Verse 1
Job 22:1. Then Eliphaz answered
— Eliphaz, in this chapter,
charges Job home with particular
facts of cruelty and oppression,
which he supposes him to be
guilty of, though he cannot
allege one proof of them; to
which he adds the atrocious
crime of atheism, and a denial
or disbelief of God’s
providence; and this latter he
assigns as the reason of Job’s
obstinacy in refusing to submit
and acknowledge his guilt. He
compares his wickedness to that
of the mighty oppressors of the
antediluvian world; to that of
the inhabitants of Sodom and the
cities of the plain; not
obscurely intimating that his
end would probably be the same
as theirs, unless prevented by a
speedy submission and full
restitution; to which he
therefore earnestly presses him,
and endeavours to allure him by
placing full in his view the
great advantages he would
probably reap from such a
conduct. — Heath.
Verse 2
Job 22:2. Can a man be
profitable unto God — That is,
add any thing to his perfection
or felicity? namely, by his
righteousness, as the next verse
shows. Why then dost thou insist
so much upon thy own
righteousness, as if thou didst
oblige God by it; or, as if he
could not, without injustice,
afflict thee, who supposest
thyself to be a righteous
person? As, or because, he that
is wise — He that is a truly
righteous and good man; may be
profitable to himself — Does
much good to himself; promotes
his own peace, and honour, and
happiness, by his goodness.
Because a wise man receives
great benefit by his virtue,
shall we think that God is a
gainer by it too?
Verse 3
Job 22:3. Is it any pleasure to
the Almighty that thou art
righteous? — That is, any such
pleasure as he needs in order to
his happiness? Heath renders it,
any advantage. God, we know,
approves of and accepts the good
actions of his people, and is
often said in Scripture to
delight in them; but certainly
cannot be advantaged by them. He
needs not us or our services. We
are undone, for ever undone,
without him: but he is happy,
for ever happy, without us.
Verse 4
Job 22:4. Will he reprove thee —
That is, rebuke, chastise, or
punish thee; for fear of thee? —
Because he is afraid lest, if he
should let thee alone, thou
wouldst grow too great and
powerful for him: surely no. As
thy righteousness cannot profit
him, so thy wickedness can do
him no hurt.
Verse 5
Job 22:5. Is not thy wickedness
great? — Thy great sins are the
true and only cause of thy
misery. Or, the verse may be
translated, Is not thy evil (thy
affliction or punishment) great,
because, אין קצ, ein ketz, there
is no end to thy iniquities? Are
not thy calamities procured by,
and in proportion to thy sins?
Thy conscience tells thee they
are so. And therefore thou hast
no reason to accuse God, or any
person but thyself.
Verse 6
Job 22:6. For thou hast taken a
pledge — Or, surely thou hast
taken. He speaks thus, by way of
conjecture, or strong
presumption: as if he had said,
When I consider thy grievous and
unusual calamities, I justly
conclude thou art guilty of
some, or all, of these following
crimes; and do thou search thy
own conscience whether it be not
so with thee. From thy brother —
Of thy neighbour, or of thy
kinsman; for naught — Without a
sufficient and justifiable
cause. And stripped the naked of
their clothing — By taking their
garments for a pledge, and
thereby rendering them naked;
or, by robbing them of their
rights, all other injuries being
comprehended under this.
Verse 8
Job 22:8. The mighty man had the
earth — That is, he had the firm
possession, or free enjoyment of
it. Which is meant, either, 1st,
of Job, of whom he speaks
invidiously in the third person:
as if he had said, The mighty
man Job possessed, enlarged, and
enjoyed his estate, without any
compassion to the poor. Or, 2d,
of other rich and potent men,
who had the earth or land by
Job’s kindness and courtesy. The
rich were always welcome to him;
his house was open to them; his
land was before them, when the
poor were driven away from his
house and territories. The
honourable man dwelt in it —
Either by Job’s sentence or
permission, he had a peaceable
and sure possession of it,
whether he had a right to it or
not. Heath renders this verse,
But, as for the mighty man, the
whole land was for him; and thy
particular favourite, he might
dwell in it.
