Chapter 26:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 Esther Psalms
Job 26
Complete Concise
This is Job's short reply to Bildad's short discourse, in
which he is so far from contradicting him that he confirms what he had said, and
out-does him in magnifying God and setting forth his power, to show what reason
he had still to say, as he did (ch. 13:2), "What you know, the same do I
know also." I. He shows that Bildad's discourse was foreign to the matter
he was discoursing ofthough very true and good, yet not to the purpose (v.
2-4). II. That it was needless to the person he was discoursing with; for he
knew it, and believed it, and could speak of it as well as he and better, and
could add to the proofs which he had produced of God's power and greatness,
which he does in the rest of his discourse (v. 5-13), concluding that, when
they had both said what they could, all came short of the merit of the subject
and it was still far from being exhausted (v. 14).
Verses 1-4
One would not have thought that Job, when he was in so much pain
and misery, could banter his friend as he does here and make himself merry with
the impertinency of his discourse. Bildad thought that he had made a fine
speech, that the matter was so weighty, and the language so fine, that he had
gained the reputation both of an oracle and of an orator; but Job peevishly
enough shows that his performance was not so valuable as he thought it and
ridicules him for it. He shows,
I. That there was no great matter to be found in it (v. 3):
How
hast thou plentifully declared the thing as it is? This is spoken
ironically, upbraiding Bildad with the good conceit he himself had of what he
had said. 1. He thought he had spoken very clearly, had
declared the thing as
it is. He was very fond (as we are all apt to be) of his own notions, and
thought they only were right, and true, and intelligible, and all other notions
of the thing were false, mistaken, and confused; whereas, when we speak of the
glory of God, we cannot declare the thing as it is, for we see it through a
glass darkly, or but by reflection, and shall not see him as he is till we come
to heaven. Here
we cannot order our speech concerning him, ch. 37:19. 2.
He thought he had spoken very fully, though in few words, that he had
plentifully declared it, and, alas! it was but poorly and scantily that he
declared it, in comparison with the vast compass and copiousness of the subject.
II. That there was no great use to be made of it.
Cui bono
What
good hast thou done by all that thou hast said?
How hast thou, with
all this mighty flourish,
helped him that is without power? v. 2.
How
hast thou, with thy grave dictates,
counselled him
that has no
wisdom? v. 3. Job would convince him, 1. That he had done God no service by
it, nor made him in the least beholden to him. It is indeed our duty, and will
be our honour, to speak on God's behalf; but we must not think that he needs
our service, or is indebted to us for it, nor will he accept it if it come from
a spirit of contention and contradiction, and not from a sincere regard to God's
glory. 2. That he had done his cause no service by it. He thought his friends
were mightily beholden to him for helping them, at a dead lift, to make their
part good against Job, when they were quite at a loss, and had no strength, no
wisdom. Even weak disputants, when warm, are apt to think truth more beholden to
them than it really is. 3. That he had done him no service by it. He pretended
to convince, instruct, and comfort, Job; but, alas! what he had said was so
little to the purpose that it would not avail to rectify any mistakes, nor to
assist him either in bearing his afflictions or in getting good by them:
"To
whom has thou uttered words? v. 4. Was it to me that thou didst direct thy
discourse? And dost thou take me for such a child as to need these instructions?
Or dost thou think them proper for one in my condition?" Every thing that
is true and good is not suitable and seasonable. To one that was humbled, and
broken, and grieved in spirit, as Job was, he ought to have preached of the
grace and mercy of God, rather than of his greatness and majesty, to have laid
before him the consolations rather than the terrors of the Almighty. Christ
knows how to speak what is proper for the weary (Isa. 50:4), and his ministers
should learn rightly to divide the word of truth, and not make those sad whom
God would not have made sad, as Bildad did; and therefore Job asks him,
Whose
spirit came from thee? that is, "What troubled soul would ever be
revived, and relieved, and brought to itself, by such discourses as these?"
Thus are we often disappointed in our expectations from our friends who should
comfort us, but the Comforter, who is the Holy Ghost, never mistakes in his
operations nor misses of his end.
Verses 5-14
The truth received a great deal of light from the dispute
between Job and his friends concerning those points about which they differed;
but now they are upon a subject in which they were all agreed, the infinite
glory and power of God. How does truth triumph, and how brightly does it shine,
when there appears no other strife between the contenders than which shall speak
most highly and honourably of God and be most copious in showing forth his
praise! It were well if all disputes about matters of religion might end thus,
in
glorifying God as Lord of all, and our Lord,
with one mind and one
mouth (Rom. 15:6); for to that we have all attained, in that we are all
agreed.
