Job 12 - Dummelow's Commentary on the Bible

Bible Comments
  • Job 12:1-25 open_in_new

    Job's Third Speech (Job 12-14)

    The friends have said God is wise and mighty. Job replies, 'I know that as well as you. You infer that He is also righteous, but experience shows that His power and wisdom are directed to unrighteous ends.' But it is with God rather than with them that he wishes to argue, and come what may he will utter all he feels. He challenges God to name his sins, presses man's hopeless destiny as a reason for God's pity, longs that God might shelter him out of reach of His anger, till it has passed away, and then renew His communion with him, but closes again on the note of man's hopeless fate. The thought that God might take Job's part against Himself here comes to expression.

    1-12. Job sarcastically praises the wisdom of the friends, which, however, is not greater than his own, or indeed than any one may learn from God's creation and government of the world. It is easy to mock one who is down: yet the prosperity of the wicked is a fact as patent as the wisdom and power of God.

  • Job 12:2 open_in_new

    A sarcastic allusion to the omniscience of the friends: Ye are the people the only wise ones.

  • Job 12:4 open_in_new

    Who calleth] RV 'A man that called.' Job complains that he, a servant of God, has become the subject of mockery.

  • Job 12:5 open_in_new

    RV 'In the thought of him that is at ease there is contempt for misfortune; it is ready for them whose foot slippeth.' An allusion to the way his friends treat him now that he is in trouble. How easy to despise the man who is down! 6. The wicked, on the other hand, seem to fare better than the good. Into whose hand, etc] Another rendering is, 'Who bears (his) god in his hand'; i.e. who regards his sword as his god: cp. Habakkuk 1:11-16.

  • Job 12:9 open_in_new

    In all these] among all these creatures. The lord] see on Job 1:21. Hath wrought this] i.e. orders all things.

    11, 12. 'I test your arguments as the palate tests its food; the aged are not necessarily wise.'

  • Job 12:12 open_in_new

    RM 'With aged men, ye say, is wisdom.' Job is not stating his own views.

    13-25. With God are wisdom and might, no one can reverse His actions. The mightiest are overthrown by Him, and He takes away the understanding of the wise.

  • Job 12:13 open_in_new

    With him] viz. God. Absolute power and wisdom are inherent in God, not acquired by pains and years as man acquires such power and wisdom as he possesses.

  • Job 12:22 open_in_new

    'The v. means that God through His wisdom sees into the profoundest and darkest deeps, and brings what is hidden to light' (Davidson).