Verse 1
Job 31:1. I made a covenant with
mine eyes, &c. — So far have I
been from any gross wickedness,
that I have abstained from the
least occasions and appearances
of evil. It was possible Job’s
friends might make quite another
use than he intended of the
relation which he had made of
his miserable condition in the
foregoing chapter. And,
therefore, lest it should
confirm them in their old error,
and they should take what he had
said to be an argument of his
guilt, he gives, in this
chapter, a large and particular
account of his integrity, which,
in general, he had so often
asserted; laying his very soul,
and the most secret inclinations
of it, open before them;
together with the actions of his
whole life in his private
capacity, (for of his public he
had spoken before, chap. 29.,)
both in respect of his
neighbours of all sorts, and in
respect of God, to whom he again
most solemnly appeals, in the
conclusion of this discourse,
for the truth of what he here
asserts. Why then should I think
upon a maid? — This is generally
understood to mean the great
care and circumspection which
Job had used to avoid all
temptations and occasions of
sin; and he subjoins, in the
following verses, the very high
and reasonable motives which had
urged him, and should urge every
man, to such a circumspection;
namely, to avoid destruction,
the sure consequence of it.
Which is a further proof that
his prospects were to another
life; for, had he spoken of a
temporal destruction, it would
have been the very thing which
his antagonists had repeated
over and over to him, and had
urged as an argument of his
guilt that he was thus miserably
destroyed. When Job, therefore,
says the same thing, namely,
that a sure destruction attends
the wicked; it is their portion,
an inheritance from God; it is
plain he must understand it in
another sense than his
antagonists did; namely, of
their final retribution in a
future state. See Peters, and
the note on Job 31:13; Job
31:23.
Verse 2
Job 31:2. For what portion of
God is there, &c. — What
recompense may be expected from
God for those who do otherwise?
From above — How secretly soever
unchaste persons carry the
matter, so that men cannot
reprove them, yet there is one
who stands upon a higher place,
whence he seeth in what manner
they act.
Verse 3-4
Job 31:3-4. Is not destruction
to the wicked? — Destruction is
their portion. And a strange
punishment — Some extraordinary
and dreadful judgment, which of
right belongs to them. Hebrew,
ונכר, venecher, an alienation,
or estrangement, namely, from
God and his favour: had I been
such a one, I neither should nor
could have expected any kindness
or mercy from God in a future
world, as now I do. Doth not he
see my ways? — That is, all my
counsels and courses. This was
another reason why he was so
circumspect and exact in
restraining his thoughts, and
senses, and whole man from
sinful practices, because he
knew that God would discern
them, and therefore punish them,
as he said, Job 31:3.
Verse 5-6
Job 31:5-6. If I have walked
with vanity — Conversed in the
world, or dealt with men, with
lying, falsehood, or hypocrisy,
as the word vanity is often
used; or if my foot hath hasted
to deceit — If, when I had an
opportunity of enriching myself
by wronging others, I have
readily and greedily complied
with it. Let me be weighed, &c.
— I desire nothing more than to
have my heart and life weighed
in just balances, and searched
out by the all-seeing God. That
God may know — Or, and he will
know (upon search he will find
out: which is spoken of God
after the manner of men) mine
integrity — So this is an appeal
to God to be witness of his
sincerity.
Verse 7-8
Job 31:7-8. If my step hath
turned out of the way — If I
have knowingly and willingly
swerved from the way of truth
and justice, which God hath
prescribed to me; and my heart
walked after mine eyes — A
strong and beautiful expression,
signifying, if my eyes have
seduced my heart. If I have let
my heart loose to desire
forbidden objects, which my eyes
have seen. Commonly sin enters
by the eye into the heart: thus
David, letting his heart walk
after his eyes, was led into the
sin, first, of adultery, and
then, of murder. How careful
then ought we to be, how deeply
should this be fixed in our
minds, not to let our heart walk
after our eyes. It is a maxim
which deserves to be written, we
will not say in letters of gold,
but, what is of more importance,
on the table of every heart! And
if any blot hath cleaved to my
hands — Any unjust gain. If I
have had or have in my hands, or
possession, any goods, gotten
from others by fraud or
violence, which would be a great
scandal and a blot to my
reputation: Then let me sow, and
let another eat — Let strangers
enjoy the fruit of my labours.
Yea, let my offspring be rooted
out — Or, rather, my increase;
all my plants, and fruits, and
improvements, as the word צאצאי,
tzeetzaai, properly signifies.
Indeed, Job had not now any
children to be rooted out.
Verse 9-10
Job 31:9-10. If my heart have
been deceived by a woman —
Namely, by a strange woman, or
rather, by my neighbour’s wife,
as the next words limit the
clause; for of a maid he had
spoken before. If I have laid
wait at my neighbour’s door —
Watching for his absence, or
some fair opportunity to enter
his house and defile his bed.
