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Job Chapter
Four
Job 4
Chapter Contents
Eliphaz reproves Job. (1-6) And maintains that God's
judgments are for the wicked. (7-11) The vision of Eliphaz. (12-21)
Commentary on Job 4:1-6
(Read Job 4:1-6)
Satan undertook to prove Job a hypocrite by afflicting
him; and his friends concluded him to be one because he was so afflicted
and
showed impatience. This we must keep in mind if we would understand what
passed. Eliphaz speaks of Job
and his afflicted condition
with tenderness;
but charges him with weakness and faint-heartedness. Men make few allowances
for those who have taught others. Even pious friends will count that only a
touch which we feel as a wound. Learn from hence to draw off the mind of a
sufferer from brooding over the affliction
to look at the God of mercies in
the affliction. And how can this be done so well as by looking to Christ Jesus
in whose unequalled sorrows every child of God soonest learns to forget his
own?
Commentary on Job 4:7-11
(Read Job 4:7-11)
Eliphaz argues
1. That good men were never thus ruined.
But there is one event both to the righteous and to the wicked
Ecclesiastes 9:2
both in life and death; the
great and certain difference is after death. Our worst mistakes are occasioned
by drawing wrong views from undeniable truths. 2. That wicked men were often
thus ruined: for the proof of this
Eliphaz vouches his own observation. We may
see the same every day.
Commentary on Job 4:12-21
(Read Job 4:12-21)
Eliphaz relates a vision. When we are communing with our
own hearts
and are still
Psalm 4:4
then is a time for the Holy Spirit to
commune with us. This vision put him into very great fear. Ever since man
sinned
it has been terrible to him to receive communications from Heaven
conscious that he can expect no good tidings thence. Sinful man! shall he
pretend to be more just
more pure
than God
who being his Maker
is his Lord
and Owner? How dreadful
then
the pride and presumption of man! How great the
patience of God! Look upon man in his life. The very foundation of that cottage
of clay in which man dwells
is in the dust
and it will sink with its own
weight. We stand but upon the dust. Some have a higher heap of dust to stand
upon than others but still it is the earth that stays us up
and will shortly
swallow us up. Man is soon crushed; or if some lingering distemper
which
consumes like a moth
be sent to destroy him
he cannot resist it. Shall such a
creature pretend to blame the appointments of God? Look upon man in his death.
Life is short
and in a little time men are cut off. Beauty
strength
learning
not only cannot secure them from death
but these things die with
them; nor shall their pomp
their wealth
or power
continue after them. Shall
a weak
sinful
dying creature
pretend to be more just than God
and more pure
than his Maker? No: instead of quarrelling with his afflictions
let him wonder
that he is out of hell. Can a man be cleansed without his Maker? Will God
justify sinful mortals
and clear them from guilt? or will he do so without
their having an interest in the righteousness and gracious help of their
promised Redeemer
when angels
once ministering spirits before his throne
receive the just recompence of their sins? Notwithstanding the seeming impunity
of men for a short time
though living without God in the world
their doom is
as certain as that of the fallen angels
and is continually overtaking them.
Yet careless sinners note it so little
that they expect not the change
nor
are wise to consider their latter end.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Job》
Job 4
Verse 2
[2] If
we assay to commune with thee
wilt thou be grieved? but who can withhold
himself from speaking?
If we
… — He
speaks with great modesty. He will not undertake the cause alone
but joins his
friends with him. He will not promise much
but only assay
or try if he could
propose any thing pertinent to Job's case.
Withhold —
When he hears such words from such a person as thou art.
Verse 4
[4] Thy words have upholden him that was falling
and thou hast strengthened
the feeble knees.
Feeble knees —
Such as were weak hearted
and fainting under their trials.
Verse 6
[6] Is
not this thy fear
thy confidence
thy hope
and the uprightness of thy ways?
Thy fear — We
now plainly see what was the nature of thy fear of God
thy confidence in him
the uprightness of thy ways
and thy hope in God's mercy. Thy present carriage
discovers that it was but mere talk and appearance.
Verse 7
[7]
Remember
I pray thee
who ever perished
being innocent? or where were the
righteous cut off?
Innocent —
Therefore thou art guilty of some great
though secret crimes
and thy sin hath
now found thee out.
Cut off — By
the sickle of Divine vengeance before his time
which is like to be thy case.
Eliphaz here advances another argument to prove Job an hypocrite; taken not
only from his impatience under afflictions
but from his afflictions
themselves.
Verse 8
[8] Even as I have seen
they that plow iniquity
and sow wickedness
reap the
same.
Even — As
thou hast never seen any example of a righteous man cut off
so I have seen
many of wicked men cut off for their wickedness.
They —
They that designedly work wickedness
first preparing themselves for it
and
then continuing to execute it
as husbandmen first plow the ground
and then
cast in the feed.
Reap —
The fruit of their iniquity
the just punishment of it.
Verse 9
[9] By
the blast of God they perish
and by the breath of his nostrils are they
consumed.
The blast — Of
his nostrils
as it follows; by his anger
which in men shews itself
in the
nostrils
by hot and frequent breathings there
by a secret
but mighty
judgment of God
they are blown away as chaff by the wind.
Verse 10
[10] The
roaring of the lion
and the voice of the fierce lion
and the teeth of the
young lions
are broken.
The roaring —
Nor can they escape
even were they strong as lions
yea
as the strongest and
fiercest of them.
Broken —
Which is true literally; the lions when taken having most commonly their teeth
broken
as ancient and modern writers relate. But this is meant of powerful
tyrants
who are fitly compared to lions
Ezekiel 32:2; 38:13
who though for a time they persecute and
oppress other men
yet in due time they are restrained
and broken
and crushed
in pieces by the mighty power of God. Possibly he may secretly accuse Job
or
his children
that being persons of great wealth and power
they had abused it
to ruin their neighbours
and therefore were justly cut off.
Verse 11
[11] The
old lion perisheth for lack of prey
and the stout lion's whelps are scattered
abroad.
Scattered —
Gone from their dens several ways to hunt for prey
and can find none.
Verse 12
[12] Now
a thing was secretly brought to me
and mine ear received a little thereof.
Now — To
convince Job of the sin and folly of impatience
Eliphaz relates a vision he
had had
perhaps since he came to him. Which in that age and state of the church
before the holy scriptures were written
was the usual way of God's discovering
his mind to those that sought him.
A thing —
Heb. a word
from God
a message.
Secretly —
Heb. was stolen
or brought by stealth unto me
privately and secretly
as the
word of God used to come to the prophets
being spoken in their ear
as it was
to Samuel
with a low and still voice. He does not pretend to have understood
it fully; but something of it he perceived. How little a portion is heard of
God! How little do we know of him in this world.
Verse 13
[13] In
thoughts from the visions of the night
when deep sleep falleth on men
In thoughts —
These thoughts arose from the visions of the night
which it is probable he had
seen before. Visions differed from dreams herein
that God imparted his mind to
men in dreams when asleep
but in visions
when they were awake. And these
visions sometimes happened by day
but most frequently by night.
Sleep — In
the dead of the night
when men usually are in a deep sleep; though Eliphaz was
not now asleep.
Verse 15
[15] Then
a spirit passed before my face; the hair of my flesh stood up:
A spirit — An
angel in visible shape
otherwise he could not have discerned it.
Stood up —
Through that excessive horror caused by so glorious
unusual
and terrible a
presence.
Verse 16
[16] It
stood still
but I could not discern the form thereof: an image was before mine
eyes
there was silence
and I heard a voice
saying
Stood —
Having passed by him to
and again
he made a stand
and addressed himself to
speak.
The form —
Exactly and distinctly.
An image — I
saw some visible resemblance
though in a confused manner.
Silence —
The spirit
which possibly had made some noise with his motion
now standing
still made no noise; all other persons and things about me were silent
and I
also kept in my voice and breath
that I might distinctly hear. In the Hebrew
the words run thus
silence and a voice I heard.
Verse 17
[17]
Shall mortal man be more just than God? shall a man be more pure than his
maker?
More just —
Pretend more strictly to observe the laws of justice? Shall (enosh) mortal
miserable man (so the word signifies) be thus insolent? Nay
shall geber
the
strongest and most eminent man
stand in competition with God? Those that find
fault with the directions of the Divine law
the dispensations of the Divine
grace
or the disposal of the Divine providence
do make themselves more just
and pure than God: who being their maker
is their Lord and owner: and the
author of all the justice and purity that is in man.
Verse 18
[18]
Behold
he put no trust in his servants; and his angels he charged with folly:
Servants —
They are called his servants by way of eminency
that general name being here
appropriated to the chief of the kind
to intimate that sovereign dominion
which the great God hath over the angels
and much more over men.
With folly —
Without all doubt
this refers to those angels who foolishly and wickedly fell
from God.
Verse 19
[19] How
much less in them that dwell in houses of clay
whose foundation is in the
dust
which are crushed before the moth?
How
… —
The sense is
what strange presumption then is it for a foolish and mortal man
to make himself more just than God.