Verse 9
Job 22:9. Thou hast sent widows
— Whose helpless state called
for thy pity; away empty —
Either by denying them that
relief that their poverty
required, or that right which
their cause deserved; or, by
spoiling them of their goods,
because thou knewest them to be
unable to oppose thee, or to
defend themselves. And the arms
of the fatherless have been
broken —
That is, all their supports and
rights, a heinous sin, but
falsely charged upon Job.
Verse 10-11
Job 22:10-11. Therefore snares
are round about thee — For these
and the like crimes thou art
encompassed with dangers and
calamities. And sudden fear
troubleth thee — Besides thy
present miseries, thou art
tormented with the dread of
further and greater judgments.
Or darkness, that thou canst not
see — Such confusion and
perplexity of mind that thou
canst not discern the true cause
and use of thy sufferings; or
grievous calamities, often
called darkness, which are such
that thou canst see no way or
possibility of escaping; and
abundance of waters cover thee —
That is, a variety of sore
afflictions, frequently compared
to waters.
Verse 12
Job 22:12. Is not God in the
height of heaven? — Surely, he
is; and from that high tower he
looketh down upon men, to
behold, and govern, and
recompense all their actions,
whether good or bad. And,
therefore, O Job, thou art
grossly mistaken, in thinking
that good men suffer as deeply
as any others in this lower
world, while the vilest of men
flourish and are exalted; which
would imply that all things are
managed here by chance, or
without any regard to justice
and to just men, and not by the
wise and holy providence of God.
Behold the stars, how high they
are — Yet God is far higher than
they, and from thence can easily
observe all men and things here
below.
Verse 13
Job 22:13. And — Or therefore,
thou sayest, How doth God know?
&c. — From this true and certain
principle, thou drawest a false
and wicked conclusion, and
fanciest, perhaps, that because
he is so high he minds not what
is done here below: or, that he
cannot discern the difference of
things so very remote, through
those immense and innumerable
clouds which lie between the
heaven and the earth.
Verse 14
Job 22:14. Thick clouds are a
covering to him — He is
surrounded, thou imaginest, with
such thick clouds that they
conceal us from his sight. And
he walketh in the circuit of the
heaven — His delight is in
heaven, which is worthy of his
care, but he will not burden
himself with the care of earth;
which was the opinion of many
heathen philosophers, and, as
his friends fancied, was Job’s
opinion also.
Verse 15-16
Job 22:15-16. Hast thou marked
the old way? — Hebrew, ארח עולם,
orach gnolam, the way of
antiquity, that is, of men
living in ancient times, or
former ages. And, by their way,
he either means their course,
and common practice, or their
end and success. Which were cut
down out of time — Before their
time; who died a violent and
untimely death. Whose foundation
was overflown, &c. — Who,
together with their foundation
the earth, and all their
supports and enjoyments, were
destroyed by a flood of waters.
As the universal deluge was a
most signal and memorable
instance of God’s displeasure
against wickedness and wicked
men, and was, doubtless, very
well known in those days,
Eliphaz takes occasion to
enlarge upon it, for five or six
verses together, as a proper
lesson (so he thought it) for
his friend; and then closes it
with the mention of another
destruction by fire, either past
or to be expected, which is
described to be as general and
as fatal to the wicked.
Verse 17
Job 22:17. Which said unto God,
Depart from us — He repeats
Job’s words, Job 21:14-15; but
to a contrary purpose. Job
alleged them to show that some
men prospered, notwithstanding
their professed wickedness, and
Eliphaz produces them to show
that they were cut off for it.
And, What can the Almighty do
for them? — Thus did that wicked
generation, whom Noah had in
vain called to repentance, as it
were, defy God, contemning both
his threatenings and his
promises.
Verse 18
Job 22:18. Yet he filled their
houses with good things — Yet it
is true, that for a time God did
prosper them, but, at last, cut
them off in a tremendous manner.
