Bible Commentary

Job 31:9-15

Matthew Henry on Job 31:9-15

Matthew Henry Concise Commentary · Matthew Henry · CC0 1.0 Universal

All the defilements of the life come from a deceived heart. Lust is a fire in the soul: those that indulge it, are said to burn. It consumes all that is good there, and lays the conscience waste. It kindles the fire of God's wrath, which, if not quenched by the blood of Christ, will consume even to eternal destruction.

It consumes the body; it consumes the substance. Burning lusts bring burning judgments. Job had a numerous household, and he managed it well. He considered that he had a Master in heaven; and as we are undone if God should be severe with us, we ought to be mild and gentle towards all with whom we have to do.

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commentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Job 31:1-40Solemn assurances of innocence. Job can discover no connection between his present sufferings and those well-founded hopes of his former life to which he has been referring; but there remains the assumption of his guilt…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Job 31:1-40Job's second parable: 4. A solemn protestation of innocence. I. WITH RESPECT TO THE LAW OF CHASTITY. (Verses 1-4.) 1. The wickedness he eschewed. Not alone the crime of seduction, or the actual defilement of virginal in…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Job 31:1-40The consciousness of integrity. The Divine solution of the riddle of human life is being wrought out in this poem, although at times it seems as though the entanglement became more and more confused. The case, as put in…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Job 31:1-40EXPOSITION The conclusion of Job's long speech (ch. 26-31.) is now reached. He winds it up by a solemn vindication of himself from all the charges of wicked conduct which have been alleged or insinuated against him. per…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryMatthew Henry on Job 31:9-15Two more instances we have here of Job's integrity:— I. That he had a very great abhorrence of the sin of adultery. As he did not wrong his own marriage bed by keeping a concubine (he did not so much as think upon a mai…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Job 31:9If mine heart have been deceived by a woman; rather, enticed, or allured unto a woman. If, that is, I have suffered myself at any time to be enticed by the wiles of a "strange woman" (Proverbs 5:3; Proverbs 6:24, etc.),…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Job 31:10Then let my wife grind unto another; i.e. "let the wife of my bosom be brought so low as to be compelled to do the servile work of grinding the corn in the household of another woman." The condition of the female slaves…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Job 31:11For this is an heinous crime. The crime of adultery subverts the family relation, on which it has pleased God to erect the entire fabric of human society. Hence, in the Jewish Law, adultery was made a capital offence (L…Joseph S. Exell and contributors