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Job 9

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1Then Job answered:

2“Yes, I know that it is so, but how can a mortal be righteous before God?

3If one wished to contend with God, he could not answer Him one time out of a thousand.

4God is wise in heart and mighty in strength. Who has resisted Him and prospered?

5He moves mountains without their knowledge and overturns them in His anger.

6He shakes the earth from its place, so that its foundations tremble.

7He commands the sun not to shine; He seals off the stars.

8He alone stretches out the heavens and treads on the waves of the sea.

9He is the Maker of the Bear and Orion, of the Pleiades and the constellations of the south.

10He does great things beyond searching out, and wonders without number.

11Were He to pass by me, I would not see Him; were He to move, I would not recognize Him.

12If He takes away, who can stop Him? Who dares to ask Him, ‘What are You doing?’

13God does not restrain His anger; the helpers of Rahab cower beneath Him.

14How then can I answer Him or choose my arguments against Him?

15For even if I were right, I could not answer. I could only beg my Judge for mercy.

16If I summoned Him and He answered me, I do not believe He would listen to my voice.

17For He would crush me with a tempest and multiply my wounds without cause.

18He does not let me catch my breath, but overwhelms me with bitterness.

19If it is a matter of strength, He is indeed mighty! If it is a matter of justice, who can summon Him?

20Even if I were righteous, my mouth would condemn me; if I were blameless, it would declare me guilty.

21Though I am blameless, I have no concern for myself; I despise my own life.

22It is all the same, and so I say, ‘He destroys both the blameless and the wicked.’

23When the scourge brings sudden death, He mocks the despair of the innocent.

24The earth is given into the hand of the wicked; He blindfolds its judges. If it is not He, then who is it?

25My days are swifter than a runner; they flee without seeing good.

26They sweep by like boats of papyrus, like an eagle swooping down on its prey.

27If I were to say, ‘I will forget my complaint and change my expression and smile,’

28I would still dread all my sufferings; I know that You will not acquit me.

29Since I am already found guilty, why should I labor in vain?

30If I should wash myself with snow and cleanse my hands with lye,

31then You would plunge me into the pit, and even my own clothes would despise me.

32For He is not a man like me, that I can answer Him, that we can take each other to court.

33Nor is there a mediator between us, to lay his hand upon us both.

34Let Him remove His rod from me, so that His terror will no longer frighten me.

35Then I would speak without fear of Him. But as it is, I am on my own.

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Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Commentary

Historical, contextual, and verse-level study notes for deeper biblical exploration.

Job 9:1-20 Upon Muthlabben, or, after the manner according to "death to

the Son," by which some song was known, to whose air or melody the musician is directed to perform this Psalm. This mode of denoting a song by some prominent word or words is still common (compare Ps 22:1). The Psalmist praises God for deliverance from his enemies and celebrates the divine government, for providing security to God's people and punishment to the wicked. Thus encouraging himself, he prays for new occasions to recount God's mercies, and confident of His continued judgment on the wicked and vindication of the oppressed, he implores a prompt and efficient manifestation of the divine sovereignty.

Job 9:1 Verse 1

Heartfelt gratitude will find utterance. 3-5. When ... are turned back--It is the result of God's power alone. He, as a righteous Judge (Ps 7:11), vindicates His people. He rebukes by acts as well as words (Ps 6:1; 18:15), and so effectually as to destroy the names of nations as well as persons.

Job 9:2 Verse 2

I know it is so of a truth--that God does not "pervert justice" (Job 8:3). But (even though I be sure of being in the right) how can a mere man assert his right--(be just) with God. The Gospel answers (Ro 3:26).

Job 9:3 Verse 3

If he--God will contend with him--literally, "deign to enter into judgment." he cannot answer, &c.--He (man) would not dare, even if he had a thousand answers in readiness to one question of God's, to utter one of them, from awe of His Majesty.

Job 9:4 Verse 4

wise in heart--in understanding!--and mighty in power! God confounds the ablest arguer by His wisdom, and the mightiest by His power. hardened himself--or his neck (Pr 29:1); that is, defied God. To prosper, one must fall in with God's arrangements of providence and grace.