Then let my wife grind unto
another — Let another take away
my wife from me, make her the
vilest slave, and use her at his
pleasure. Not as if Job desired
this, but that if God should
give up his wife to such
wickedness, he would acknowledge
his justice in it.
Verse 11-12
Job 31:11-12. For this is a
heinous crime — Namely,
adultery, whether committed by
choice and design, or by the
solicitation of a woman; yea, it
is an iniquity to be punished,
&c. — Hebrew, an iniquity of the
judges; which it belongs to them
to take cognizance of, and to
punish, even with death; and
that not only by the law of
Moses, but even by the law of
nature, as appears from the
known laws and customs of the
heathen nations. For it is a
fire that consumeth, &c. — Lust
is a fire in the soul; it
consumes all that is good there,
convictions of sin, desires
after God, devout affections,
pious resolutions, holy
comforts, and lays the
conscience waste. The sin of
adultery, or fornication,
consumes the body, the
reputation, the substance,
rooting out all the increase: it
kindles the fire of God’s wrath,
which, if not quenched by the
blood of Christ, in consequence
of repentance and faith in him,
will burn to the lowest hell.
Verses 13-15
Job 31:13-15. If I did despise
the cause of my man-servant — If
I used my power over him to
overthrow him and his just
rights; when they contended with
me — Either for requiring more
work from them than they could
perform, or for not providing
for them those supports which
their nature and necessity
required, or for any other
plausible cause. I heard them
patiently, considered the
matters complained of
impartially, and did them right
even against myself, if through
any misinformation, or fancied
provocation, I had done them an
injury. What then shall I do
when God riseth up? — Namely, to
plead the cause of the oppressed
against the oppressor, and to
execute judgment. I used my
servant like one who knew that I
myself also was a servant, and
had a master in heaven, to whom
I was to give an account of my
conduct toward my servant and
all men. And when he visiteth —
That is, when he shall call me
to his tribunal, and strictly
examine all my actions, and
particularly the cause between
me and my servant; what shall I
answer him? — What apology shall
I make for myself? Did not he
that made me, &c. — I considered
that, though he was my servant,
he was my fellow-creature, made
by the same God, and therefore
one of God’s subjects, whom I
could not injure without
injustice to the supreme Lord.
And did not one fashion us, &c.
— With a body and soul of the
same nature and quality, a
rational and immortal creature,
and made after God’s image no
less than myself, to whom
therefore I owed some respect
for God’s sake.
Verse 16-17
Job 31:16-17. If I have withheld
the poor, &c. — If I have denied
them what they desired of me,
either in justice or from
necessity; for he was under no
obligation to grant their vain
or inordinate desires. Or have
caused the eyes of the widow to
fail — With tedious expectation
of my justice or charity. I
durst neither deny nor delay my
help, when they needed or
required it. Or have eaten my
morsel alone — Without
communicating part of my
provisions or property to the
poor, as it follows; and the
fatherless hath not eaten
thereof — This one kind of
necessitous persons is put for
all the rest. Job is most large
upon these heads of doing
justice to the widows and
fatherless, and relieving the
poor, because Eliphaz had most
particularly accused him in
these respects.
Verse 18
Job 31:18. For from my youth —
As soon as I was capable of
managing my own affairs, and
doing good to others; he was
brought up with me as with a
father — Under my care and
protection, with all the
diligence and tenderness of a
father. And I have guided her —
The widow, mentioned Job 31:16;
from my mother’s womb — From my
tender years; ever since I was
capable of discerning good from
evil, I have made conscience of
this duty.
Verses 19-22
Job 31:19-22. If I have seen any
perish — When it was in my power
to help them. If his loins have
not blessed me — That is, if my
covering his loins hath not
given him occasion to bless me,
and to pray to God to bless me;
the loins being put for the
whole body. If he were not
warmed, &c. — With clothing made
of my wool. If I have lifted up
my hand against the fatherless —
An expression signifying an act
of power and hostility. If I
have ever beaten or ill used
him; if I have brought him to
the judgment- seat, that, under
the colour of justice, I might
take away his right, or any ways
to threaten, injure, or crush
him; when I saw my help in the
gate — When I saw myself
superior in the gate, Houbigant.
That is, superior in authority.
When I understood my advantage
against him, and that I could
influence the judges to do what
I pleased. Then let mine arm
fall, &c. — I am contented that
that arm which hath been so
wickedly employed, may either
rot off or fall out of joint,
and so be useless and burdensome
to me.
Verse 23
Job 31:23. For destruction, &c.
