Job 17 - Dummelow's Commentary on the Bible

Bible Comments
  • Job 17:1-16 open_in_new

    Job's Fourth Speech (concluded)

    1-9. Job prays God to pledge Himself to vindicate his innocence in the future, for his friends have failed him, and he rejects their promises of restoration in the present life.

  • Job 17:3 open_in_new

    RV 'Give now a pledge, be surety for me with thyself; who is there that will strike hands with me?' Job begs that God will promise to testify to his innocence after he is dead. There is no one else who will do this. To 'strike hands' was the Hebrew sign of becoming surety for another.

  • Job 17:4 open_in_new

    The friends are too prejudiced against Job to speak on his behalf. Not exalt them] i.e. not let their views triumph.

  • Job 17:5 open_in_new

    RV 'He that denounceth his friends for a prey, even the eyes of his children shall fail.'

  • Job 17:6 open_in_new

    He hath made me] Render, 'I am made.' And aforetime, etc.] RV 'And I am become an open abhorring.'

    8, 9. The upright, astonished at Job's calamities, will rise against the ungodly, while the righteous holds on his way with increasing strength. This does not fit in well with Job's attitude, so that there is plausibility in the view of some scholars that the vv. are a misplaced fragment of Bildad's speech.

  • Job 17:10 open_in_new

    Job invites the friends to renew their arguments, although he expects nothing worth hearing from them.

    11, 12. The thoughts, etc.] Render, perhaps,' The thoughts of my heart put night for day. Darkness is nearer than light.'

    13-16. Job declares that it is vain to look for any restoration or justification (my hope) in this life. His hope will go to the grave with him.

  • Job 17:16 open_in_new

    They] RV 'it' (i.e. his hope). Bars of the pit] the gates of the world of the dead: cp. Isaiah 38:10. When, etc.] RV 'when once there is rest in the dust.' Job moves forward in this speech to the great thought that after he is dead, God will clear his reputation of the stain placed upon it by his disasters, which seemed to the world to prove his guilt. He does not expect the old relations between God and himself to be renewed, but since he cannot bear the thought that he will be permanently branded as an evil-doer, he wins the conviction that he will ultimately be righted. And since God alone can or will clear his honour (for man cannot and will not) he is assured that God, who is now slaying him by slow torture, will at last vindicate him. God's present mood is not an index to His permanent character.