the fury of his
wrath upon him — Some dreadful
and destructive judgment. And
shall rain it upon him — This
phrase denotes both the author
of his plagues, God, and the
nature and quality of them, that
they shall come upon him like
rain, with great vehemence, so
that he cannot prevent or avoid
them; while he is eating — As it
fell upon thy sons, Job 1:18-19.
Verse 24-25
Job 20:24-25. He shall flee from
the iron weapon — That is, from
the sword or spear; and so shall
think himself out of danger. The
bow of steel — Which is of great
strength, and therefore sendeth
forth the arrow with greater
force; shall strike him through
— Shall mortally wound him. He
shall flee from one danger, but
another, still greater, shall
overtake him. It is drawn —
Namely, the arrow which had
entered into his body, and now
is drawn out of it, either by
himself or some other person.
Yea, the glittering sword —
Hebrew, וברק, ubarak, literally,
the lightning, and thence a
glittering weapon, the bright
sword, or spear; as Deuteronomy
32:41. By this it is implied he
was doubly wounded, first with
the arrow, and then with the
sword or spear: cometh out of
his gall — Into which it had
entered, and wherewith it was
coloured. This shows that the
wound was both deep and deadly,
as wounds are in that part. It
is probable he mentions this in
reference to a similar
expression of Job 16:13. Terrors
are upon him — Namely, the
terrors of death; because he
perceives, by the tincture of
his gall upon the weapon, that
his wound is incurable. Or
horrors of conscience, because
he cannot live, and dare not
die.
Verse 26
Job 20:26. All darkness — All
sorts of miseries, of soul, and
body, and estate; shall be hid —
Or laid up by God for him. They
are reserved and treasured up
for him, and kept as in a sure
place, and shall infallibly
overtake him: in his secret
places — In those places where
he confidently hoped to hide and
secure himself from all evils
and enemies; yet even there God
shall find him out. A fire not
blown — By man, but kindled by
God himself; shall consume or
destroy him — He thinks, by his
might and violence, to secure
himself from men; but God, by
his own immediate hand, or in
some unknown and unexpected
manner, will find him out. It
may be understood of the fire of
hell; see Isaiah 30:33. It shall
go ill with him that is left in
his tabernacle — With his
family, or posterity, who shall
inherit his curse, as well as
his estate. Heath translates
this verse, All manner of
calamity is laid up in store for
him: an unquenchable fire shall
consume him: it shall devour all
that remaineth in his stead.
Verse 27-28
Job 20:27-28. The heaven shall
reveal his iniquity — God shall
be a swift witness against him
by extraordinary judgments;
still he reflects upon Job’s
case, and the fire from heaven.
And the earth shall rise up
against him — All creatures upon
earth shall conspire to destroy
him. If the God of heaven and
earth be his enemy, neither
heaven nor earth will show him
any kindness, but all the hosts
of both are, and will be, at war
with him. The increase of his
house — יבול, jebul, proventus,
his income, revenue, or his
estate got by the labour, and
employed for the use of his
family; shall depart — Shall be
lost or taken away from him:
shall flow away — Like waters,
swiftly and strongly, and so as
to return no more: in the day of
his wrath — That is, of God’s
wrath; when God shall come to
execute judgment upon him. The
abundance of his house, Heath
renders it, shall roll away like
the torrents in the day of his
fury.
Verse 29
Job 20:29. This is the portion
of the wicked man from God —
Allotted to him, designed for
him, as his portion: and he will
have it for a perpetuity; it is
what he must abide by. And the
heritage appointed unto him by
God — Hebrew, נחלת אמרו,
nachalath imro, the heritage of
his word; that is, appointed by
the word or sentence of God; and
termed a heritage, to signify
the stability and assurance of
it; that it is as firm and
certain to him as an inheritance
to the right heir; and in
opposition to that inheritance
which he had gotten by fraud and
violence. Though impenitent
sinners do not always fall under
such temporal judgments as are
here described, and in that
Zophar was mistaken; yet the
wrath of God abides upon them:
and they are made miserable by
spiritual judgments, which are
much worse; their consciences
being either, on the one hand, a
terror to them, and then they
are in continual amazement; or,
on the other hand, seared and
silenced, and then they are
given up to a reprobate mind,
and bound over to eternal ruin.
“Never was any doctrine better
explained,” says Henry, “nor
worse applied, than this here by
Zophar: who intended by all this
to prove Job to be a hypocrite.
Let us receive the good
explication, and make a better
application, for warning to
ourselves to stand in awe and
not to sin.” |