In them —
Who though they have immortal spirits
yet those spirits dwell in mortal
bodies
which are great clogs
and incumbrances
and snares to them. These are
called houses
(because they are the receptacles of the soul
and the places of
its settled abode) and houses of clay
because they were made of clay
or
earth
and to note their great frailty and mutability; whereas the angels are
free spirits
unconfined to such carcasses
and dwell in celestial
and
glorious
and everlasting mansions.
Whose —
Whose very foundation
no less than the rest of the building
is in the dust;
had their original from it
and must return to it. We stand but upon the dust:
some have an higher heap of dust to stand upon than others. But still it is the
earth that stays us up
and will shortly swallow us up.
Before —
Sooner than a moth is crushed
which is easily done by a gentle touch of the
finger. Or
at the face of a moth. No creature is so contemptible
but one time
or other it may have the body of man in its power.
Verse 20
[20] They
are destroyed from morning to evening: they perish for ever without any
regarding it.
Destroyed —
All the day long
there is not a moment wherein man is not sinking towards
death and corruption.
Perish — In
reference to this present worldly life
which when once lost is never
recovered.
Regarding —
Heb. without putting the heart to it
this is so common a thing for all men
though never so high and great
to perish in this manner
that no man heeds it
but passes it by as a general accident not worthy of observation.
Verse 21
[21] Doth
not their excellency which is in them go away? they die
even without wisdom.
Excellency —
Whatsoever is by common estimation excellent in men
all their natural
and
moral
and civil accomplishments
as high birth
great riches
power and
wisdom
these are so far from preserving men from perishing
that they perish
themselves
together with those houses of clay in which they are lodged.
Without wisdom —
Even without having attained that only wisdom for which they came into the
world. Shall such mean
weak
foolish
sinful
dying creatures as this
pretend
to be more just than God
more pure than his maker? No: instead of quarrelling
with his afflictions
let him admire that he is out of hell.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Job》
04 Chapter 4
Verses 1-21
Then Eliphaz the Temanite answered and said.
The first colloquy
At this point we pass into the poem proper. It opens with three
colloquies between Job and his friends. In form these colloquies closely
resemble each other. But while similar in form
in spirit they differ widely.
At the outset the friends are content to hint their doubts of Job
their
suspicion that he has fallen into some secret and heinous sin
in general and
ambiguous terms; but
as the argument rolls on
they are irritated by the
boldness with which he rebuts their charges and asserts his integrity
and grow
ever more candid and harsh and angry in the denunciation of his guilt. With
fine truth to nature
the poet depicts Job as passing through an entirely
opposite process. At first
while they content themselves with hints and
“ambiguous givings-out
” with insinuating in general terms that he must have
sinned
and set themselves to win him to confession and repentance
he is exasperated
beyond all endurance
and challenges the justice both of man and God; for it is
these general charges
these covert and undefined insinuations of some
“occulted guilt
” which
because it is impossible to meet them
most of all vex
and disturb the soul. But as
in their rising anger
they exchange ambiguous
hints for open
definite charges
by a fine natural revulsion
Job grows even
more calm and reasonable; for definite charges can be definitely met; why then
should he any longer vex and distress his spirit? More and more he turns away
from the loud
foolish outcries of his friends
and addresses himself to God
even when he seems to speak to them. (Samuel Cox
D. D.)
The message of the three friends
When Job opened his mouth and spoke
their sympathy was dashed
with pious horror. They had never in all their lives heard such words. He
seemed to prove himself far worse than they could have imagined. He ought to
have been meek and submissive. Some flaw there must have been: what was it? He
should have confessed his sin
instead of cursing life
and reflecting upon
God. Their own silent suspicion
indeed
is the chief cause of his despair; but
this they do not understand. Amazed
they hear him; outraged
they take up the
challenge he offers. One after another the three men reason with Job
from
almost the same point of view
suggesting first
and then insisting that he
should acknowledge fault
and humble himself under the hand of a just and holy
God. Now
here is the motive of the long controversy which is the main subject
of the poem. And
in tracing it
we are to see Job
although racked by pain and
distraught by grief--sadly at disadvantage
because he seems to be a living
example of the truth of their ideas--rousing himself to the defence of his integrity
and contending for that as the only grip he has of God. Advance after advance
is made by the three
who gradually become more dogmatic as the controversy
proceeds. Defence after defence is made by Job
who is driven to think himself
challenged not only by his friends
but sometimes also by God Himself through
them. Eliphaz
Bildad
and Zophar agree in the opinion that Job has done evil
and is suffering for it. The language they use
and the arguments they bring
forward are much alike. Yet a difference will be found in their way of
speaking
and a vaguely suggested difference of character. Eliphaz gives us an
impression of age and authority. When Job has ended his complaint
Eliphaz
regards him with a disturbed and offended look. “How pitiful!” he seems to say
but also
“How dreadful
how unaccountable!” He desires to win Job to a right
view of things by kindly counsel; but he talks pompously
and preaches too much
from the high moral bench. Bildad
again
is a dry and composed person. He is
less the man of experience than of tradition. He does not speak of discoveries
made in the course of his own observation; but he has stored the sayings of the
wise and reflected upon them. When a thing is cleverly said he is satisfied
and he cannot understand why his impressive statements should fail to convince
and convert. He is a gentleman like Eliphaz
and uses courtesy. At first he
refrains from wounding Job’s feelings. Yet behind his politeness is the sense
of superior wisdom--and wisdom of ages and his own. He is certainly a harder
man than Eliphaz. Lastly
Zophar is a blunt man with a decidedly rough
dictatorial style. He is impatient of the waste of words on a matter so plain
and prides himself on coming to the point. It is he who ventures to say definitely
“Know therefore that God exacteth of thee less than thine iniquity
deserveth
”--a cruel speech from any point of view. He is not so eloquent as
Eliphaz
he has no air of a prophet. Compared with Bildad
he is less
argumentative. With all his sympathy--and he too is a friend--he shows an
exasperation which he justifies by his zeal for the honour of God. The
differences are delicate
but real
and evident even to our late criticism. In
the author’s day the characters would probably seem more distinctly contrasted
than they appear to us. Still
it must be owned
each holds virtually the same
position. One prevailing school of thought is represented
and in each figure
attacked. It is not difficult to imagine three speakers differing far more from
each other. One hears the breathings of the same dogmatism in the three voices.
The dramatising is vague
not at all of our sharp
modern kind
like that of
Ibsen
throwing each figure into vivid contrast with every other. (Robert A.
Watson
D. D.)
Eliphaz as a natural religionist
See such an one estimating man’s character.
I. He regarded the
fact that a man suffered as proof of his wickedness. It is true that the
principle of retribution is at work amongst men in this world. It is also true
that this principle is manifest in most signal judgments. But retribution here
though often manifest
is not invariable and adequate; the wicked are not
always made wretched
nor are the good always made happy in this life. To judge
a man’s character by his external circumstances is a most flagrant mistake.
1. Suffering is not necessarily connected (directly) with sin.
2. Suffering seems almost necessary to the human creature in this
world.
3. Suffering
as a fact
has a sanitary influence upon the character
of the good.
II. He regarded the
murmuring of a man under suffering as a proof of his wickedness. Job had
uttered terrible complaints. Eliphaz was right here: a murmuring spirit is
essentially an evil. In this complaining spirit Eliphaz discovers two things.
Hypocrisy. Ignorance of God. He then unfolds a vision he had
which suggests
three things.
1. That man has a capacity to hold intercourse with a spirit world.
2. That man’s character places him in a humiliating position in the
spirit world.
3. That man’s earthly state is only a temporary separation from a
conscious existence in the spirit world. (Homilist.)
The error of Eliphaz
Let us avoid the error of Eliphaz
the Temanite
who
in
reproving Job
maintained that the statute of requital is enforced in all
cases
rigorously and exactly--that the world is governed on the principle of
minute recompense--that sin is always followed by its equivalent of suffering
in this present life. This is not so. To the rule of recompense we must allow
for a vast number of exceptions. The penalty does not always follow directly on
the heels of sin. It is oftentimes delayed
may be postponed for years
may
possibly never be inflicted in this world at all And meantime the wicked
flourish. They sit in places of honour and authority. As it is said
“The
tabernacles of robbers do prosper
and they that provoke God are secure. They
are not in trouble as other men. They increase in riches
and their eyes stand
out with fatness. Yea
I have seen the wicked in great power
and spreading
himself like a green bay tree.” “Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper?”
1. It is not because God is unobservant. Ah
no. “The iniquities of
the wicked are not hid from Mine eyes
” saith the Lord. He seeth our ways
pondereth our goings
hath set a print upon the very heels of our feet.
2. Nor is it because of any indifference on the part of God. Seeing
our sin
He abhors it; otherwise He would not be God.
3. Nor is it for want of power. The tide marks of the deluge
remaining plain upon the rocks even unto this day
attest what an angry God can
do. Why then is the sinner spared? And why is the just penalty of his guilt not
laid upon us here and now? Because the Lord is merciful. Sweep the whole
heavens of philosophy for a reason and you shall find none but this
the Lord
is merciful. “As I live
” saith the Lord
“I have no pleasure in the death of
the wicked.”