Job 9:5 Verse 5

and they know not--Hebrew for "suddenly, unexpectedly, before they are aware of it" (Ps 35:8); "at unawares"; Hebrew, which "he knoweth not of" (Joe 2:14; Pr 5:6).

Job 9:6 Verse 6

The earth is regarded, poetically, as resting on pillars, which tremble in an earthquake (Ps 75:3; Isa 24:20). The literal truth as to the earth is given (Job 26:7).

Job 9:6 Verse 6

Literally, "As to the enemy finished are his ruins for ever. Thou [God] hast destroyed," &c. (1Sa 15:3, 7; 27:8, 9). The wicked are utterly undone. Their ruins shall never be repaired.

Job 9:7 Verse 7

The sun, at His command, does not rise; namely, in an eclipse, or the darkness that accompanies earthquakes (Job 9:6). sealeth up the stars--that is, totally covers as one would seal up a room, that its contents may not be seen.

Job 9:7-8 Verses 7-8

God's eternal possession of a throne of justice is contrasted with the ruin of the wicked.

Job 9:8 Verse 8

spreadeth out--(Isa 40:22; Ps 104:2). But throughout it is not so much God's creating, as His governing, power over nature that is set forth. A storm seems a struggle between Nature and her Lord! Better, therefore, "Who boweth the heavens alone," without help of any other. God descends from the bowed-down heaven to the earth (Ps 18:9). The storm, wherein the clouds descend, suggests this image. In the descent of the vault of heaven, God has come down from His high throne and walks majestically over the mountain waves (Hebrew, "heights"), as a conqueror taming their violence. So "tread upon" (De 33:29; Am 4:13; Mt 14:26). The Egyptian hieroglyphic for impossibility is a man walking on waves.

Job 9:9 Verse 9

maketh--rather, from the Arabic, "covereth up." This accords better with the context, which describes His boundless power as controller rather than as creator [Umbreit]. Arcturus--the great bear, which always revolves about the pole, and never sets. The Chaldeans and Arabs, early named the stars and grouped them in constellations; often travelling and tending flocks by night, they would naturally do so, especially as the rise and setting of some stars mark the distinction of seasons. Brinkley, presuming the stars here mentioned to be those of Taurus and Scorpio, and that these were the cardinal constellations of spring and autumn in Job's time, calculates, by the precession of equinoxes, the time of Job to be eight hundred eighteen years after the deluge, and one hundred eighty-four before Abraham. Orion--Hebrew, "the fool"; in Job 38:31 he appears fettered with "bands." The old legend represented this star as a hero, who presumptuously rebelled against God, and was therefore a fool, and was chained in the sky as a punishment; for its rising is at the stormy period of the year. He is Nimrod (the exceedingly impious rebel) among the Assyrians; Orion among the Greeks. Sabaism (worship of the heavenly hosts) and hero-worship were blended in his person. He first subverted the patriarchal order of society by substituting a chieftainship based on conquest (Ge 10:9, 10). Pleiades--literally, "the heap of stars"; Arabic, "knot of stars." The various names of this constellation in the East express the close union of the stars in it (Am 5:8). chambers of the south--the unseen regions of the southern hemisphere, with its own set of stars, as distinguished from those just mentioned of the northern. The true structure of the earth is here implied.

Job 9:9-10 Verses 9-10

The oppressed, and all who know Him (Ps 5:3; 7:1), find Him a sure refuge.

Job 9:10 Verse 10

Repeated from Eliphaz (Job 5:9).

Job 9:11 Verse 11

I see him not: he passeth on--The image is that of a howling wind (Isa 21:1). Like it when it bursts invisibly upon man, so God is felt in the awful effects of His wrath, but is not seen (Joh 3:8). Therefore, reasons Job, it is impossible to contend with Him.

Job 9:11 Verse 11

(Compare Ps 2:6; 3:4).

Job 9:12 Verse 12

If "He taketh away," as in my case all that was dear to me, still a mortal cannot call Him to account. He only takes His own. He is an absolute King (Ec 8:4; Da 4:35).

