Paul Kretzmann Commentary - Job 22:12 - 22:20

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Paul Kretzmann Commentary - Job 22:12 - 22:20


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Warning to Avoid Further Punishments

v. 12. Is not God in the height of heaven,
the infinitely Exalted One, ruling the world and punishing evil? And behold the height of the stars, how high they are! God is immensely exalted over puny man with his feeble criticism of divine justice and every suspicion of God's wisdom.

v. 13. And thou sayest, How doth God know?
His wisdom cannot extend to the every-day affairs of men. Can He judge through the dark cloud? The idea is that God is wholly separated and shut off from the business of men, so that He does not concern Himself about them.

v. 14. Thick clouds are a covering to Him that He seeth not; and He walketh in the circuit of heaven,
on its immense vault, so engrossed in His own exaltation that He overlooks and neglects the affairs of the insignificant world of men.

v. 15. Hast thou marked the old way which wicked men have trodden?
Did Job intend to observe and follow the way of the wicked children of the world?

v. 16. Which were cut down out of time,
being swept away by a calamity before they had reached the normal span of life, whose foundation was overflown with a flood, the place where they and their dwellings stood became fluid as quicksand, causing them to sink down;

v. 17. which said unto God, Depart from us! and what could the Almighty do for them?
Both speeches are attributed to the ungodly, with whom Eliphaz here classes Job, in allusion to 21:14. 15.

v. 18. Yet He filled their houses with good things,
it was God who had granted to these very scoffers the prosperity which they enjoyed; but the counsel of the wicked is far from me! Eliphaz here echoes the declaration of Job_21:16, but includes Job in the number of the wicked.

v. 19. The righteous see it and are glad,
namely, over the destruction which would surely come upon the wicked; and the innocent laugh them to scorn, mocking at those whose insolence has such a shameful end.

v. 20. Whereas our substance is not cut down, but the remnant of them the fire consumeth.
That is the sum of the mocking speeches which the righteous heap upon the ungodly: Verily, destroyed is our adversary, and what is left of their prosperity the fire has devoured! In this sneering manner Eliphaz attempted to apply the doctrine of divine retribution to the case of Job.