— I stood in awe of God, and his
justice and wrath, and therefore
made it my care and business to
shun sin, and to please him. And
by reason of his highness — His
excellence or majesty, which is
most glorious and terrible; I
could not endure — I knew myself
unable, either to oppose his
power, or to bear his wrath, and
therefore I did not dare to
provoke him by any impiety or
injustice. Even good men have
need to restrain themselves from
sin, with the fear of
destruction from God. Even when
salvation from God is a comfort
to us, yet destruction from God
should be a terror to us. Adam,
in innocence, was awed by a
threatening.
Verse 24
Job 31:24. If I have made gold
my hope — That is, the matter of
my hope and trust, expecting
safety and happiness from it,
and placing my chief joy in the
increase of my riches.
Verse 25
Job 31:25. If I have rejoiced
because my wealth was great —
Esteeming myself happy in the
possession of it, though without
God’s love and favour; because
my hand had gotten much —
Ascribing my acquisition of it
to my own skill or industry,
rather than to God’s goodness
and mercy. And these sins Job
the rather mentions, partly for
his own vindication, lest it
should be thought that God took
away his property because he had
abused it to pride, or luxury,
or the oppression of others; and
partly for the instruction of
mankind in succeeding
generations, that they might
take notice of the evil of such
practices, though by most men
they are reputed laudable or
harmless, or, at the worst, but
light and trivial instances of
misconduct.
Verse 26-27
Job 31:26-27. If I beheld the
sun when it shined — Namely, in
its full strength and glory;
when it most affected men’s
minds and hearts with admiration
of its beauty, and of the
benefits which it is
instrumental in communicating to
the world, and thereby moved
them to worship it; or the moon
walking in brightness — When it
shined most clearly, or was at
the full, at which time
especially the idolaters
worshipped it. Job, in this
passage, evidently speaks of the
worship of the host of heaven,
and especially of the sun and
moon, the most eminent and
glorious of that number, which
was the most ancient kind of
idolatry, and most frequent in
the eastern countries. And my
heart hath been enticed — Or
seduced, or deceived, by their
plausible and glorious
appearances, to believe that
there was something of a
divinity in them, and so should
be induced to worship them, and
that secretly, or inwardly, in
my thoughts or affections, while
I professed outwardly to adhere
to God and the true religion.
This emphatical expression,
enticed, seems to be used here
with a design to teach the world
this necessary and important
truth: that no mistake, or error
of mind, would excuse the
practice of idolatry. My mouth
hath kissed my hand — In token
of worship, whereof this was a
sign.
Verse 28
Job 31:28. This also were an
iniquity — No less than the
other fore- mentioned sins of
adultery, oppression, &c.; to be
punished by the judge — The
civil magistrate; who, being
advanced and protected by God,
is obliged to maintain and
vindicate his honour, and
consequently to punish idolatry.
For I should have denied God —
Not directly, but by
consequence, because this was to
rob God of his prerogative, by
giving to the creature that
worship which is peculiar to
God.
Verse 29-30
Job 31:29-30. If I rejoiced, &c.
— I was so far from being
malicious toward, and from
revenging myself on, an enemy,
which is the common and allowed
practice of ungodly men, that I
did not so much as delight in
his ruin, when it was brought
upon him by other hands. By
this, and other passages of the
Old Testament, (see Exodus 23:4;
Proverbs 24:17-18,) we see that
to love, forgive, and do good to
our enemies, is not a duty
peculiar to Christianity, but a
part of that charity which now
is, and ever was, by the law of
nature, of indispensable
obligation upon all men. Or
lifted up myself when evil found
him — Hebrew, התעררתי,
hithgnorarti, stirred up
himself, to rejoice and insult
over his misery. Neither have I
suffered my mouth — Hebrew, חכי,
chicchi, my palate, which, being
one of the instruments of
speech, is put for all the rest;
to sin by wishing a curse to his
soul. The sense is, if any
desire of his hurt did arise in
me, I forthwith suppressed it,
and did not suffer it to break
forth in my uttering an
imprecation against him.
Verse 31-32
Job 31:31-32. If the men of my
tabernacle — My domestics and
familiar friends; said not, O
that we had of his flesh! —
Heath and Schultens read the
words, Who can show the man that
hath not filled himself with his
victuals? And many commentators
understand Job as asserting
here, that it was a common thing
among those who lived in his
family, on beholding his
boundless beneficence, to cry
out, “Who is there that has not
eaten of his flesh?” That is,
who has not tasted of his
generosity? Others consider it
as an exclamation of gratitude,
uttered by those who were
sustained by Job; as if he had
said, O that we had wherewithal
to support ourselves, that we
might not thus be a burden to
this generous man; that we might
not be obliged thus to feed upon
his flesh or substance! But the
connection of the words with the
preceding seems most apparent if
we understand them as an
amplification, and further
confirmation, of Job’s
charitable disposition toward
his enemies. Although his cause
was so just, and the malice of
his enemies so notorious and
unreasonable, that all who were
daily conversant with him, and
were witnesses of his and their
carriage, were so zealous in his
quarrel, that they protested
they could eat their very flesh;
yet he restrained both them and
himself from executing vengeance
upon them. The stranger — Or
traveller, as it follows; did
not lodge in the street —
But in my house, according to
the laws of hospitality; see
Genesis 18:3; Genesis 19:2.
