JOB 32-37. SPEECH OF ELIHU. Reasons have already been given in the
Introduction for regarding this as a later addition to the poem. The
point of view of Elihu is very much that of Eliphaz, viz. that
suffering is disciplinary. If it is rightly accepted, and its lesson
learned, God will graciously res... [ Continue Reading ]
Elihu has yet words to utter for God. By a wide survey he will
establish the righteousness of his Maker. All that Elihu says is true
and his knowledge perfect.... [ Continue Reading ]
God is mighty, yet despises none. He destroys the wicked, but watches
over the righteous, exalting them to honour. If He afflicts them it is
to bring home to them their sin. Thus God instructs them and teaches
them repentance. If they repent they prosper, but, if not, destruction
is their portion.... [ Continue Reading ]
The godless cherish angry thoughts about God's discipline they refuse
to cry for God's help (Job 36:13). They die young, perishing like the
sodomites (those religiously consecrated to unnatural vice; see
Deuteronomy 23:17). God saves the afflicted by his affliction, and
opens their ear by adversity... [ Continue Reading ]
God is great who can teach like Him? Can man command or criticise Him?
Man's part is to magnify his work in psalms, though only beholding it
from afar, and unable to comprehend it.... [ Continue Reading ]
God draws up the water-drops and lets them fall in rain. Who can
understand the distribution of the clouds, the thunders which fill the
cloud where He dwells? (_cf._ Psalms 18:11). He is surrounded with
light (Job 36:30). By the thunderstorm He judges the peoples and
supplies humanity with food (by... [ Continue Reading ]