A few practical inferences--
1. The fact that a sinner is afflicted here will not exempt him
hereafter from the just penalty of his ill-doing. We say of a man sometimes
when the darkest waves of life are rolling over him
“He is having his
retribution now.” But that cannot be.
2. The fact that a sinner does not suffer here is no evidence that he
will always go scot-free. If the sentence be suspended for a timer it is only
for a time--and for a definite end. The Roman emblem of Justice was an old man
with a two-edged sword
limping slowly but surely to his work.
3. The fact that the wicked are sometimes left unpunished here
is
proof conclusive of a final day of reckoning. For the requital is imperfect.
Alas
for justice
if its administration is to be regarded as completed on
earth!
4. The fact that compensation is often delayed so long
in order that
the sinner may have abundant room for repentance
is a complete vindication of
God’s mercy though the fire burn forever.
5. The fact that all sin must be and is in every case
sooner or
later
followed by suffering
proves the absolute necessity of the vicarious
pain of Jesus. God sent forth His only-begotten and well-beloved Son to bear in
His own body on the tree the retribution that should have been laid upon us. So
He redeemed the lost
yet did no violence to justice. And thus it comes about
that God can be just and yet the justifier of the ungodly. (D. J. Burrell
D. D.)
Verses 1-21
Then Eliphaz the Temanite answered and said.
The first colloquy
At this point we pass into the poem proper. It opens with three
colloquies between Job and his friends. In form these colloquies closely
resemble each other. But while similar in form
in spirit they differ widely.
At the outset the friends are content to hint their doubts of Job
their
suspicion that he has fallen into some secret and heinous sin
in general and
ambiguous terms; but
as the argument rolls on
they are irritated by the
boldness with which he rebuts their charges and asserts his integrity
and grow
ever more candid and harsh and angry in the denunciation of his guilt. With fine
truth to nature
the poet depicts Job as passing through an entirely opposite
process. At first
while they content themselves with hints and “ambiguous
givings-out
” with insinuating in general terms that he must have sinned
and
set themselves to win him to confession and repentance
he is exasperated
beyond all endurance
and challenges the justice both of man and God; for it is
these general charges
these covert and undefined insinuations of some
“occulted guilt
” which
because it is impossible to meet them
most of all vex
and disturb the soul. But as
in their rising anger
they exchange ambiguous
hints for open
definite charges
by a fine natural revulsion
Job grows even
more calm and reasonable; for definite charges can be definitely met; why then
should he any longer vex and distress his spirit? More and more he turns away
from the loud
foolish outcries of his friends
and addresses himself to God
even when he seems to speak to them. (Samuel Cox
D. D.)
The message of the three friends
When Job opened his mouth and spoke
their sympathy was dashed
with pious horror. They had never in all their lives heard such words. He
seemed to prove himself far worse than they could have imagined. He ought to
have been meek and submissive. Some flaw there must have been: what was it? He
should have confessed his sin
instead of cursing life
and reflecting upon
God. Their own silent suspicion
indeed
is the chief cause of his despair; but
this they do not understand. Amazed
they hear him; outraged
they take up the
challenge he offers. One after another the three men reason with Job
from
almost the same point of view
suggesting first
and then insisting that he
should acknowledge fault
and humble himself under the hand of a just and holy
God. Now
here is the motive of the long controversy which is the main subject
of the poem. And
in tracing it
we are to see Job
although racked by pain and
distraught by grief--sadly at disadvantage
because he seems to be a living
example of the truth of their ideas--rousing himself to the defence of his
integrity and contending for that as the only grip he has of God. Advance after
advance is made by the three
who gradually become more dogmatic as the
controversy proceeds. Defence after defence is made by Job
who is driven to
think himself challenged not only by his friends
but sometimes also by God
Himself through them. Eliphaz
Bildad
and Zophar agree in the opinion that Job
has done evil and is suffering for it. The language they use
and the arguments
they bring forward are much alike. Yet a difference will be found in their way
of speaking
and a vaguely suggested difference of character. Eliphaz gives us
an impression of age and authority. When Job has ended his complaint
Eliphaz
regards him with a disturbed and offended look. “How pitiful!” he seems to say
but also
“How dreadful
how unaccountable!” He desires to win Job to a right
view of things by kindly counsel; but he talks pompously
and preaches too much
from the high moral bench. Bildad
again
is a dry and composed person. He is
less the man of experience than of tradition. He does not speak of discoveries
made in the course of his own observation; but he has stored the sayings of the
wise and reflected upon them. When a thing is cleverly said he is satisfied
and he cannot understand why his impressive statements should fail to convince
and convert. He is a gentleman like Eliphaz
and uses courtesy. At first he
refrains from wounding Job’s feelings. Yet behind his politeness is the sense
of superior wisdom--and wisdom of ages and his own. He is certainly a harder
man than Eliphaz. Lastly
Zophar is a blunt man with a decidedly rough
dictatorial style. He is impatient of the waste of words on a matter so plain
and prides himself on coming to the point. It is he who ventures to say
definitely
“Know therefore that God exacteth of thee less than thine iniquity
deserveth
”--a cruel speech from any point of view. He is not so eloquent as
Eliphaz
he has no air of a prophet. Compared with Bildad
he is less
argumentative. With all his sympathy--and he too is a friend--he shows an
exasperation which he justifies by his zeal for the honour of God. The
differences are delicate
but real
and evident even to our late criticism. In
the author’s day the characters would probably seem more distinctly contrasted
than they appear to us. Still
it must be owned
each holds virtually the same
position. One prevailing school of thought is represented
and in each figure
attacked. It is not difficult to imagine three speakers differing far more from
each other. One hears the breathings of the same dogmatism in the three voices.
The dramatising is vague
not at all of our sharp
modern kind
like that of
Ibsen
throwing each figure into vivid contrast with every other. (Robert A.
Watson
D. D.)
Eliphaz as a natural religionist
See such an one estimating man’s character.
I. He regarded the
fact that a man suffered as proof of his wickedness. It is true that the
principle of retribution is at work amongst men in this world. It is also true
that this principle is manifest in most signal judgments. But retribution here
though often manifest
is not invariable and adequate; the wicked are not
always made wretched
nor are the good always made happy in this life. To judge
a man’s character by his external circumstances is a most flagrant mistake.
1. Suffering is not necessarily connected (directly) with sin.
2. Suffering seems almost necessary to the human creature in this
world.
3. Suffering
as a fact
has a sanitary influence upon the character
of the good.
II. He regarded the
murmuring of a man under suffering as a proof of his wickedness. Job had
uttered terrible complaints. Eliphaz was right here: a murmuring spirit is
essentially an evil. In this complaining spirit Eliphaz discovers two things.
Hypocrisy. Ignorance of God. He then unfolds a vision he had
which suggests
three things.
1. That man has a capacity to hold intercourse with a spirit world.
2. That man’s character places him in a humiliating position in the
spirit world.
3. That man’s earthly state is only a temporary separation from a
conscious existence in the spirit world. (Homilist.)
The error of Eliphaz
Let us avoid the error of Eliphaz
the Temanite
who
in
reproving Job
maintained that the statute of requital is enforced in all
cases
rigorously and exactly--that the world is governed on the principle of
minute recompense--that sin is always followed by its equivalent of suffering
in this present life. This is not so. To the rule of recompense we must allow
for a vast number of exceptions. The penalty does not always follow directly on
the heels of sin. It is oftentimes delayed
may be postponed for years
may
possibly never be inflicted in this world at all And meantime the wicked
flourish. They sit in places of honour and authority. As it is said
“The
tabernacles of robbers do prosper
and they that provoke God are secure. They
are not in trouble as other men. They increase in riches
and their eyes stand
out with fatness. Yea
I have seen the wicked in great power
and spreading
himself like a green bay tree.” “Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper?”
1. It is not because God is unobservant. Ah
no. “The iniquities of
the wicked are not hid from Mine eyes
” saith the Lord. He seeth our ways
pondereth our goings
hath set a print upon the very heels of our feet.
2. Nor is it because of any indifference on the part of God. Seeing
our sin
He abhors it; otherwise He would not be God.
3. Nor is it for want of power. The tide marks of the deluge
remaining plain upon the rocks even unto this day
attest what an angry God can
do. Why then is the sinner spared? And why is the just penalty of his guilt not
laid upon us here and now? Because the Lord is merciful. Sweep the whole
heavens of philosophy for a reason and you shall find none but this
the Lord
is merciful. “As I live
” saith the Lord
“I have no pleasure in the death of
the wicked.”
A few practical inferences--
1. The fact that a sinner is afflicted here will not exempt him
hereafter from the just penalty of his ill-doing. We say of a man sometimes
when the darkest waves of life are rolling over him
“He is having his
retribution now.” But that cannot be.
2. The fact that a sinner does not suffer here is no evidence that he
will always go scot-free. If the sentence be suspended for a timer it is only
for a time--and for a definite end. The Roman emblem of Justice was an old man
with a two-edged sword
limping slowly but surely to his work.
