Verses 1-4
Job 27:1-4. Job continued his
parable — His grave and weighty
discourse. As God liveth — He
confirms the truth of his
expressions by an oath, because
he found them very backward to
believe what he professed. Who
hath taken away my judgment —
Who, though he knows my
integrity, yet does not plead my
cause against my friends. All
the while my breath is in me —
Which is the constant companion
and certain sign of life; or my
soul or life is in me; and
Spirit of God — Or rather, the
breath of God; is in my nostrils
— I protest, that as long as I
have breath in my body, and he
shall enable me to speak a word;
my lips shall not speak
wickedness, &c. — My tongue
shall be the faithful
interpreter of my heart, and I
will never speak otherwise than
I think.
Verse 5-6
Job 27:5-6. God forbid that I
should justify you — In your
opinion concerning me, and
censure of me; till I die, &c. —
Never hope that I will yield to
your judgment, which I know to
be false: no, I abhor the
thought of it, and will sooner
die than confess the guilt which
you charge upon me. My
righteousness I hold fast — You
shall never extort that from me,
but I will resolutely maintain
my uprightness, and not be
persuaded by any reason to
desert its defence. My heart
shall not reproach me, &c. —
With betraying my own cause and
innocence; my conscience doth
not hitherto accuse me, and it
shall not upbraid me hereafter.
Verse 7
Job 27:7. Let mine enemy be as
the wicked — I am so far from
loving and practising
wickedness, whereof you accuse
me, that I abhor the thoughts of
it; and if I might and should
wish to be revenged of mine
enemy, I could wish him no
greater mischief than to be a
wicked man. This does not imply
that we may lawfully wish any
man to be wicked, or that any
man who is not wicked should be
treated as wicked; but we ought
all rather to choose to be in
the condition of a beggar, an
outlaw, a galley-slave, any
thing rather than in the
condition of the wicked, though
in ever so much outward pomp and
prosperity.
Verse 8
Job 27:8. What is the hope of
the hypocrite, though he hath
gained? — There is no reason why
I should envy or desire the
portion of wicked men: although
they ofttimes prosper in the
world, and seem to be great
gainers; yet death, which
hasteneth to all men, and to me
especially, will show that they
are far greater losers, and die
in a most wretched and desperate
condition, having no hope either
of continuing in this life,
which they chiefly desire, or of
enjoying a better life, which
they never regarded. But I have
a firm and well-grounded hope,
not of that temporal restitution
which you promise, but of a
blessed immortality after death;
and therefore I am not a
hopeless hypocrite, as you think
me to be. When God taketh away
his soul — When, much against
his will, and by an act of
violence, (as the word ישׁל,
jeshel, here used, signifies,)
God, as the Judge, takes his
soul out of his body, that it
may be tried and determined to
its everlasting state. What will
his hope be then? It will be
vanity and a lie; it will stand
him in no stead. The wealth of
this world, which he hoped in,
he must leave behind him, and
the happiness of the other
world, which he hoped for, he
will certainly fall short of;
his hopes, therefore, will
disappoint and make him ashamed.
Verse 9
Job 27:9. Will God hear his cry
when trouble cometh? — When any
calamity comes upon him; or,
when his conscience accuses him,
and his guilt flies in his face?
Will God pay any regard to the
cries of one who regarded him so
little?
Verse 10
Job 27:10. Will he delight
himself in the Almighty? — When
he has nothing else to delight
in? No: his delight is in the
things of the world, which now
sink under him. Will he always
call upon God? — Will he have
the confidence to pray to God,
and expect any comfort from him?
Nay, will he not rather despond
in such a case, and cease to
call upon him? Certainly those
who do not delight in God will
not long call upon him.
Verse 11
Job 27:11. I will teach you by
the hand of God — That is, by
God’s help and inspiration; or,
by such arguments as are
irresistible. The words,
however, may be rendered,
concerning the hand of God; that
is, concerning his counsel and
providence in governing the
world, or the manner of his
dealing with men, and especially
with wicked men, of whom he
discourses, Job 27:13, &c.,
showing how far the hand of God
is either for them, upon, or
against them. That which is with
the Almighty — That is, in his
counsel, and how he executes his
secret purposes concerning them;
I will not conceal — I will
declare the truth of God, and
the doctrine that he hath taught
his church about these matters.