But the counsel of the wicked,
&c. — He repeats Job’s words,
(Job 21:16,) not without
reflection: thou didst say so,
but against thy own principle,
that God carries himself
indifferently toward good and
bad; but I, who have observed
God’s terrible judgments upon
wicked men, have much more
reason to abhor their counsels.
Verse 19
Job 22:19. The righteous see it
— Whom God often spares in
common calamities, and gives
them to see the destruction of
the wicked; as Noah, Lot, &c.
And are glad — Not that they
insult over, or rejoice in, the
ruin of any men, but because
they delight in the vindication
of God’s honour, and justice,
and holiness, which is connected
with the destruction of his
enemies, and which is, and ought
to be, dearer to them than all
the interests of men. And the
innocent laugh them to scorn —
Justly deride them, for their
vain and strong confidences,
which are now destroyed; for
their profane contempt of God’s
wrath and judgments, which they
now feel; and for their deep and
crafty counsels, which are now
frustrated and turned against
themselves.
Verse 20
Job 22:20. Whereas — Or rather,
seeing that, or, because, when
wicked men are destroyed, they
are preserved. He should have
said their substance; but he
changes the person, and saith,
our substance; either as
including himself in the number
of righteous persons, and
thereby intimating that he
pleaded the common cause of all
such, while Job pleaded the
cause of the wicked; or because
he would hereby thankfully
acknowledge some eminent and
particular preservation given to
him among other righteous men.
The remnant of them — All that
was left undestroyed in the
general calamity. The fire
consumeth — He is thought by
some to allude to the judgment
of God upon Sodom and Gomorrah:
as if he had said, Thou mayest
find here and there an instance
of a wicked man dying in peace.
But what is that to the two
great instances of the final
perdition of ungodly men, the
drowning the whole world, and
the burning of Sodom and
Gomorrah. It seems, however,
much more natural, as Dr. Dodd
observes, to understand him as
referring to the last general
conflagration: “for how could
the destroying a little city or
two be said, with any propriety,
to consume the remnant; that is,
the whole remainder of wicked
men? when, at the very same
time, Chaldea, and perhaps the
greatest part of the world, was
overrun with idolatry. The
dissolution of the world by fire
is what St. Peter calls
expressly, The day of judgment
and perdition of ungodly men, 2
Peter 3:7. And St. Jude, Job
22:14, seems to say, that this
was prophesied of by Enoch
before the flood; and if so,
must have been known to Noah,
and by him, no doubt,
transmitted to posterity, and so
might be well known to Job and
his friends.” Eliphaz,
therefore, may be understood as
saying, Though the judgment by
water, extensive as it was, did
not thoroughly purge the world,
but wickedness and wicked men
again sprung up, spread widely,
and abounded; yet know, there
shall come a time hereafter when
the world shall be consumed by
fire, and then the whole race
and remainder of wicked men
shall be delivered up, once for
all, to such an absolute
destruction, as that none shall
ever spring from their ashes,
nor shall the new world and its
inhabitants know wickedness, or
a defection from God any more.
If this view of the passage be
admitted, it will appear that
the doctrine of the future
dissolution of the world by
fire, so plainly taught us in
the New Testament, and so
immediately connected with that
of the resurrection, was not
unknown in Job’s time, and
consequently we shall have a
further confirmation of the
interpretation we have given of
Job 19:25, and some other
passages in this book. See
Peters, p. 409; and the 24th,
25th, and 26th chapters of
Isaiah, where the prophet seems
to speak copiously on this
subject, using an expression,
Job 26:11, very like to this of
Eliphaz. The fire of thine
enemies, which is prepared for
thine enemies, shall consume
them.