Job 9:12 Verse 12

for blood--that is, murders (Ps 5:6), including all the oppressions of His people. maketh inquisition--(compare Ge 9:5). He will avenge their cause.

Job 9:13 Verse 13

If God--rather, "God will not withdraw His anger," that is, so long as a mortal obstinately resists [Umbreit]. the proud helpers--The arrogant, who would help one contending with the Almighty, are of no avail against Him.

Job 9:13 Verse 13

gates--or, "regions." of death--Gates being the entrance is put for the bounds.

Job 9:14 Verse 14

How much less shall I? &c.--who am weak, seeing that the mighty have to stoop before Him. Choose words (use a well-chosen speech, in order to reason) with Him.

Job 9:14 Verse 14

gates ... Zion--The enclosure of the city (compare Ps 48:12; Isa 23:12), or, church, as denoted by this phrase contrasted with that of death, carries out the idea of exaltation as well as deliverance. Signal favors should lead us to render signal and public thanks.

Job 9:15 Verse 15

(Job 10:15). Though I were conscious of no sin, yet I would not dare to say so, but leave it to His judgment and mercy to justify me (1Co 4:4).

Job 9:15-16 Verses 15-16

The undesigned results of the devices of the wicked prove them to be of God's overruling or ordering, especially when those results are destructive to the wicked themselves.

Job 9:16-17 Verses 16-17

would I not believe that he had hearkened unto my voice--who breaketh me (as a tree stripped of its leaves) with a tempest.

Job 9:16 Verse 16

Higgaion--means "meditation," and, combined with Selah, seems to denote a pause of unusual solemnity and emphasis (compare Ps 3:2). Though Selah occurs seventy-three times, this is the only case in which Higgaion is found. In the view which is given here of the retribution on the wicked as an instance of God's wise and holy ordering, we may well pause in adoring wonder and faith.

Job 9:17 Verse 17

shall be turned--or, "shall turn," retreating under God's vengeance, and driven by Him to the extreme of destruction, even hell itself. Those who forget God are classed with the depraved and openly profane.

Job 9:18 Verse 18

(Compare Ps 13:1-6). the needy--literally, "poor," as deprived of anything; hence miserable. expectation of the poor--or, "meek," "humble," made so by affliction.

Job 9:19 Verse 19

Umbreit takes these as the words of God, translating, "What availeth the might of the strong?" "Here (saith he) behold! what availeth justice? Who will appoint me a time to plead?" (So Jer 49:19). The last words certainly apply better to God than to Job. The sense is substantially the same if we make "me" apply to Job. The "lo!" expresses God's swift readiness for battle when challenged.

Job 9:19 Verse 19

Arise--(compare Ps 4:7). let not man--(Ps 8:4). let ... be judged--and of course condemned.

Job 9:20 Verse 20

it--(Job 15:6; Lu 19:22); or "He," God.

Job 9:20 Verse 20

By their effectual subjection, make them to realize their frail nature (Ps 8:4), and deter them from all conceit and future rebellion. PSALM 10

Job 9:21 Verse 21

Literally, here (and in Job 9:20), "I perfect! I should not know my soul! I would despise," [that is], "disown my life"; that is, Though conscious of innocence, I should be compelled, in contending with the infinite God, to ignore my own soul and despise my past life as if it were guilty [Rosenmuller].

Job 9:22 Verse 22

one thing--"It is all one; whether perfect or wicked--He destroyeth." This was the point Job maintained against his friends, that the righteous and wicked alike are afflicted, and that great sufferings here do not prove great guilt (Lu 13:1-5; Ec 9:2).

Job 9:23 Verse 23

If--Rather, "While (His) scourge slays suddenly (the wicked, Job 9:22), He laughs at (disregards; not derides) the pining away of the innocent." The only difference, says Job, between the innocent and guilty is, the latter are slain by a sudden stroke, the former pine away gradually. The translation, "trial," does not express the antithesis to "slay suddenly," as "pining away" does [Umbreit].