Verse 12
Job 27:12. Ye yourselves have
seen it — I speak no false or
strange things: but what is
known and confirmed by your own
experience, and that of others.
Why then are ye thus altogether
vain? — In maintaining such a
foolish and false opinion
against your own knowledge and
experience?
Why do you so obstinately defend
your opinion, and not comply
with mine, for the truth of
which I appeal to your own
consciences?
Verse 13
Job 27:13. This is the portion
of a wicked man — Namely, that
which is mentioned in the
following verses; with God —
Either laid up with God, namely,
in his counsel and appointment;
or, which he shall have from
God, as the next words explain
it; and the heritage of
oppressors — Who are mighty,
fierce, terrible, and
mischievous, as the word עריצים,
gnaritzim, implies; whom,
therefore, men cannot destroy,
but God will.
Verse 14-15
Job 27:14-15. It is for the
sword — That they may be cut off
by the sword, either of war or
of justice: and his offspring,
&c. — Shall be starved, or shall
want necessaries. Those that
remain of him — Who survive that
sword and famine; shall be
buried in death — “Shall be
reduced to so great a degree of
misery,” says Schultens, “that
where they die, there they shall
rot, and no person shall bury
them: they shall have death
itself, (so he renders the
text,) for their sepulchre.” It
is put in antithesis, or by way
of contrast to the monuments of
the rich. And his widows — For
they had many wives; shall not
weep — Because they, as well as
other persons, groaned under his
tyranny, and, therefore, rejoice
in their deliverance from it.
Verses 16-18
Job 27:16-18. Prepare raiment as
the clay — In great abundance.
But the just shall put it on —
Either because it shall be given
to him by the magistrate, to
recompense him for those
injuries which he had received
from the oppressor; or because
the right of it is, in some
other way, transferred upon him
by divine providence. He
buildeth his house as a moth —
Which settleth itself in a
garment, but is quickly and
unexpectedly dispossessed of its
dwelling, and crushed to death.
And as a booth, &c. — Which the
keeper of a garden or vineyard
suddenly rears up in fruit-time,
and as quickly pulls down again.
Verse 19
Job 27:19. The rich man shall
lie down — In death; but he
shall not be gathered — Namely,
in burial, as this word יאסŠ,
jeaseph, is often used. Instead
of that honourable interment
with his fathers, which he
expected, his carcass shall lie
like dung upon the earth. He
openeth, or, one openeth his
eyes, and he is not — That is,
while a man can open his eyes,
in a moment, or in the twinkling
of an eye, he is as if he had
never been; he is dead and gone,
and his family and name are
extinct with him.
Verse 20
Job 27:20. Terrors take hold on
him — From the sense of
approaching death or judgment.
As waters — As violently and
irresistibly as a river breaking
its banks, or a deluge of waters
bears down all before it. A
tempest stealeth, &c. — God’s
wrath cometh upon him like a
tempest, and withal unexpectedly
like a thief in the night.
Verse 21-22
Job 27:21-22. The east wind —
Some terrible judgment, fitly
compared to the east wind,
which, in those parts, was most
vehement, furious, pestilential,
and destructive; carrieth him
away — Out of his place, as it
follows; out of his stately
mansion, where he expected to
dwell for ever; whence he shall
be carried, either by an enemy
or by death. For God shall cast
upon him — His darts or plagues,
one after another and not spare
— That is, shall show no pity or
mercy to him when he crieth to
him for it. As there is no
Hebrew for God, we may attribute
this power to the storm
occasioned by the east wind.
For, if the tempest, Job 27:20,
steals him away, according to
the same kind of phraseology,
the storm may be said to cast
itself upon him, and not spare.
He would fain flee out of his
hand — That is, God’s hand, or
from the power and violence of
the storm. He earnestly desires
and endeavours, by all possible
ways, to escape the judgments of
God, but in vain. Those that
will not be persuaded to flee to
the arms of divine grace, which
are now stretched out to receive
them, will not be able to flee
from the arms of divine wrath,
which will shortly be stretched
out to destroy them.
Verse 23
Job 27:23. Men — Who shall see
and observe these things; shall
clap their hands at him — In
token of their joy, at the
removal of such a public pest
and tyrant; and by way of
astonishment, as also in
contempt and scorn; all which
this action signifies in
Scripture. And shall hiss him
out of his place — In token of
detestation and derision. |