Verse 1
Job 25:1. Then answered Bildad —
Who makes the last weak effort
against Job; and being unable to
deny the truth of his
assertions, but at the same time
unwilling to give up the
argument, shelters himself
behind the acknowledged
attributes of God, power,
justice, and purity, and the
infirmities of human nature.
Probably he and the rest of
Job’s friends now perceived that
Job and they did not differ so
much as they had thought. They
owned that the wicked might
prosper for a while; and Job
owned they would be destroyed at
the last. As to the point of
bringing Job to confess himself
guilty of some enormous crimes,
which they at first rashly
supposed had drawn this heavy
judgment upon him, that is
completely given up, and Bildad
satisfies himself with an
evasive answer to what Job had
observed on that head, to this
purpose, namely, that no man,
strictly speaking, can be
justified before God; man being
at best a frail and fallible
creature, and God a being of
infinite purity and perfection;
an argument which concerned Job
no more than themselves, but
equally involved them all in the
same class of sinners. This
answer has no reference to what
Job spake last, but to that
which seemed most reproveable in
all his discourses, his censure
of God’s proceedings with him,
and his desire of disputing the
matter with him. Bildad’s
sentiments are extremely good
and pious, but they are but
little to the purpose, since he
is now reduced to advance what
Job had never disputed. “As we
here take our leave,” says Dr.
Dodd, “of the arguments urged by
Job’s friends, we may just
observe, in conclusion, that
nothing could be more untoward
than this conduct of theirs, to
bring a charge against him which
they could not prove, and from
which his well- known virtue and
integrity of life ought to have
screened him. But, though Job
very plainly shows them the
injustice and inhumanity of this
procedure; nay, though he
confutes them so far that they
had nothing to reply, yet, like
modern disputants, they stood
out to the last, and had not the
grace to own their mistake, till
God himself was pleased to
thunder it in their ears. Here,
then, we have a lively instance
of the force of prejudice and
prepossession.”
Verse 2
Job 25:2. Dominion and fear are
with him — Absolute and
sovereign power over all persons
and things, so that it is both
rebellion and madness to contend
with him; and terror, which
justly makes him dreadful to all
men, and especially to all that
undertake to dispute with him.
In other words, awful majesty
and infinite knowledge are his,
whereby he is much better
acquainted with men’s hearts and
ways than they are themselves,
and sees much sin in them, which
themselves do not discover; and
to him belong also exact purity
and justice, which render him
formidable to sinners. These are
with him whom thou challengest;
with him who is not lightly and
irreverently to be named, much
less to be contended with; and
therefore it is thy duty to
humble thyself before him, and
quietly and modestly to submit
thyself and thy cause to his
pleasure. He maketh peace in his
high places — This clause, as
well as the following verse,
seems to be added, to prove
God’s dominion and dreadfulness;
he keepeth and ruleth all
persons and things in heaven, in
peace and harmony. The angels,
though they be very numerous,
all own his sovereignty, and
acquiesce in his pleasure. The
stars, though vast in their
bulk, and various in their
motions, exactly keep the order
which God hath appointed them:
and therefore it is great folly
for thee to quarrel with the
methods of God’s dealings with
thee.
Verse 3
Job 25:3. Is there any number of
his armies? — Of his angels, and
stars, and other creatures, all
which are his hosts, wholly
submitting themselves to his
will, to be and to do whatever
he pleases. And, therefore, how
insolent and unreasonable a
thing it is to quarrel with him,
or resist his will! Upon whom
doth not his light arise? — The
light of the sun is communicated
to all parts of the world. This
is a faint resemblance of the
cognizance and care which God
takes of the whole creation. All
are under the light of his
knowledge: all partake of the
light of his goodness: his
pleasure is to show mercy: all
the creatures live upon his
bounty.
Verse 4
Job 25:4. How then can man be
justified with God? — That is,
before God’s tribunal, to which
thou dost so boldly appeal. Thou
mayest plead thy cause with thy
fellow-worms, as we are, and
expect to be justified; but wo
to thee, if the great God
undertake to plead his cause
against thee: how severely and
certainly wouldest thou be
condemned! The word used for man
here, אנושׁ, enosh, signifies
miserable man, which supposes
him to be sinful; and that such
a creature should quarrel with
that dominion of God to which
the sinless, and happy, and
glorious angels willingly
submit, is absurd and impious.
Verse 5
Job 25:5. Behold, even to the
moon, and it shineth not — The
moon, though bright and
glorious, if compared with the
divine majesty, is without any
lustre or glory. By his naming
the moon, and thence proceeding
to the stars, he shows that he
includes the sun also, and all
other creatures, and signifies
that the brightest and most
glorious objects in nature shine
not when compared with God’s
ineffable and essential
brightness. Indeed, the highest
order of beings make but small
advances to the essential
perfection which is in him; so
that, when a comparison is made,
their highest purity will be
little less than impurity, when
brought before the standard of
divine perfection.
Verse 6
Job 25:6. How much less man,
that is a worm — Mean, vile, and
impotent; proceeding from
corruption, and returning to it.
And the son of man — For
miserable man, in the last
clause, he here puts the son of
any man, to show that this is
true, even of the greatest and
best of men. Let us then wonder
at the condescension of God, in
taking such worms into covenant
and communion with himself! |