Job 17 - Wesley's Explanatory Notes

Bible Comments
  • Job 17:1 open_in_new

    The graves — He speaks of the sepulchres of his fathers, to which he must be gathered. The graves where they are laid, are ready for me also. Whatever is unready, the grave is ready for us: it is a bed soon made. And if the grave be ready for us, it concerns us, to be ready for the grave.

  • Job 17:2 open_in_new

    Are not — Do not my friends, instead of comforting, mock me? Thus he returns to what he had said, Job 16:20, and intimates the justice of his following appeal.

  • Job 17:3 open_in_new

    Surety — These words contain, an humble desire to God that he would be his surety, or appoint him a surety who should maintain his righteous cause against his opposers. Strike hands — Be surety to me; whereof that was the usual gesture.

  • Job 17:4 open_in_new

    Hid — Thou hast blinded the minds of my friends: therefore I desire a more wise and able judge. Therefore — Thou wilt not give them the victory over me in this contest, but wilt make them ashamed of their confidence.

  • Job 17:7 open_in_new

    As a shadow — I am grown so poor and thin, that I am not to be called a man, but the shadow of a man.

  • Job 17:8 open_in_new

    Astonied — At the depth and mysteriousness of God's judgments, which fall on innocent men, while the worst of men prosper. Yet — Notwithstanding all these sufferings of good men, and the astonishment which they cause, he shall the more zealously oppose those hypocrites, who make these strange providences of God an objection to religion.

  • Job 17:11 open_in_new

    My days — The days of my life. I am a dying man, and therefore the hopes you give me of the bettering of my condition, are vain. Purposes — Which I had in my prosperous days, concerning myself and children.

  • Job 17:12 open_in_new

    They — My thoughts so incessantly pursue and disturb me, that I can no more sleep in the night, than in the day. The light — The day — light, which often gives some comfort to men in misery, seems to be gone as soon as it is begun. Darkness — Because of my grievous pains and torments which follow me by day as well as by night.

  • Job 17:13 open_in_new

    Wait — For deliverance, I should be disappointed; for I am upon the borders of the grave, I expect no rest but in the dark grave, for which therefore I prepare myself. I endeavour to make it easy, by keeping my conscience pure, by seeing Christ lying in this bed, (so turning it into a bed of spices) and by looking beyond it to the resurrection.

  • Job 17:14 open_in_new

    Corruption — Heb. to the pit of corruption, the grave. Father — I am near a — kin to thee, and thou wilt receive and keep me in thy house, as parents do their children.

  • Job 17:16 open_in_new

    They — My hopes, of which he spake in the singular number, Job 17:15, which he here changes into the plural, as is usual in these poetical books. Bars — Into the innermost parts of the pit: my hopes are dying, and will be buried in my grave. We must shortly be in the dust, under the bars of the pit, held fast there, 'till the general resurrection. All good men, if they cannot agree now will there rest together. Let the foresight of this cool the heat of all contenders, and moderate the disputers of this world.