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4,046 commentary entries

Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Job 9:25-35Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 9:25-35

What little need have we of pastimes, and what great need to redeem time, when it runs on so fast towards eternity! How vain the enjoyments of time, which we may quite lose while yet time continues! The remembrance of h…

Job 10:1-7Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 10:1-7

Job, being weary of his life, resolves to complain, but he will not charge God with unrighteousness. Here is a prayer that he might be delivered from the sting of his afflictions, which is sin. When God afflicts us, he…

Job 10:8-13Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 10:8-13

Job seems to argue with God, as if he only formed and preserved him for misery. God made us, not we ourselves. How sad that those bodies should be instruments of unrighteousness, which are capable of being temples of th…

Job 10:14-22Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 10:14-22

Job did not deny that as a sinner he deserved his sufferings; but he thought that justice was executed upon him with peculiar rigour. His gloom, unbelief, and hard thoughts of God, were as much to be ascribed to Satan's…

Job 11:1-6Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 11:1-6

Zophar attacked Job with great vehemence. He represented him as a man that loved to hear himself speak, though he could say nothing to the purpose, and as a man that maintained falsehoods. He desired God would show Job…

Job 11:7-12Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 11:7-12

Zophar speaks well concerning God and his greatness and glory, concerning man and his vanity and folly. See here what man is; and let him be humbled. God sees this concerning vain man, that he would be wise, would be th…

Job 11:13-20Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 11:13-20

Zophar exhorts Job to repentance, and gives him encouragement, yet mixed with hard thoughts of him. He thought that worldly prosperity was always the lot of the righteous, and that Job was to be deemed a hypocrite unles…

Job 12:1-5Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 12:1-5

Job upbraids his friends with the good opinion they had of their own wisdom compared with his. We are apt to call reproofs reproaches, and to think ourselves mocked when advised and admonished; this is our folly; yet he…

Job 12:6-11Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 12:6-11

Job appeals to facts. The most audacious robbers, oppressors, and impious wretches, often prosper. Yet this is not by fortune or chance; the Lord orders these things. Worldly prosperity is of small value in his sight: h…

Job 12:12-25Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 12:12-25

This is a noble discourse of Job concerning the wisdom, power, and sovereignty of God, in ordering all the affairs of the children of men, according to the counsel of His own will, which none can resist. It were well if…

Job 13:1-12Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 13:1-12

With self-preference, Job declared that he needed not to be taught by them. Those who dispute are tempted to magnify themselves, and lower their brethren, more than is fit. When dismayed or distressed with the fear of w…

Job 13:13-22Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 13:13-22

Job resolved to cleave to the testimony his own conscience gave of his uprightness. He depended upon God for justification and salvation, the two great things we hope for through Christ. Temporal salvation he little exp…

Job 13:23-28Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 13:23-28

Job begs to have his sins discovered to him. A true penitent is willing to know the worst of himself; and we should all desire to know what our transgressions are, that we may confess them, and guard against them for th…

Job 14:1-6Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 14:1-6

Job enlarges upon the condition of man, addressing himself also to God. Every man of Adam's fallen race is short-lived. All his show of beauty, happiness, and splendour falls before the stroke of sickness or death, as t…

Job 14:7-15Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 14:7-15

Though a tree is cut down, yet, in a moist situation, shoots come forth, and grow up as a newly planted tree. But when man is cut off by death, he is for ever removed from his place in this world. The life of man may fi…

Job 14:16-22Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 14:16-22

Job's faith and hope spake, and grace appeared to revive; but depravity again prevailed. He represents God as carrying matters to extremity against him. The Lord must prevail against all who contend with him. God may se…

Job 15:1-16Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 15:1-16

Eliphaz begins a second attack upon Job, instead of being softened by his complaints. He unjustly charges Job with casting off the fear of God, and all regard to him, and restraining prayer. See in what religion is summ…

Job 15:17-35Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 15:17-35

Eliphaz maintains that the wicked are certainly miserable: whence he would infer, that the miserable are certainly wicked, and therefore Job was so. But because many of God's people have prospered in this world, it does…

Job 16:1-5Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 16:1-5

Eliphaz had represented Job's discourses as unprofitable, and nothing to the purpose; Job here gives his the same character. Those who pass censures, must expect to have them retorted; it is easy, it is endless, but wha…

Job 16:6-16Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 16:6-16

Here is a doleful representation of Job's grievances. What reason we have to bless God, that we are not making such complaints! Even good men, when in great troubles, have much ado not to entertain hard thoughts of God.…

Job 16:17-22Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 16:17-22

Job's condition was very deplorable; but he had the testimony of his conscience for him, that he never allowed himself in any gross sin. No one was ever more ready to acknowledge sins of infirmity. Eliphaz had charged h…

Job 17:1-9Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 17:1-9

Job reflects upon the harsh censures his friends had passed upon him, and, looking on himself as a dying man, he appeals to God. Our time is ending. It concerns us carefully to redeem the days of time, and to spend them…

Job 17:10-16Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 17:10-16

Job's friends had pretended to comfort him with the hope of his return to a prosperous estate; he here shows that those do not go wisely about the work of comforting the afflicted, who fetch their comforts from the poss…

Job 18:1-4Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Matthew Henry on Job 18:1-4

Bildad had before given Job good advice and encouragement; here he used nothing but rebukes, and declared his ruin. And he concluded that Job shut out the providence of God from the management of human affairs, because…

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