3. The fact that the wicked are sometimes left unpunished here
is
proof conclusive of a final day of reckoning. For the requital is imperfect.
Alas
for justice
if its administration is to be regarded as completed on
earth!
4. The fact that compensation is often delayed so long
in order that
the sinner may have abundant room for repentance
is a complete vindication of
God’s mercy though the fire burn forever.
5. The fact that all sin must be and is in every case
sooner or
later
followed by suffering
proves the absolute necessity of the vicarious
pain of Jesus. God sent forth His only-begotten and well-beloved Son to bear in
His own body on the tree the retribution that should have been laid upon us. So
He redeemed the lost
yet did no violence to justice. And thus it comes about
that God can be just and yet the justifier of the ungodly. (D. J. Burrell
D. D.)
Verses 3-5
Thou hast strengthened the weak hands.
Preaching easier than practising
Behold
thou hast instructed many
etc. To do each day’s duty with
Christian diligence
and to bear each day’s crosses with Christian patience;
thou hast done it well. But how comes it now to pass that thy present doings
shame thy former sayings? and that
as it was noted of Demosthenes the orator
thou art better at praising of virtue than at practising of it? What a shame
was it that Hilary should complain that the people’s ears were holier than the
preachers’ hearts
and that Erasmus
by a true lest
should be told that there
was more goodness in his book of the Christian soldier than in his bosom!
Eliphaz from this ground would here argue that Job was little better than a
hypocrite; a censure over-rigid
it being the easiest thing in the world
as a
philosopher observed
to give good counsel
and the hardest thing to take it.
Dr. Preston
upon his death bed
confessed
that now it came to his own turn
he found it somewhat to do to practise that which he had oft pressed upon
others. (J. Trapp.)
Job’s usefulness in the past
1. That to teach
instruct
and comfort others
is not only a man’s
duty
but his praise. For here Eliphaz speaks it in a way of commendation
though with an intent to ground a reproof upon it.
2. That such as know God in truth and holiness
are very ready to
communicate the knowledge of God unto others.
3. That honourable and great men lose nothing of their honour and
greatness by descending to the instruction of others
though their inferiors.
4. That charity
especially spiritual charity
very liberal and
open-hearted. Job instructed not only his own
but he instructed others
he
instructed many; he did not confine his doctrine and his advice to his own
walls
but the sound thereof went wheresoever he went: he instructed many.
5. That the words of the wise have a mighty power
strength
and
prevalency in them. You see how efficacious the words of Job were. Job’s
instructions were strengthenings: thou hast strengthened the weak hands and
feeble knees; his words were as stays to hold them up that were ready to fall.
When a word goes forth clothed with the authority and power of God
it works
wonders. (J. Caryl.)
But now it is come upon
thee
and thou faintest.--Thou hast instructed many
thou hast strengthened the weak
hands
etc. But now it is come upon thee
etc. That is
trouble and affliction
are come upon thee. And thou faintest. The word signifies an extraordinary
fainting; when a man is so wearied and spent
that he knows not what he doth
when his reason seems tired
as much as his strength. So that the words
Now it
is come upon thee
thou faintest
may import thus much; thou art in such a
case
that thou seemest to be beside thyself
thou knowest not what thou dost
thou speakest thou knowest not what. The word is translated in the first verse
by grieved; in other Scriptures
by mad and furious (Proverbs 26:18). As a mad man who casteth
firebrands
etc. And whereas we say (Genesis 47:13)
The land of Egypt fainted
by reason of the famine
many render it
The land of Egypt was enraged or mad
because of the famine. Want of bread turns to want of reason; famine distracts.
The Egyptians were so extremely pinched with hunger
that it did even take away
their wits from them; and scarcity of food for their bodies
made a dearth in
their understandings. So there is this force in the word: Thou who hast given
such grave and wise instruction unto others
from those higher principles of grace
now it is come upon thee
thou art even as a mad man
as a man distracted
not
able to act by the common principles of reason. It toucheth thee. It is the
same word which we opened before; the devil desired that he might but touch
Job; now his friend telleth him he is touched. And thou art troubled. That word
also hath a great emphasis in it. It signifies a vehement
amazed trouble; as
in that place (1 Samuel 28:21)
where
when the
woman
the witch of Endor
had raised up Samuel (in appearance) as Saul
desired
the text saith
that when all was ended
she came unto Saul
and she
saw he was sore troubled: think what trouble might fall upon a man in such a
condition as Saul was in
after this acquaintance with the visions of hell;
think what a deep astonishment of spirit seized upon him
such disorder of mind
this word lays upon Job. Now it toucheth thee
and thou art troubled. Hence
observe--
1. To commend a man with a “but
” is a wound instead of a
commendation. Thou hast instructed many
“But
” etc. How many are there who
salute their friends very fair to their faces
or speak them very fair behind
their backs
yet suddenly (as Joab to Amasa) draw out this secret dagger
and stab
their honour and honesty to the heart!
2. Observe
great afflictions may disturb the very seat of reason
and leave a saint
in some acts
below a man.
3. That when we see any doing ill
it is good to mind him of the good
which he hath done.
4. That the good we have done
is a kind of reproach to us
when we
do the contrary evil.
5. It is an easier matter to instruct others in trouble
than to be
instructed
or take instruction ourselves in our own troubles.
6. It is a shame for us to teach others the right way
and to go in
the wrong ourselves. (J. Caryl.)
Verse 6
Is not this thy fear
thy confidence
thy hope?
The confidence of a godly fear
These words are understood by divers of the Hebrew writers for a
direct and simple assertion
and they give it thus
“Will not
or would not thy
fear be thy confidence
and the uprightness of thy ways thy hope?” As if
Eliphaz had thus said unto him
Job
thou hast pretended much holiness and
religion
fear and uprightness; why art thou so disquieted now that the hand of
God is upon thee? Why art thou so amazed under these sufferings Would not that
fear be thy confidence? And would not that uprightness of thy ways be thy hope?
Surely it would
if thou hadst any such fear as thou pretendest; this fear
would be thy confidence
and this uprightness thy hope; thou wouldst be very
bold
and by hope cast anchor upon the goodness and faithfulness of God in the
midst of all this storm: thy heart would be poised
settled
and established
notwithstanding all these shakings. Would not thy fear be thy confidence?
1. They who fear most in times of peace
have most reason to be
confident in times of trouble.
2. The uprightness of a man’s ways in good times
doth mightily
strengthen his hope in evil times. (Joseph Caryl.)
Times of trouble are special times for the use of our graces
It is as if Eliphaz had said
Thou thyself
and all that knew
thee
have spoken much of thy grace
but now is the time to use it; where is
it? Show it me now. Where is thy fear and thy confidence? If a man have been
reported very skilful at his weapon
when he comes into danger
then is the
time to show his skill: and we may say to him
Where is thy skill now? Where is
thy art now? So here. Now that thou hast most need of thy graces
where are
they? Bring them forth. Are they to seek now? Is thy righteousness as the
morning dew
and as a cloud vanished away? (Joseph Caryl.)
Verse 7
Who ever perished
being innocent?
Divine retributions
This grand maxim
of a just and sure retribution at the hand of
God
must be admitted to be sound and true. His blessing is over the righteous
and His face “against them that do evil.” Job takes exception to this as a rule
of God’s providential dealings with mankind
and rejects the inference that
because he is now overwhelmed in trouble
he has been a transgressor. As to the
extent of his friend’s suspicions
he was right. But still
the rule laid down
by Eliphaz must be considered as holding universally. But the reasons of the
present proceedings of God are not always within the ken of human observation;
the short prosperity of the wicked may be both for a judgment to others and for
their own manifestation and increased punishment. Under the execution of the
holy discipline
it is not for innocency and righteousness that the children of
God suffer; but most commonly for sin--sin unacknowledged and unconfessed; or
with some view to their correction and advancement in holiness
where they were
too remiss in perfecting it in the fear of God. Eliphaz’s maxim was not
altogether wrong
even as applied to Job. But his inference of secret
hypocrisy
or of some outward notorious transgression
from the judgment that
had overwhelmed him
was altogether unwarranted. He is mistaken
too
as well
as the poor sufferer himself
if he concluded that this affliction was
remediless
and sent for his utter destruction. How different was the aspect of
his calamity when the end of the Lord was seen! (John Fry
B. A.)
Verse 8-9
Even as I have seen
they that plow iniquity
and sow wickedness
reap the same.