I. Many illustrious instances are here given of the wisdom and
power of God in the creation and preservation of the world.
1. If we look about us, to the earth and waters here below, we
shall see striking instances of omnipotence, which we may gather out of these
verses. (1.)
He hangs the earth upon nothing, v. 7. The vast terraqueous
globe neither rests upon any pillars nor hangs upon any axle-tree, and yet, by
the almighty power of God, is firmly fixed in its place, poised with its own
weight. The art of man could not hang a feather upon nothing, yet the divine
wisdom hangs the whole earth so. It is
ponderibus librata suispoised by
its own weight, so says the poet; it is
upheld by the word of God's
power, so says the apostle. What is hung upon nothing may serve us to set
our feet on, and bear the weight of our bodies, but it will never serve us to
set our hearts on, nor bear the weight of our souls. (2.) He
sets bounds to
the waters of the sea, and compasses them in (v. 10), that they may not
return
to cover the earth; and these bounds shall continue unmoved, unshaken,
unworn,
till the day and night come to an end, when time shall be no
more. Herein appears the dominion which Providence has over the raging waters of
the sea, and so it is an instance of his power, Jer. 5:22. We see too the care
which Providence takes of the poor sinful inhabitants of the earth, who, though
obnoxious to his justice and lying at his mercy, are thus preserved from being
overwhelmed, as they were once by the waters of a flood, and will continue to be
so, because they are reserved unto fire. (3.) He
forms dead things under the
waters. Rephaim-giants, are formed under the waters, that is, vast
creatures, of prodigious bulk, as whales, giant-like creatures, among the
innumerable inhabitants of the water. So bishop Patrick. (4.) By mighty storms
and tempests he shakes the mountains, which are here called
the pillars of
heaven (v. 11), and even
divides the sea, and smites through its proud
waves, v. 12. At the presence of the Lord the
sea flies and the
mountains
skip, Ps. 114:3, 4. See Hab. 3:6, etc. A storm furrows the waters, and does,
as it were, divide them; and then a calm smites through the waves, and lays them
flat again. See Ps. 89:9, 10. Those who think Job lived at, or after, the time
of Moses, apply this to the dividing of the Red Sea before the children of
Israel, and the drowning of the Egyptians in it.
By his understanding he
smiteth through Rahab; so the word is, and Rahab is often put for Egypt; as
Ps. 87:4; Isa. 51:9.
2. If we consider hell beneath, though it is out of our sight,
yet we may conceive the instances of God's power there. By
hell and
destruction (v. 6) we may understand the grave, and those who are buried in
it, that they are under the eye of God, though laid out of our sight, which may
strengthen our belief of the resurrection of the dead. God knows where to find,
and whence to fetch, all the scattered atoms of the consumed body. We may also
consider them as referring to the place of the damned, where the separate souls
of the wicked are in misery and torment. That is hell and destruction, which are
said to be
before the Lord (Prov. 15:11), and here to be
naked before
him, to which it is probable there is an allusion, Rev. 14:10, where sinners
are to be tormented
in the presence of the holy angels (who attended the
Shechinah) and
in the presence of the Lamb. And this may give light to v.
5, which some ancient versions read thus (and I think more agreeably to the
signification of the word
Rephaim): Behold, the giants groan under the
waters, and those that dwell with them; and then follows,
Hell is naked
before him, typified by the drowning of the giants of the old world; so the
learned Mr. Joseph Mede understands it, and with it illustrates Prov. 21:16,
where hell is called
the congregation of the dead; and it is the same
word which is here used, and which he would there have rendered
the
congregation of the giants, in allusion to the drowning of the sinners of
the old world. And is there any thing in which the majesty of God appears more
dreadful than in the eternal ruin of the ungodly and the groans of the
inhabitants of the land of darkness? Those that will not with angels fear and
worship shall for ever with devils fear and tremble; and God therein will be
glorified.
3. If we look up to heaven above, we shall see instances of God's
sovereignty and power. (1.)
