Job 14:17 - John Trapp Complete Commentary

Bible Comments

My transgression [is] sealed up in a bag, and thou sewest up mine iniquity.

Ver. 17. My transgression is sealed up in a bag] As the writings or informations of a process which is ready to be sentenced, Deu 32:34 Hosea 13:12. Thou hast, as it were, sealed up and made sure work with all my sins, saith Job, to have them forthcoming for the increase of my punishment. Look how the clerk of assizes (saith one) seals up the indictments of men, and at the assizes brings his bag, and takes them out to read the same against them; so God dealt with Job, in his conceit at least. The truth is, God had not sealed his transgressions in a bag, but had cast them behind his back. A bag God hath for men's sins, and a bottle he hath for their tears, Psalms 56:8. Now Job was one of those penitents that helped to fill God's bottle, and therefore he saw at length (though now he was benighted) all his sins, bag and all, thrown in the sea, and sinking as a weighty millstone in those mighty waters of free grace and undeserved mercy.

And thou sewest up mine iniquity] Adsuesne aliquid iniquitati meae? so the Tigurines translate, i.e. Wilt thou sow or add anything to mine iniquity? wilt thou tie to it that tag (as a martyr phraseth it) of the law's malediction, conjoining the punishment to the sin? Adsuere ad iniquitatem, est poenas poenis continenter adiungere (Merl.). Some make this an explication of the former; q.d. the bag is not only sealed, but, for more surety, sewed too, and that purposely for a purchase of punishment, as some sense it.

Job 14:17

17 My transgression is sealed up in a bag, and thou sewest up mine iniquity.