Sowing and reaping
Eliphaz speaks of himself here as an observer of God’s providence;
and the result of his observations is
the discernment of the law
that “they
who plow iniquity and sow wickedness
reap the same.” Was Eliphas wrong in
this? No. He perceived a very great and important law of the kingdom. Where
then
was he wrong? It was in applying this to Job
and in so easily concluding
that his severe sufferings were the consequence of his own individual sins. The
friends often expressed most beautiful and important truths
and only failed
because they misapplied them. For this law
compare Hosea 8:7; Hosea 10:12-13; Galatians 6:7-8. We see the operation of
this law in the natural world. There
in that world
as people sow
so they
reap; nor do they ever expect it to be otherwise. But in the moral and
spiritual world
nothing is more common than to meet with those who sow
iniquity
and yet do not expect to reap of the same
either in this world or in
the world to come. Men do not expect any consequences to follow a life of
carelessness and impenitence. It may be that you have seen solemn and affecting
instances of the operation of this law; if not
ministers of Christ will tell
you that they have seen them only too often. They have seen those who have
lived careless and self-indulgent lives struggle at last in vain. The hardened
heart was but the fulfilment of the solemn law of God’s kingdom. Amongst the
many ways of sowing to the flesh
there is one which we cannot omit. It is the
indulgence of pride and self-confident feelings. St. Paul speaks of sowing to
the Spirit. In which way have you been sowing? Do you wish to escape the
consequences--the harvest of misery--which
in the very nature of things
will
follow your sowing to the flesh? Through grace you may do it. (George
Wagner.)
An old axiom
There was truth underlying the proposition set forth by Eliphaz
applicable to all ages and states of the world. The axiom is a very old one as
propounded by Job’s expostulator; it may have been older than he; but it is not
so old now as to have become obsolete; nor will it ever become so while the
world is the same world
and its Governor is the same God. As St. Paul
reproduced it in his day
so may we in ours. Its principle is incorporated with
this dispensation as much as with the last. It is its application that is
modified under the Gospel; the principle is just the same. It is as true now as
it was of old time
that men reap as they sow; that the harvest of their
recompense is according to the agriculture of their actions. The difference in
the truth
as propounded during the age of Moses
and as recognised in “the
days of the Son of Man
” is
that during the latter
its confirmation and
realisation are thrown further forward. The distinction is indicated by the
respective forms into which the axiom is cast by Eliphaz and St. Paul. The one
saith
“They that plow iniquity
and sow wickedness
reap the same.” The other
“Whatsoever a man soweth
that shall he also reap.” Eliphaz makes both portions
of this moral process
present
palpable
perspicuous. The apostle severs the
two; projecting the latter portion into the future. With the Jew
this truth
was a fact of yesterday
today
and tomorrow. With us
it is rather a matter of
faith for the future
the far off
the eternal. Eliphaz states the subject in
accordance with the order of the past dispensation; as doth St. Paul with the
genius of this. In the eyes of the ancient Israelite
the doctrine of Divine
retribution was like some mountain of his native country
which upreared its
brow close over against him
overshadowing him whithersoever he went; its
rugged aspect being all the more sharply defined through the sunshine of
temporal prosperity in which his nation reposed
so long as the people were
“obedient unto the voice of the Lord their God.” As to us
the mountain is in
the distance; far away
as Sinai itself is
from many a shore on which the
standard of the Redeemer’s Cross hath been planted; but visible in the distance
still
though its outline be rendered indistinct in the twilight of that mystery
which now encompasseth God’s government of our world. At the period when
Eliphaz reasoned
a state of things had just been inaugurated
under which
as
a rule
retribution of a temporal kind was to follow “every transgression and
disobedience”; when punishment was to be contemporaneous with the commission of
crime; and when a man would begin to reap the fruit of his deeds shortly after
his sowing. And the reasoner could not understand how the patriarch
or anyone
else
could be an exception to the rule; still less
that a state of things
inaugurated by both the teaching and the history of Jesus Christ
under which
the rule itself would become the exception
was to succeed. That was a state
under which God judged men for their sins continually and instantaneously; this
a state under which God is not judging them; seeing “He hath appointed a day in
which He will judge them by that Man whom He hath ordained”; through whose
intercession at the right hand of the Father
judgment is at present suspended.
Now it is our consolation to know that whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth; then
the man whom the Lord chastened
He might have had a controversy with
and was
visiting for his misdeeds. (Alfred Bowen Evans.)
Is the old axiom true still
1. It is so far true as to assure us that there is a righteous
Governor and a just Judge of the world. We cannot apply the rule laid down by
Eliphaz. It is a rule to us no longer. We have no right to fix upon any
individual or nation upon earth
and to affirm that Almighty God is dealing
with the one or the other in a way of retribution
because they may be
suffering such and such things. But
notwithstanding this
there is a principle
at work in the affairs of men
so far manifest as to show that the world is not
left to take its chance
and that the children of men cannot do as they please.
2. It is so far true as it hath respect to the natural constitutions
of men. Men cannot transgress the principles of their nature with impunity
nor
run counter to the rules of their constitution unharmed. Nature is not to be
trifled with. And the retribution that followeth the violation of physical laws
is a sure pledge of a retribution that will follow the infringement of moral.
3. It is true so far as to obviate the necessity of our ever taking
vengeance into our own hands. God repayeth that we need not. Vengeance is His
that it may not be ours. It has been said
“God avengeth those that do not
avenge themselves.”
4. It is true so far as to inspire us with a salutary fear for
ourselves. There is to be a resurrection of action as well as of agents; of
deeds as well as of doers; of works as well as of men. And we know not how
soon
as to some of its details
this resurrection may take place. The
transgressor is never safe. Whatsoever wrong any man hath done may be required
of him at any time. (Alfred Bowen Evans.)
The life of the sinner a foolish agriculture
I. Human life is a
sowing and a reaping. All the actions of a man’s life are inseparable
united
by the law of causation. One grows out of another as plants out of seed. The
sowing and the reaping
strange to say
go on at the same time. In reaping what
we sowed yesterday
we sow what we shall have to reap tomorrow.
II. Life’s reaping
is determined by its sowing. “I have seen
they that plow iniquity
” etc. Like
begets like everywhere
the same species of seed sown will be reaped in fruit.
He that soweth hemlock will not reap wheat
but crops of hemlock. All moral
actions are moral seeds deposited in the soul.
III. The reaping of
the sinner is a terrible destiny. What a destiny this: to be reaping
wickedness
to be reaping whirlwinds of agony. From this subject learn--
1. The great solemnity of life. There is nothing trifling. The most
volatile sin is a seed that must grow
and must be reaped. Take care!
2. The conscious rectitude of the sinner’s doom. What is hell?
Reaping the fruit of sinful conduct. The sinner feels this
and his conscience
will not allow him to complain of his fate.
3. The necessity for a godly heart. All actions and words proceed
from the heart: out of it are the issues of life. Hence the necessity of
regeneration. (Homilist.)
Sinful sowing and penal reaping
1. That to be a wicked man is no easy task; he must go to plough for
it. It is ploughing
and you know ploughing is laborious
yea
it is hard
labour.
2. That there is an art in wickedness. It is ploughing
or
as the
word imports
an artificial working. Some are curious and exact in shaping
polishing
and setting off their sin. So to say such a man is an abomination
worker
or a lie maker
notes him not only industrious
but crafty
or (as the
prophet speaks) “wise to do evil.”
3. That wicked men expect benefit in ways of sin
and look to be
gainers by being evil-doers. They make iniquity their plough; and a man’s
plough is so much his profit
that it is grown into a proverb
to call that
(whatsoever it is) by which a man makes his living or his profit
his plough.
Every man tills in expectation of a crop; who would put his plough into the
ground to receive nothing? It is even so with wicked men
when they are
stoning
they think themselves thriving
or laying up that in the earth a
while
which will grow and increase to a plentiful harvest. What strange
fancies have many to be rich
to be great
by ways of wickedness! Thus they
plough in hope
but they shall never be partakers of their hope.
4. That every sinful act persisted in shall have a certain sorrowful
reward.
5. That the punishment of sin may come long after the committing of
sin. The one is the seedtime
and the other a reaping time; there is a great
distance of time between sowing and reaping. The seeds of sin may lie many
years under the furrows.
6. That the punishment of sin shall be proportionable to the degrees
of sin. He shall reap the same
saith the text
the same in degree. If ye sow
sparingly
ye shall reap sparingly; on the other side
if ye sow plentifully
ye shall reap plentifully.
7. Punishment shall not exceed the desert of sin.
8. That the punishment of sin shall be like the sin in kind. It shall
be the same
not only in degree
but also in likeness. Punishment often bears
the image and superscription of sin upon it. You may see the father’s face and
feature in the child. Whatsoever a man soweth
that shall he also reap (Galatians 6:7). (J. Caryl.)
Verses 13-17
In thoughts from the visions of the night.
The spectre’s question
Disguise it how we may
this is a ghost story.
I. Attempt to
realise the spectre. Recollect that for every one of us spirit has clothed
itself with shape and vesture
and that the basis of the whole world in which
we live is spiritual. Look at some of the circumstances favourable to such a
spectre.
1. It was produced by a likeness of moral state. It was a time of
thought. The mind was wandering amazed
the labyrinthine way stretched out on
every hand
the mind trod the dark pathways
I do not see that we are under any
necessity to suppose a ghost
in the real
spectral
objective sense of that
word. The thought of Eliphaz is of God. It was God who was “a trouble to him.”
And shapeless terror
while it was a Very objective reality to him
need not be
regarded as such by us. It was the answer to the voice of conscience within.