Job 9:24 Verse 24

Referring to righteous "judges," in antithesis to "the wicked" in the parallel first clause, whereas the wicked oppressor often has the earth given into his hand, the righteous judges are led to execution--culprits had their faces covered preparatory to execution (Es 7:8). Thus the contrast of the wicked and righteous here answers to that in Job 9:23. if not, where and who?--If God be not the cause of these anomalies, where is the cause to be found, and who is he?

Job 9:25 Verse 25

a post--a courier. In the wide Persian empire such couriers, on dromedaries or on foot, were employed to carry the royal commands to the distant provinces (Es 3:13, 15; 8:14). "My days" are not like the slow caravan, but the fleet post. The "days" are themselves poetically said to "see no good," instead of Job in them (1Pe 3:10).

Job 9:26 Verse 26

swift ships--rather, canoes of reeds or papyrus skiffs, used on the Nile, swift from their lightness (Isa 18:2).

Job 9:28 Verse 28

The apodosis to Job 9:27--"If I say, &c." "I still am afraid of all my sorrows (returning), for I know that thou wilt (dost) (by removing my sufferings) not hold or declare me innocent. How then can I leave off my heaviness?"

Job 9:29 Verse 29

The "if" is better omitted; I (am treated by God as) wicked; why then labor I in vain (to disprove His charge)? Job submits, not so much because he is convinced that God is right, as because God is powerful and he weak [Barnes].

Job 9:30 Verse 30

snow water--thought to be more cleansing than common water, owing to the whiteness of snow (Ps 51:7; Isa 1:18). never so clean--Better, to answer to the parallelism of the first clause which expresses the cleansing material, "lye:" the Arabs used alkali mixed with oil, as soap (Ps 73:13; Jer 2:22).

Job 9:32 Verse 32

(Ec 6:10; Isa 45:9).

Job 9:33 Verse 33

daysman--"mediator," or "umpire"; the imposition of whose hand expresses power to adjudicate between the persons. There might be one on a level with Job, the one party; but Job knew of none on a level with the Almighty, the other party (1Sa 2:25). We Christians know of such a Mediator (not, however, in the sense of umpire) on a level with both--the God-man, Christ Jesus (1Ti 2:5).

Job 9:34 Verse 34

rod--not here the symbol of punishment, but of power. Job cannot meet God on fair terms so long as God deals with him on the footing of His almighty power.

Job 9:35 Verse 35

it is not so with me--As it now is, God not taking His rod away, I am not on such a footing of equality as to be able to vindicate myself.

Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Pastoral and devotional reflections focused on spiritual formation and application.

Job 9:1-13 Verses 1-13

In this answer Job declared that he did not doubt the justice of God, when he denied himself to be a hypocrite; for how should man be just with God? Before him he pleaded guilty of sins more than could be counted; and if God should contend with him in judgment, he could not justify one out of a thousand, of all the thoughts, words, and actions of his life; therefore he deserved worse than all his present sufferings. When Job mentions the wisdom and power of God, he forgets his complaints. We are unfit to judge of God's proceedings, because we know not what he does, or what he designs. God acts with power which no creature can resist. Those who think they have strength enough to help others, will not be able to help themselves against it.

Job 9:14-21 Verses 14-21

Job is still righteous in his own eyes, ch. 32:1, and this answer, though it sets forth the power and majesty of God, implies that the question between the afflicted and the Lord of providence, is a question of might, and not of right; and we begin to discover the evil fruits of pride and of a self-righteous spirit. Job begins to manifest a disposition to condemn God, that he may justify himself, for which he is afterwards reproved. Still Job knew so much of himself, that he durst not stand a trial. If we say, We have no sin, we not only deceive ourselves, but we affront God; for we sin in saying so, and give the lie to the Scripture. But Job reflected on God's goodness and justice in saying his affliction was without cause.

Job 9:22-24 Verses 22-24

Job touches briefly upon the main point now in dispute. His friends maintained that those who are righteous and good, always prosper in this world, and that none but the wicked are in misery and distress: he said, on the contrary, that it is a common thing for the wicked to prosper, and the righteous to be greatly afflicted. Yet there is too much passion in what Job here says, for God doth not afflict willingly. When the spirit is heated with dispute or with discontent, we have need to set a watch before our lips.