Verse 21
Job 22:21. Acquaint now thyself
with him — That is, with God, as
appears both from Job 22:23,
where he is expressed, and from
the nature of the matter in
hand, there being no other way
to happiness. Renew thy
acquaintance with God by prayer,
and repentance for all thy sins,
and true humiliation under his
hand, and hearty compliance with
all his commands, and diligent
care to serve and enjoy him. It
is our honour, that we are made
capable of this acquaintance;
our misery, that by sin we have
lost it; our privilege, that
through Christ we may return to
it; and our unspeakable
advantage, to renew and
cultivate it. And be at peace —
At peace with God, and at peace
with thyself; not fretful or
uneasy. Good shall come unto
thee — All the good thou canst
desire, temporal, spiritual,
eternal.
Verse 22
Job 22:22. Receive the law from
his mouth — Take the rule,
whereby thou mayest govern thy
thoughts, and words, and whole
life, not from idolaters and
profane heathen, whose opinion
concerning God’s providence thou
appearest to have embraced, nor
from thy own imaginations or
violent passions, which have led
thee into thy present errors;
but from God, and from his law,
which is written in thy own
mind, and from the doctrines and
instructions of the wise and
holy men of God, who are all of
our mind in this matter. And lay
up his words in thy heart — Not
only hear them with thine ears,
but let them sink into thy
heart, being received there with
hearty affection, and fixed by
the serious, frequent, and
practical consideration of them.
Verse 23
Job 22:23. If thou return to the
Almighty — The Hebrew phrase,
תשׁוב עד שׁדי, tashub gnad
shaddai, is emphatical, and
implies a thorough turning from
sin to God, so as to love him,
and cleave to him, and sincerely
devote a man’s self to his fear
and service. Thou shalt be built
up — God will repair thy ruins,
and give thee more children, and
bless thee with prosperity. Thou
shalt put away iniquity, &c. —
It is either, 1st, A spiritual
promise; if thou dost sincerely
repent, God will give thee grace
effectually to reform thyself
and family: or, 2d, A temporal
promise, meaning, thou shalt put
away the punishment of thy sins,
as iniquity is very often used;
far from thy tabernacles — From
all thy dwellings, and tents,
and possessions.
Verse 24-25
Job 22:24-25. Then shalt thou
lay up gold — The word בצר,
batzer, here rendered gold, is a
word of dubious meaning. R.
Levi, indeed, makes it parallel
to zahab, gold: Ab. Ezra, to
cheseph, silver. “In Arabic,”
says Chappelow, “it sometimes
signifies some particular
stones, diversified with white
lines. And this, perhaps, is the
true sense of the term.” As dust
— In great abundance. Or, as על
עפר, gnal gnaphar, rather means,
upon the dust, or ground. It
shall be so plentiful, and
therefore vile, that thou shalt
not lock it up in chests, but
scatter it anywhere, and suffer
it to lie, even upon the ground;
as the stones of the brook — As
if pieces of gold were but so
many pebble-stones, which are to
be found in or near every brook.
Yea, the Almighty shall be thy
defence — Against the incursions
of neighbouring spoilers: thy
wealth shall not then lie
exposed, as it did to Sabeans
and Chaldeans; God, by his
watchful providence, shall
protect thee from all dangers
and calamities. And thou shalt
have plenty of silver — The
Hebrew, כסŠ תועפות, cheseph
tognapoth, is literally,
argentum virium tibi, or, the
strength of silver shall be to
thee: that is, shall by God’s
blessing be thy defence,
Ecclesiastes 7:12; or, as the
phrase may be rendered, silver
of heights, that is, high and
heaped up like a mountain, Henry
very properly calls our
attention here to the margin,
which reads gold instead of
defence in the former clause of
the verse, the original word
being the same with that
rendered gold, Job 22:24. Thus
interpreted the sense is, The
Almighty shall be thy gold, and
silver of strength to thee;
which translation is perfectly
agreeable to the Hebrew. On this
the same pious author observes,
“Worldlings make gold their god;
saints make God their gold: they
that are enriched with his
favour and grace may truly be
said to have abundance of the
best gold, and best laid up.”