2. The fear anticipated the vision. Where man does not feel he wilt
not fear; where he does not tear the spectre
he will usually see none
feel
none
know none. But man
every man
is accessible to fear. We do not dwell so
near to terror as our fathers. Yet what a riddle there is in fear! Until Adam
fell
Adam had no conscience
because he was one
his whole nature was a
religious sensation. It is different now. The conscience is not free
it would
be free
but it is nailed. Conscience is moral fear--conscience is the surgery
of the soul. Possibly
all men have not fears. How comes it that man knows what
moral fear is? It comes from the forbidden. Our world is a house full of fears
because the fall has removed us into the night
away from God. This is the
natural history of fear--of moral fear. What is this natural capacity of fear
in me? Nervousness
you say! Nervousness
what is that? It is a term used to
describe the fine sheathing of the soul; it is man’s capacity for mental and
moral suffering.
II. From the
spectre to the question. The ghost’s question touches very appropriately and
comprehensively the whole topic also of the Book of Job. It is a message from
the dead
or rather
a message from the solemn kingdom of spirits.
1. How large is the field of thought the message covers. It is the
assertion of the purity and universality of Divine providence. It is a glance
at the alleged injustice of God. Man stands whence he thinks he can behold
flaws in the Divine government. Job and his friend had met together in the
valley of contemplation in the kingdom of night; in Job it was an experience
in Eliphaz a mournful contemplation. The spectre’s question then was a reality.
In the vision of the night the soul was shaken with the terror
and it is the
overwhelming thought--God. God was only known as terror. What must the
appearance of God be
if an apparition can startle so terribly? The spectator
was crushed by the spectre
and by the question of the spectre. If thy thoughts
transcend nature
not less assuredly does thy Maker transcend thee.
2. The question was directed to the delectability of man. Consider
thyself
thy littleness
thy narrowness
the limited sphere of thy vision. And
thou art presuming to find a flaw in the Divine purposes and arrangements.
3. Hitherto
the ghost only crushes; it was not the purpose of the
spectre to do more. It asked of man the question which had its root only in the
eternal and illimitable will. It referred all to God. But the message probably
included the following chapter.
III. The ghost is
asking his question still. “Shall mortal man be just with God?” The moral fear
of man
his conscience
is his best assurance of God. Man’s ideas are the best
proof that there is a God over him
higher than he is
infinite in goodness and
wisdom. It is from God Himself man derives the terrors that scare him. God
Himself has reflected His own being in the conscience within the soul. But then
it is a wounded conscience
and needs healing. (E. Paxton Hood.)
The discourse of the apparition
The text was uttered by an individual for whom we cannot perhaps
claim that he Spake by the Spirit of God. Eliphaz recounts a vision; he records
words which were mysteriously brought to him amid the deep silence of the
night. We use the wild and awful circumstances of this vision to give solemnity
to the truth which is brought to our notice. “Shall mortal man be more just
than God? Shall a man be more pure than his Maker?” We have the account of an
apparition. A purely spiritual being
such as an angel
assumed a visible
though indescribable form
and stood before Eliphaz in the stillness of the
night. We see nothing in the statements of Scripture or the deductions of
reason
from which to decide that there cannot be apparitions; that the
invisible state may never communicate with the visible through the
instrumentality of phantoms
strange and boding forms that are manifestly not
of this earth. There may easily be a weak and fond credulity in regard of
ghosts and apparitions; but there may be also a cold and hard scepticism. The
Bible
so far from discountenancing the notion of apparitions
may be said to
give it the weight of its testimony
and that too
in more than one instance.
Of this one thing may we be fully persuaded
that it would not be on any
trivial or ordinary occasion that God drew aside the veil
and commissioned
spiritual beings to appear upon earth. So terrible is the apparition in the
text
that we naturally prepare ourselves for some very momentous
communication. But the expectation does not appear to be answered. If there is
an elementary truth
it surely is that man cannot be more just than God
nor
more pure than his Maker. There is no debate that a pure theism was the creed
of Job and his friends. What
then
are we to gather from the visit of the
spectre? We wish you to contrast the solemnity and awfulness of the agency
employed with the simplicity and commonness of the message delivered. But is
there not often needed some such instrumentality as that of the spectre to
persuade even ourselves that mortal man is neither more just nor more pure than
his Maker? The vision was probably granted
and certainly used to oppose an
infidelity more or less secret
--an infidelity which
fostered by the troubles
and discrepancies of human estate
took the Divine attributes as its subject
and either limited or denied them altogether. Is there no such infidelity among
ourselves? We are persuaded that
if you will search your own hearts
you will
find that you often give it some measure of entertainment. We are persuaded of
this in regard both of God’s general dealings and of His individual or
personal. (Henry Melvill
B. D.)
The spectre
It was midnight. All without was hushed and still. No breeze
stirred the foliage of the trees. No bird broke the silence with its song. Deep
sleep had fallen on man. Eliphaz
the friend of Job
was musing in solitude
either about former visions that he had received
or about some of those grave
questions which have in all ages perplexed the minds of thoughtful men. He had
evidently had glimpses of the unseen--strange hints and whispers
the full
meaning of which he could not grasp. And these had been followed by disturbed
and anxious thoughts. His whole frame was trembling and agitated. His spirit
was possessed with that vague premonitory awe which precedes the approach of
something unusual and unknown. And Eliphaz was not anticipating such
communications. But he was alone; and his mind was evidently in a state of
bewilderment
groping its way to find a light. He was in a fit condition to
receive ghostly impressions timorous
restless
anxious
shivering
brooding
over mysteries--a condition favourable to the creation of weird shapes and
forms. At this solemn hour
whilst thus musing
lo! a spirit passed before him
and then stood still. He could not discern its form clearly. Either he was too
frightened to observe it closely
or the darkness was too dense
or the shape
of the spirit was not sharply defined. He was so frightened that not only his
limbs shook
but even his hair stood on end; and amid the stillness that
reigned around
a voice was heard
saying
“Shall mortal man be more just than
God? Shall a man be more pure than his Maker?” Was it a dream
or a reality?
Opinion is divided on this subject. Some think that Eliphaz was wrapped in
slumber like those around him; others
that while they slept he was awake. But
it is quite possible that the spectre
though not a mere creation of a
disordered brain
was visible only to the mind of Eliphaz. It partook somewhat
of the character of a dream vision
though it seems to have affected his bodily
frame. The spectre was the medium through which God conveyed to him solemn and
important truths. It was God’s answer to man’s perplexities; and though it
first startled
it finally allayed his anxieties and fears. The description is
a master stroke
and was evidently written by one who saw what he described.
The spirit first gliding by; then pausing
as if to arrest attention; the
terror it awakened; the solemn
breathless silence; the obscurity in which it
was veiled; and then the gentle voice
with its calming
soothing influence;
all indicate that the writer is narrating his own experience. When the spectre
appeared to Eliphaz we do not know. It may have been a considerable time before
he spoke of it to Job; but he referred to it in his address to the patriarch
because of its supposed applicability to his theory that Job’s sufferings were
the result of sin. At the present day men often see
in the declarations of
God’s Word
only so much as can be made to fit in with their preconceived
opinions; and if Eliphaz spoke about matters that were too high for him
if the
words of the spectre
which he regarded as supporting his argument
rather operated
against it
does not this fact go to prove that the vision was not a mere
invention of his own
but a direct message from the Almighty? Let us turn
however
from Eliphaz and his opinions
and consider what the spectre said to
him: “Shall mortal man be more just than God? Shall a man be more pure than his
Maker?” This was his first utterance
and it contains the germ of all that
follows. It declares the rectitude of God. At first such a question as this
seems superfluous. Who would think of suggesting that man was purer than his
Maker? Who would set up a claim to deal out justice with more regularity and
fidelity than He? And yet those who criticise God’s dealings with men do
virtually set themselves up as His superiors. They would have kept out sin
and
prevented the inroads of suffering and sorrow. They would have made men happy
all round
and ordained gladness and prosperity from one end of the year to the
other. Such are the boasts of self-confident men; and it is in reply to such
apparently
that the spectre utters this solemn appeal. There are few of us
probably
who have not at some time or other passed judgment upon God. How much
there is that is mysterious! How much that seems to baffle the skill of the
wisest interpreter! We have traversed the same ground as Eliphaz
and have been
as perplexed and bewildered as he. How inscrutable are God’s dealings with men!
How terrible are the convulsions of nature! How disastrous are the conflicts of
nations! How bitter are the sorrows of individual men! But these words will
bear another rendering. “Is mortal (or feeble) man just from the side of God
namely
from God’s standpoint
or more briefly
before God? Is man pure before
his Maker?” The rectitude of God is thus placed in contrast with the frailty of
man. This fact
so humbling in itself
and so suggestive of man’s inability to
do better than God
is brought out more fully in the verses that follow
which
most commentators regard as a continuation of the spectre’s declaration.
“Behold
He put no trust in His servants; and His angels He Charged with folly.