Verse 33
Job 31:33. If I covered my
transgressions as Adam — As Adam
did in paradise. By hiding mine
iniquity in my bosom — In my own
breast, and from the sight of
all men; or, in secret, as R.
Levi renders בחבי, bechobbi. Job
alludes to Adam’s hiding himself
among the trees of the garden,
and palliating his sin; a
circumstance in the history of
the fall, recorded by Moses,
Genesis 3:7, and doubtless
imparted by the godly patriarchs
to their children before Moses’s
time, and therefore well known
to Job, who here says he did not
act thus, but was ever ready to
acknowledge his errors. The
allusion is quite proper and
apposite: but if we should
render the passage, agreeably to
the marginal reading, after the
manner of men, it becomes an
accusation of others; and the
vindication of himself has a
mixture of pride in it, which
does not suit the character of
the speaker. See Sherlock on
Prophecy, p. 212.
Verse 34
Job 31:34. Did I fear a great
multitude? — No: all that knew
Job, knew him to be a man of
resolution, that boldly
appeared, spoke, and acted, in
defence of religion and justice.
He durst not keep silence, or
stay within, when called to
speak or act for God. He was not
deterred by the number, or
quality, or insults of the
injurious, from reproving them,
and doing justice to the
injured.
Verse 35
Job 31:35. O that one would hear
me! — O that I might have my
cause heard by any just and
impartial judge! Behold, my
desires, &c. — So the Vulgate
and the Targum understand תוי,
tavi, here, deriving it from
אוה, ivvah, he desired, he
coveted. Some, however, deriving
it from תוה, tivvah, to mark, to
design, to define, render the
clause, Lo, here is my sign,
mark, or pledge, namely, that I
will stand the trial. But the
former seems to be the true
sense, and is approved by A.
Ezra and R. Levi. That the
Almighty would answer me —
Answer my desire herein, either
by hearing me himself, or by
appointing some impartial person
to judge whether I be such a
hypocrite as my friends make me,
or an upright person. And that
mine adversary — Whosoever he be
that shall contend with, or
accuse me; had written a book —
Had put down in writing the
charges he has against me, and
brought them in. He alludes to
what is usual in judicial
proceedings. This shows that
letters were in use in Job’s
time.
Verse 36
Job 31:36. Surely I would take
it — The book, or writing,
containing the charges against
me; upon my shoulder — As a
trophy, or badge of honour; and
bind it as a crown to me — I
would be so far from being
ashamed or terrified, that I
would glory, and rejoice, and
triumph in it, nay, and openly
expose it to be read by all,
well knowing that so groundless
and impotent an accusation would
only serve the more to clear my
innocence.
Verse 37
Job 31:37. I would declare to
him — To the Almighty, my judge;
the number of my steps — The
whole course of my life and
actions, step by step, as far as
I could remember: as a prince
would I go near him — That is,
with courage and confidence of
success: I would stand before
him with a look as upright and
assured as that of a prince.
Nothing can be plainer than that
the book, or libel, here
supposed to be written by Job’s
adversary, cannot be meant of
one drawn up by God. For how was
it possible for him to triumph
in this? If it were a bill of
accusation, coming from the God
of truth, he had more reason to
tremble, certainly, than to
triumph. We must therefore
conclude that by the adversary
must be meant one or all of
Job’s friends, who were his only
accusers that we know of: and
God is here appealed to as a
hearer or judge between them. In
this it is that Job, with
reason, rejoices and triumphs as
being conscious of his integrity
before God, and his sincere
desire and endeavour to know and
do his will in all things. See
Peters and Dodd.
Verses 38-40
Job 31:38-40. If my land cry
against me — To wit, to God, for
revenge,
(as the like phrase signifies,
Genesis 4:10; Habakkuk 2:11,)
because I have gotten it from
the right owners by fraud or
violence, as my friends accuse
me. If I have eaten the fruits
thereof without money — Either
without paying the price
required by the right owner of
the land, or by defrauding the
workmen of the wages of their
labours. Or have caused the
owners to lose their life —
Killing them, that I might have
undisturbed possession of it, as
Ahab did Naboth. The words of
Job are ended — To wit, in
answer to his friends: for he
speaks but little afterward, and
that is to God. |