Verse 26
Job 22:26. For then shalt thou
have thy delight in the Almighty
— Thou shalt find delight, not
only or chiefly in these outward
comforts, but also and
especially in God, whose face
shall shine upon thee; and who
shall give thee these things,
not in anger, as he doth to
wicked men, but as pledges of
his love and favour to thee, and
of those greater and eternal
blessings which he hath in store
for thee. And accordingly thou
shalt delight thyself in him as
worldly people delight
themselves in their money, and
shalt find real and continual
pleasure in worshipping,
obeying, and serving him in and
with all his mercies. Thus these
words contain a reason why he
might confidently expect all
those forementioned blessings,
because he should set his
affections on God, and possess
his favour, which is the spring
and foundation of all good. And
lift up thy face unto God — Look
up to him with cheerfulness and
confidence.
Verse 27
Job 22:27. Thou shalt make thy
prayer unto him — Hebrew, תעתיר
אליו, tagnter eelaiv, thou shalt
pray earnestly and
importunately, or, thou shalt
multiply thy prayer. Under all
thy burdens, in all thy wants,
cares, and fears, thou shalt
apply to heaven for wisdom,
strength, and comfort. Thou
shalt pay thy vows — Thou shalt
obtain those blessings for which
thou didst make vows to God, and
therefore, according to thy
obligation, shalt pay thy vows
to him.
Verse 28-29
Job 22:28-29. It shall be
established — Thy purposes shall
not be disappointed, but
ratified by God. And in all thy
counsels and actions God shall
give thee the light of his
direction and governance, and of
comfort and success. When men
are cast down — When, in a time
of general calamity, all are
cast down round about thee, cast
down in their affairs, cast down
in their spirits, sinking,
desponding, ready to despair;
when men’s hearts fail them for
fear, or, rather, according to
the Hebrew, (in which there is
nothing for men, and which is
only כי השׁפילו, chi hishpilu,
cum depresserint,) when they
have cast thee down, or, when
thou art cast down; when God, in
the course of his providence,
shall bring thee, or suffer thee
to be brought, into any trouble
which he sees will be good for
thee; thou shalt say — Within
thyself, with good confidence
and assurance; There is lifting
up — Or, there shall be lifting
up; either, 1st, For them, who,
if they repent and humble
themselves, shall be preserved
and restored: or, rather, for
thee and thine: God will deliver
thee, when others are crushed
and destroyed. Hebrew, Thou
shalt say, גרה, gerah,
exaltation! an expression to be
admired for its conciseness and
comprehensiveness. Thou shalt
expect exaltation in the time of
depression; nay, thy depression
shall be in order to, and the
means of, thy exaltation. And
thou shalt find that consolation
in thyself, which will not only
bear thee up under thy troubles,
and keep thee from fainting, but
lift thee up above thy troubles,
and enable thee to rejoice
notwithstanding them. And he —
God, from whom alone cometh
salvation; shall save —
Temporally from the evils here
mentioned, and eternally from
other and infinitely greater
evils; the humble person —
Hebrew, שׁח עינים, shach
gneinaim, him that hath low or
cast-down eyes; which phrase may
denote, either, 1st, Humility
and lowliness of mind, as pride
is often expressed by high or
lofty looks; and so this is a
tacit reproof of Job, for his
confident justification of
himself: or, 2d, Lowness of
state and condition, as James
1:10. And so understood, it
describes him, whose eyes and
countenance are dejected by
reason of great troubles and
miseries.
Verse 30
Job 22:30. He — Whose
prerogative it is to give
deliverances; shall deliver —
Namely, upon thy request, as the
following clause shows; the
island of the innocent — Not
only thyself, when thou shalt
become innocent, or righteous,
but, for thy sake, he will
deliver the whole island, or
country, in which thou dwellest:
God will have so great a respect
to thy innocence, that for thy
sake he will deliver those that
belong to thee, or live with
thee, or near thee, though, in
themselves, they be ripe for
destruction. By the pureness of
thy hands — By thy prayers,
proceeding from a pure heart and
conscience. So Eliphaz and his
two friends, who, in this
matter, were not innocent, were
delivered by the pureness of
Job’s hands, Job 42:8. |