How much less in them that dwell in houses of clay
whose foundation is in the
dust
which are crushed before the moth!” First
the spectre draws a comparison
between God and the angels
who are His servants. They are God’s servants
not
His equals; His messengers
not His counsellors. There are some things which
they do not understand; some things which they long desired to look into
but
in vain. Some of the angels once fell from their first estate. It would not
therefore
seem to be an absolute impossibility for angels to sin. But God’s
purity is the essence of His character. All His ways are just and true. And if
God put no trust in His angels
--if they are imperfect compared with His
infinite perfection
--how much more is this true of men
who may be described
as dwelling in houses of clay
and who are crushed as easily as a moth. That is
the argument; and surely it is calculated to restrain men from passing judgment
upon the equity of God’s ways. Then are we qualified to sit in judgment on God?
Could we govern the world better than He? Are we even capable of comprehending
His plans and purposes? There are still many mysteries around us; and there are
stiff many like Eliphaz
who have brooded over them in silence in the hour when
deep sleep falleth upon men. We have thought
perhaps
of the departed
and
wanted to know what they were doing. We have pondered the history of our past
life
--so strange and chequered
--and asked why we were led
or
--it may
be
--driven by circumstances
into the path that we have now to tread. We have
caught ourselves drifting into speculations that might lead to dangerous
results. We have even been tempted to let go the faith which we once held so
dear. It is not fresh facts that are required
but clearer vision;--a
disposition to accept that which has been revealed already
and act upon it;
for (according to Christ’s own words) obedience is the way to knowledge. “If
any man do the will of God
he shall know of the doctrine.” There was no
written Word in the days of Eliphaz; no risen Christ; no Holy Spirit in the
world to convince the understanding
and sanctify the heart. But it is
otherwise now. God has spoken to us in terms far clearer and more explicit than
those which He addressed
through the spectre
to the friend of Job. He has not
proposed to us simply the question
“Shall mortal man be more just than God?
Shall a man be purer than his Maker?” He has declared in the most emphatic
terms
that He is just and holy; and that instead of dealing with men according
to their sins
and rewarding them according to their iniquities
He is gentle
and forbearing
even to the hardened and impenitent. He has done more. He has
assured us that chastisement is a proof of love; that He inflicts it not for
His pleasure
but for our profit
that we may be partakers of His holiness. We
have no right to expect that God will explain or justify all His actions.
Where
then
would there be room for the exercise of faith? We could not question
a spectre
probably
if he were to appear. Most likely he would only terrify
and alarm us. But we can turn again and again to the written Word. But God has
given us more than the written Word. He sent His Son into the world--“the
brightness of the Father’s glory and the express image of His person
” and
through Him we have obtained more light upon the character of God and His
relations to men than any spectre could ever have given us. He came from the
world of spirits. Eliphaz was afraid of the spectre. And we
probably
should
be quite as frightened if a spectre were to appear to us. But there is
something more terrible than a spectre. It is the sight of an offended God.
When Adam sinned he hid himself among the trees of the garden
for he was
afraid to meet God. And so will it be at last with every unpardoned sinner. He
may hide himself in the dens and in the rocks of the mountains; he may call
upon the rocks to fall on him and hide him from the face of Him that sitteth on
the throne
and from the wrath of the Lamb. But it will be of no avail. Eliphaz
trembled at the sight of the spectre. But there is something more appalling
still; it is the sight of the ghosts of unforgiven sins. (F. J. Austin.)
Super sensuous phenomena
Physical science has established the remarkable fact that
there may be
and in all probability are
phenomena which cannot be perceived
by our senses. There are sounds which a trained ear can distinguish
which
altogether escape an ordinary ear. There are musical variations which are detected
by the practised ear of a skilled composer which altogether escape an
uncultured listener. Sound vibrations of more than 38
000 pulsations a second
are inaudible by ordinary persons
but are heard and registered by persons
sensitive to the highest notes. Moreover
there appears to be no reason for
doubting that there may be sound vibrations all around us of such extreme
rapidity that we cannot hear them. Pass from acoustics to optics. White light
consists of a complete series of coloured rays which
when refracted through a
triangular bar of glass
form a continuous spectrum
passing by imperceptible
shades from dark red through yellow
green and blue
to very dark violet. Just
the same colours are seen in the rainbow. Now
there are rays at each end of the
spectrum which cannot be seen. At one end there are heat rays
and at the other
end there are chemical (actinic) rays
which are unperceived by our senses
whose existence is attested by other delicate instruments. And physical science
gives no reason to believe that we know the absolute limit of the spectrum at
either end. The man
then
who says he will not believe anything but what he
can see
or what comes within the observation of his senses
limits his belief
very considerably
and ignores a great deal that exists in the universe. (T.
T. Waterman.)
Verse 16
There was silence and I heard a voice.
Silence and a voice
1. God’s humbling dispensations toward His people will all come to a
good issue
and the close of all His dealings will still be sweet. For after
all his humbling and fear
preparing Eliphaz for the vision
and assuring him
that God was present
the voice cometh.
2. The composing of our spirits
from the confusions and tumultuous
disorders incident to them
is a necessary antecedent to God’s revealing of His
mind. For when “there was silence
I heard a voice.”
3. As for this way of the Lord’s speaking by a still
or calm voice
albeit we need inquire after no reason why He makes use of it
who doth all
things after the counsel of His own will
yet without wresting we may observe
these in it.
Verse 17
Shall a man he more pure than his Maker?
Man compared with God
The sum of the assertion in this verse is
that no man can be more
pure and just than God. Let a man be never so just or sincere
yet there ought
no comparison be made betwixt his righteousness and God’s. Learn--
1. God is most righteous
pure
and holy
within Himself and in His
administration
so that He can do no wrong
nor ought He to be challenged by
any. Sufficient arguments are not wanting whereby to clear this righteousness
of God in all His dealings
and particularly in His afflicting godly men
and
suffering the wicked to prosper; but when we consider His absolute dominion and
sovereignty
and His holiness in Himself
it will put the matter beyond all
debate
though we dip no further into the particulars.
2. This righteousness and holiness of God is so infinitely
transcendent
that the holiness of the best of men cannot compare with it; but
it becomes impurity
except he look on them in a Mediator.
3. Though God be thus just and holy
and that infinitely above the
best of men
yet men are not wanting
in many cases
to reproach and reflect
upon the righteousness of God
yea
and to cry up their own worth and holiness
to the prejudice of His righteousness.
4. An impatient complainer under affliction doth
in effect
wrong
God and His righteousness
and sinfully extol his own holiness.
5. Whatever liberty men take to vent their passions
and to judge
harshly of God and His dealing; and whatever their passion suggest for
justifying thereof
yet men’s own consciences and reason
in cold blood
will
tell them that their sentence is unjust.
6. Men’s frailty and mortality bear witness against them
that they
are not perfectly pure
and that they may not compare with God.
7. Man
considered not only in his frailties
but even in his
strength and best endowments
is infinitely inferior to God.
8. If men consider that God is their Creator and Maker
and that they
have no degree of perfection which is not from God
they will find it a high
presumption to compete with Him in the point of perfection. (George
Hutcheson.)
On humility
“Shall man be more just than God?” The vision described in the
passage from which the text is taken
is awful and sublime. Its spiritual
meaning
and the moral instruction it conveys
are of superior interest and
importance. That the acknowledged probity of Job’s life might not justify such
impatience and complaint
Eliphaz
from a vision that was revealed unto him
disparages all human attainments and excellency before God
in order to
vindicate the ways of God to man; to prove that all His laws are holy
just
and good; to repress pride and inculcate humility. The duty of humility may be
proved--
I. From man’s
relative condition in the world. That we did not bring ourselves into
existence
and are incapable
for a moment
to support ourselves in it
are
self-evident truths. If we
and all that belongs to us
be the gift of God
of
what have we to be proud
even in the most favourable estimate we can make of
ourselves
and of all our acquisitions? Of scientific improvement and
cultivated talents how little reason there is for boasting. Of moral and
religious improvement how can he boast who even knows not his secret errors?
II. From the
example of our Saviour. As it is a perfect pattern of universal excellence
so
in the display of this virtue it is eminently instructive. If anything could
give addition to such illustrious acts of goodness
it was the mildness
the
tenderness
the humility
with which they were conferred. If we be His true
disciples
we
like Him
will be clothed with humility
and consider it as the
distinguishing characteristic of our Christian profession.
III. The advantages
with which it is attended
strongly enforce the practice of this virtue. It
paves the way for general esteem
exempts us from the mortifications of vanity
and pride; by enabling us to form just views of our own characters
it teaches
us where to correct them when wrong
and where to improve their excellence when
good; it leaves us in full possession of all our powers and attainments
without envy and without detraction; it repels chagrin and engenders
contentment; it is a sunshine of the mind
which throws its mild lustre on
every object; and affords to every intellectual and moral excellence the most
advantageous light in which it can appear. In short
it is leasing to God
and
equally ornamental and advantageous to man. (A. Stifling
L. L. D.)
Verses 18-21
And His angels He charged with folly.
