John Trapp Complete Commentary - Job 40:4 - 40:4

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John Trapp Complete Commentary - Job 40:4 - 40:4


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This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

Job_40:4 Behold, I am vile; what shall I answer thee? I will lay mine hand upon my mouth.

Ver. 4. Behold, I am vile] Light and little worth; and therefore deserve to be slighted and laid by, as a broken vessel. The humble man vilifies, yea, nullifies, himself before God, as Abraham, Gen_18:27; as Agur, Pro_30:3; as Paul, Eph_3:8; as that martyr who cried out, Gehenna sum Domine, Lord, Thou art heaven, but I am hell, &c. Tantillitas nostra, saith Ignatius of himself and his colleagues. Behold, I am an abject, saith Job here, contemptible and inconsiderable. This was well, but not all; an excellent confession, but not full enough: his meanness he acknowledgeth, and that he was no fit match for God; but not his sinfulness, with desire of pardon and deprecation of punishment; God therefore gives him not over so, but sets upon him a second time, Job_40:6, and brings him to it, Job_42:1. There must be some proportion between a man’s sin and his repentance, Ezr_9:1-15, and this God will bring all his Jobs to ere he leave them.



What shall I answer thee?
] I am silenced, and set down; I see there is no reasoning against thee; I acknowledge thy greatness so plainly and plentifully demonstrated in the foregoing discourse; and am well pleased that thou shouldest be justified when thou speakest and overcome when thou judgest, Psa_51:4 Rom_3:4.



I will lay my hand upon my mouth] I that have spoken more freely and boldly than I ought, Et ore patulo multa sine iudicio effutivi, and have opened my mouth more wide than was meet, will henceforth be better advised, and keep my mouth with a bridle, or muzzle, as Psa_31:1. {See Trapp on "Job_21:5"}