He stretches out the north over the empty place,
v. 7. So he did at first, when
he stretched out the heavens like a curtain
(Ps. 104:2); and he still continues to keep them stretched out, and will do so
till the general conflagration, when they shall be
rolled together as a
scroll, Rev. 6:14. He mentions the north because his country (as ours) lay
in the northern hemisphere; and the air is the empty place over which it is
stretched out. See Ps. 89:12. What an empty place is this world in comparison
with the other! (2.) He keeps the waters that are said to be
above the
firmament from pouring down upon the earth, as once they did (v. 8):
He
binds up the waters in his thick clouds, as if they were tied closely in a
bag, till there is occasion to use them; and, notwithstanding the vast weight of
water so raised and laid up, yet
the cloud is not rent under them, for
then they would burst and pour out as a spout; but they do, as it were, distil
through the cloud, and so come drop by drop, in mercy to the earth, in small
rain, or great rain, as he pleases. (3.) He conceals the glory of the upper
world, the dazzling lustre of which we poor mortals could not bear (v. 9):
He
holds back the face of his throne, that light in which he dwells,
and
spreads a cloud upon it, through which
he judges, ch. 22:13. God will
have us to live by faith, not by sense; for this is agreeable to a state of
probation. It were not a fair trial if the face of God's throne were visible
now as it will be in the great day.
Lest his high throne, above expression bright,
With deadly glory should oppress our sight,
To break the dazzling force he draws a screen
Of sable shades, and spreads his clouds between.
Sir R. Blackmore
(4.) The bright ornaments of heaven are the work of his hands
(v. 13):
By his Spirit, the eternal Spirit that moved upon the face of
the waters,
the breath of his mouth (Ps. 33:6),
he has garnished the
heavens, not only made them, but beautified them, has curiously bespangled
them with stars by night and painted them with the light of the sun by day. God,
having made man to look upward
(Os homini sublime dedit
To man he
gave an erect countenance), has
therefore garnished the heavens, to
invite him to look upward, that, by pleasing his eye with the dazzling light of
the sun and the sparkling light of the stars, their number, order, and various
magnitudes, which, as so many golden studs, beautify the canopy drawn over our
heads, he may be led to admire the great Creator, the Father and fountain of
lights, and to say, "If the pavement be so richly inlaid, what must the
palace be! If the visible heavens be so glorious, what are those that are out of
sight!" From the beauteous garniture of the ante-chamber we may infer the
precious furniture of the presence-chamber. If stars be so bright, what are
angels! What is meant here by
the crooked serpent which his hands have
formed is not certain. Some make it part of the garnishing of the heavens, the
milky-way, say some; some particular constellation, so called, say others. It is
the same word that is used for leviathan (Isa. 27:1), and probably may be meant
of the whale or crocodile, in which appears much of the power of the Creator;
and why may not Job conclude with that inference, when God himself does so? ch.
41.
II. He concludes, at last, with an awful
et caetera (v.
14):
Lo, these are parts of his ways, the out-goings of his wisdom and
power, the ways in which he walks and by which he makes himself known to the
children of men. Here, 1. He acknowledges, with adoration, the discoveries that
were made of God. These things which he himself had said, and which Bildad had
said, are his ways, and this is heard of him; this is something of God. But, 2.
He admires the depth of that which is undiscovered. This that we have said is
but part of his ways, a small part. What we know of God is nothing in comparison
with what is in God and what God is. After all the discoveries which God has
made to us, and all the enquiries we have made after God, still we are much in
the dark concerning him, and must conclude,
Lo, these are but parts of his
ways. Something we hear of him by his works and by his word; but, alas!
how
little a portion is heard of him? heard by us, heard from us! We know but in
part; we prophesy but in part. When we have said all we can, concerning God, we
must even do as St. Paul does (Rom. 11:33); despairing to find the bottom, we
must sit down at the brink, and adore the depth:
O the depth of the wisdom
and knowledge of God! It is but a little portion that we hear and know of
God in our present state. He is infinite and incomprehensible; our
understandings and capacities are weak and shallow, and the full discoveries of
the divine glory are reserved for the future state. Even
the thunder of his
power (that is, his powerful thunder), one of the lowest of his ways here in
our own region, we cannot understand. See ch. 37:4, 5. Much less can we
understand the utmost force and extent of his power, the terrible efforts and
operations of it, and particularly
the power of his anger, Ps. 90:11. God
is great, and we know him not.
Chapter 26:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 Esther Psalms
Genesis
Exodus
Leviticus
Numbers
Deuteronomy
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Job
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Joel
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Habakkuk
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Haggai
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John
Acts
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2 Corinthians
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1 Thessalonians
2 Thessalonians
1 Timothy
2 Timothy
Titus
Philemon
Hebrews
James
1 Peter
2 Peter
1 John
2 John
3 John
Jude
Revelation
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