Folly in angels
“His angels He charged with folly.” Revelation conveys to us the
highly interesting information that there is between the great Spirit and man
an intermediate order of spirits whose habitation is in the high and holy
place. But the discoveries which Divine revelation makes to us of the invisible
world
surprising and sublime as they are
were not intended to raise our
astonishment
or gratify our curiosity. They are uniformly brought forward in
the Scriptures for practical purposes of the highest kind. The doctrine of
angels is introduced to illustrate the amazing condescension of the Son of God.
At other times it is taught for the consolation of the saints
who have
assurance that they are encompassed
preserved
and provided for by God’s
invisible host. At other times it is adduced to set forth the greatness
wisdom
and holiness of God on the one hand
and the folly
weakness
and
nothingness of man on the other. This is the view introduced in the passage
before us. Some of the angels
by pride and rebellion
forfeited their place.
Was God
after this
to place His confidence in man
even though created in His
image? What is asserted of angels is applicable to them still. God only
possesses in Himself all excellence. Angels derive their being
and all its
excellences
from Him. If the text is the estimate which the Most High forms of
angels
how insignificant and contemptible must we be in His sight! What are
our bodies
but moulded
moving
breathing
speaking clay! And what can be
frailer than a house of clay! Practical lessons--
1. The subject teaches the folly of covetousness and ambition.
Covetousness is in itself sinful
and as it usurps the place due to God in the
heart
it is idolatry; but when viewed in the light of the text
it is folly
and madness
and wilful madness
which exposes its victim to merited derision.
2. It teaches us to avoid pride and security.
3. It teaches us not to trust or glory in man. Why has God declared
His trust in His servants
and accused His angels of folly
but to teach us
more effectually the sin and danger of all creature confidence and boasting? (Thomas
M’Crie
D. D.)
The imperfect angel
I want to put the truth of God’s purity in its right relation to
His patience and long-suffering and gentleness. Side by side with the text’s
setting forth God’s unapproachable purity
may be placed such texts as Isaiah 42:3
Matthew 10:42
which set forth the
patience and beneficence of His character
and the scrupulous and delicate
equities of His administration. In the addresses of Eliphaz
God’s strict and
unapproachable purity is depicted in exalted and impressive phraseology. This
seer
Eliphaz
sinned through overweening confidence in his own prophetic gift.
His error consisted in the misapplication of truths that were obviously
inspired
rather than in the premises he laid down as the basis of his appeal to
Job. He was right in his abstract principles. We may accept his truth about the
inconceivable purity of God.
1. God’s ideals of purity are so transcendent and so terrible
that
the purity of the angel nearest to His throne is little better than stain
shadow
darkness in comparison. “His angels He chargeth with folly.” But is not the
whole subject
with the angel in the background
vague
misty
fanciful? It is
surely not unscientific to assume the existence of the pure and mighty beings
spoken of by seers and prophets of the olden time
nor speculative to ponder
well the words which declare that in comparison with God Himself
the angels
have about them traces of finite dimness
blemish
imperfection. Are the
angels
then
frail and foolish and defective? Are the angels disfigured with
limitation
even as we? Put them in comparison with man
fallen man
and they
will well justify the title “holy.” Bring them into comparison with God
and
the title will seem incongruous
arrogant
and misplaced. The fall of some of
their number shows that
as a class
the angels have not yet passed beyond the
stage of defectibility. They have not risen into a wisdom so complete that no
illusion can betray it
nor into a strength so unassailable that no temptation
can score its record of disfigurement upon their lives. They are free
it is
true
from actual transgression
but they are passing through the first crude
stages of a development in which
because of inward weakness and limitation
there is perilous room for the wiles of the tempter. They have not reached the
transcendent holiness of God
who cannot be tempted with evil. An incarnation
with its perils and possibilities
would be fatal to an angel. God can never
forget the frailty
weakness
limitation
that may be latent in the unfallen
types of angelic life.
2. The holiness of an angel will appear as little better than a
frailty if we think of it in comparison with the uncreated holiness of God. The
Divine holiness has in it a transcendent originality
with which that of the
creature can never hope to vie. The holiness of the angel is a mere echo. The
angels are but copyists
and their workmanship is unutterably inferior to the
original conception.
3. In the judgment of the Most High
the holiness of the angel verges
upon a frailty
because of its inferior vitality and its less consuming
fervour. No angel knows what it is to love with a mighty intenseness that makes
the love necessarily vicarious
and the heart break with pure grief over the
sin
and grief
and shame of others. No Bethlehems
or Gethsemanes
or
Golgothas have ever immortalised angelic devotion and love. Their love
however
crystal pure
is a love to which sacrifice is strange. It does not draw them
into incarnations and propitiatory offerings
and down into the shadows of vast
redeeming shames and agonies. If Jesus Christ is the Lamb slain from the
foundation of the world
the Father must have been touched in some sense from
everlasting with the same sorrow. Before all worlds there was some dim mystery
of self-sacrificing pain in the heart of God.
4. The defect of the angel is a defect of narrowness. In comparison
with the Catholic and all-comprehending love of God
his love is insular and
restrained. All perfect moral qualities are boundless. The graces of these
celestial envoys are dwarfed into frailty and insignificance when brought into
contrast with the perfect moral life of God.
5. The holiness of the angel has about it the defect and limitation
inseparable from the briefness of its own history. It is a frail thing of
yesterday in comparison with the holiness of God. Think of the amazing epochs
through which God’s holiness has been unfolding itself. The worth of a moral
quality is proportioned to the period through which it has verified and
established itself. Angel life is but of recent birth.
6. The holiness of the angel has about it the defect of immaturity.
The insight and holiness of the angel are but starting points for some higher
and more magnificent evolution of character
the first cell out of which shall
issue the wonder and transfiguration of their after destiny . . . Consider the
unparalleled patience and gentleness of God. “His angels He chargeth with
folly.” Yes; but He keeps them at His feet
and with exhaustless grate carries
on their education
epoch after epoch. Is there no contradiction in these
views? No. Only He who is infinitely holy can afford to be absolutely gracious
and gentle. His very greatness enables Him to stoop. The incomparable holy dare
stoop to blemish
and frailty
and weakness
and help it out of its dark and
humiliating conditions. There is no contradiction here.. Then again
the
infinitely holy can discern the hidden promise and possibility of holiness in
the weak and erring. It would be an awful thing if we were left to suppose that
God was microscopic in His scrutiny for judgment and condemnation only
and not
also for blessing and approval. He discerns hope and fine possibility all the
more keenly through the very affluence of His own purity. The perfection of righteousness
is realised in the perfection of love. (Thomas G. Selby.)
On Easter Day
In the resurrection we shall be as the angels. And that we might
not flatter ourselves in a dream of a better state than the angels have
in
this text we have an intimation what their state and condition is--“His angels
He charged with folly.”
I. Of whom were
these words spoken? Angels. But it does not appear whether good or bad angels;
those that fell or those that stood. Calvin thinks the good angels
considered
in themselves
may be defective. The angels were Created in a possibility of
everlasting blessedness
but not in actual possession of it. This admits of no
doubt
because some of them actually did fall.
II. What words were
spoken?
1. What is positively said.
2. What is consequently inferred. (John Donne.)
Verse 19
Them that dwell in houses of clay.
The frailty and mortality of man
The great design of God in His Word and in His providence is to
humble the pride and cure the fatal presumption of man.
I. The impressive
description here of our frail and mortal condition. Angels are pure spirits
men are partly spiritual and partly corporal. “We dwell in houses of clay.” The
frailty of our frame is thus set forth. Its foundation is in the dust
its
origin and subsistence are from the dust. This too is a significant expression
“Who are crushed before the moth
” that is
sooner than the moth.
II. This impressive
description of our frailty is verified by instances of daily occurrence.
Illustrate by cases of death from simple and sudden accident
and from
insidious disease. Draw some practical inferences.
1. If the frame of man is so frail
and liable to death from causes
so numerous
what egregious and culpable folly is it to be wholly engrossed in
the pursuits and pleasures of the present life.
2. How important to be prepared for a world where death and sorrow
are unknown! But what is a due preparation for immortal bliss!
3. If the body is so frail and mortal
and the mind so apt to turn
and stray from the solemn consideration required
how necessary is it to pray
for light and grace to direct and fix our thoughts on this deeply interesting
subject! To learn the method of profitably numbering our days on earth
we all
need Divine teaching
and this must be sought of Him who is willing to impart
it. (Essex Remembrancer.)
Verse 21
They die
even without wisdom.
Dying in ignorance
“Alas! while the body stands so broad and brawny must the soul be
blinded
dwarfed
stupefied
almost annihilated? Alas! This too was a breath of
God: bestowed in heaven
but on earth never to be unfolded. That there should
one man die ignorant who had capacity for knowledge
this I call a tragedy.” (Carlyle.)
Unpreparedness for death:
“One should think
” said a friend to the celebrated Dr. Samuel
Johnson
“that sickness and the view of death would make men more religious.”
“Sir
” replied Johnson
“they do not know how to go to work about it. A man who
has never had religion before
no more grows religious when he is sick than a
man who has never learned figures can count when he has need of calculation.”
──《The Biblical Illustrator》