Job 9:25-35 Verses 25-35

What little need have we of pastimes, and what great need to redeem time, when it runs on so fast towards eternity! How vain the enjoyments of time, which we may quite lose while yet time continues! The remembrance of having done our duty will be pleasing afterwards; so will not the remembrance of having got worldly wealth, when it is all lost and gone. Job's complaint of God, as one that could not be appeased and would not relent, was the language of his corruption. There is a Mediator, a Daysman, or Umpire, for us, even God's own beloved Son, who has purchased peace for us with the blood of his cross, who is able to save to the uttermost all who come unto God through him. If we trust in his name, our sins will be buried in the depths of the sea, we shall be washed from all our filthiness, and made whiter than snow, so that none can lay any thing to our charge. We shall be clothed with the robes of righteousness and salvation, adorned with the graces of the Holy Spirit, and presented faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding joy. May we learn the difference between justifying ourselves, and being thus justified by God himself. Let the tempest-tossed soul consider Job, and notice that others have passed this dreadful gulf; and though they found it hard to believe that God would hear or deliver them, yet he rebuked the storm, and brought them to the desired haven. Resist the devil; give not place to hard thoughts of God, or desperate conclusions about thyself. Come to Him who invites the weary and heavy laden; who promises in nowise to cast them out.

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Afflictions and Adversities: Despondency In Job 9:16–35

If I summoned Him and He answered me, I do not believe He would listen to my voice. / For He would crush me with a tempest and multiply my wounds without cause. / He does not let me catch my breath, but overwhelms me with bitterness.

Astronomy: Sidereal Phenomena Job 9:6–9

He shakes the earth from its place, so that its foundations tremble. / He commands the sun not to shine; He seals off the stars. / He alone stretches out the heavens and treads on the waves of the sea.

Blasphemy: General Scriptures Concerning Job 9:16, 17, 34, 35

If I summoned Him and He answered me, I do not believe He would listen to my voice. / For He would crush me with a tempest and multiply my wounds without cause. / Let Him remove His rod from me, so that His terror will no longer frighten me.

Constellations: Orion Job 9:9

He is the Maker of the Bear and Orion, of the Pleiades and the constellations of the south.

Depravity of Man: General Scriptures Concerning Job 9:2, 3, 20, 29, 30

“Yes, I know that it is so, but how can a mortal be righteous before God? / If one wished to contend with God, he could not answer Him one time out of a thousand. / Even if I were righteous, my mouth would condemn me; if I were blameless, it would declare me guilty.

Doubting: General Scriptures Concerning Job 9:16–23

If I summoned Him and He answered me, I do not believe He would listen to my voice. / For He would crush me with a tempest and multiply my wounds without cause. / He does not let me catch my breath, but overwhelms me with bitterness.

God: Creator Job 9:8, 9

He alone stretches out the heavens and treads on the waves of the sea. / He is the Maker of the Bear and Orion, of the Pleiades and the constellations of the south.

God: Glory of Job 9:32, 33

For He is not a man like me, that I can answer Him, that we can take each other to court. / Nor is there a mediator between us, to lay his hand upon us both.

God: Invisible Job 9:11

Were He to pass by me, I would not see Him; were He to move, I would not recognize Him.

God: Judge, and his Justice Job 9:15, 28

For even if I were right, I could not answer. I could only beg my Judge for mercy. / I would still dread all my sufferings; I know that You will not acquit me.

God: Power of Job 9:4–7, 10, 12, 13, 19

God is wise in heart and mighty in strength. Who has resisted Him and prospered? / He moves mountains without their knowledge and overturns them in His anger. / He shakes the earth from its place, so that its foundations tremble.

God: Sovereign Job 9:12

If He takes away, who can stop Him? Who dares to ask Him, ‘What are You doing?’

God: Unclassified Scriptures Relating To Job 9:2–35

“Yes, I know that it is so, but how can a mortal be righteous before God? / If one wished to contend with God, he could not answer Him one time out of a thousand. / God is wise in heart and mighty in strength. Who has resisted Him and prospered?

God: Unsearchable Job 9:10

He does great things beyond searching out, and wonders without number.

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