Job 22:22
What meaning of the job 22:22 in the Bible?
What does Job 22:22 mean? Commentary, explanation and study verse by verse.
"Receive, I pray thee, the law from his mouth, and lay up his words in thine heart."
What does Job 22:22 mean? Commentary, explanation and study verse by verse.
"Receive, I pray thee, the law from his mouth, and lay up his words in thine heart."
Verse Job 22:22. _RECEIVE, I PRAY THEE, THE LAW FROM HIS MOUTH_] Some, who wish to place Job _before_ the law given by Moses, say that this means the _Noahic precepts_; others, that the _law of nature...
RECEIVE, I PRAY THEE, THE LAW FROM HIS MOUTH - Listen to his commands, and obey his precepts. AND LAY UP HIS WORDS IN THINE HEART - Embrace his truth, and do not forget it. Let it abide with you, and...
THE THIRD SERIES OF CONTROVERSIES CHAPTER 22 The Third Address of Eliphaz _ 1. Is not thy wickedness great? (Job 22:1)_ 2. In what Job had sinned (Job 22:6) 3. The omniscience of God and the ways...
JOB 22. THIRD SPEECH OF ELIPHAZ. The only new thing that Eliphaz has to say, is definitely to describe the sin of Job! Yet his mildness makes him end with bright promises. JOB 22:1. Is it not to Job...
The Third Circle of Speeches In the first round of speeches the three friends exhausted the argument from the general conception of God. In the second they exhausted the argument from the operation o...
RECEIVE, I PRAY THEE, &C.— This phrase, says Bishop Warburton, was taken from the verbal delivery of the Jewish law from Mount Sinai. He adds, "The rabbins were so sensible of the expressive peculiari...
4. Repent, and restoration will be certain. (Job 22:21-30) TEXT 22:21-30 21 ACQUAINT NOW THYSELF WITH HIM, AND BE AT PEACE: Thereby good shall come onto thee. 22 Receive, I pray thee, the law from...
_RECEIVE, I PRAY THEE, THE LAW FROM HIS MOUTH, AND LAY UP HIS WORDS IN THINE HEART._ Lay up - (Psalms 119:11, "Thy word have I hid in mine heart, that I might not sin against thee;" cf. Proverbs 2:1;...
THE LAST SPEECH OF ELIPHAZ 1-11. Eliphaz ignoring Job's last speech, perhaps because he could not answer it, argues that God's treatment of man must be impartial, since He has nothing to gain or lose...
JOB, A SERVANT OF GOD Job _KEITH SIMONS_ Words in boxes (except for words in brackets) are from the Bible. This commentary has been through Advanced Checking. CHAPTER 22 ELIPHAZ’S LAST SPEECH G...
THE LAW FROM HIS MOUTH. — It would be highly interesting to know whether by this _law_ (Torah), the Law, the Torah, was in any way alluded to. One is naturally disposed to think that since Job seems t...
קַח ־נָ֣א מִ פִּ֣יו תֹּורָ֑ה וְ שִׂ֥ים אֲ֝מָרָ֗יו בִּ לְבָבֶֽךָ׃...
XIX. DOGMATIC AND MORAL ERROR Job 22:1 ELIPHAZ SPEAKS THE second colloquy has practically exhausted the subject of debate between Job and his friends. The three have really nothing more to say in...
“ACQUAINT THYSELF WITH GOD” Job 22:1 Eliphaz opens the third cycle of the discussion with a speech altogether too hard and cruel. He begins with an _enumeration of Job's fancied misdeeds,_ Job 22:1....
Here begins the third cycle in the controversy, and again EIiphaz is the first speaker. His address consisted of two movements. First, he made a definite charge against Job (1-20); and, second, he mad...
_Law of Moses, (Rabbins) or rather (Haydock) the natural law, which teaches that God is just, and deserves to be adored. He addresses Job, as if he had acknowledged no law or restraint._...
(21) В¶ Acquaint now thyself with him, and be at peace: thereby good shall come unto thee. (22) Receive, I pray thee, the law from his mouth, and lay up his words in thine heart. There is a great deal...
THE FOLLOWING COMMENTARY COVERS CHAPTER S 4 THROUGH 31. As to the friends of Job, they do not call for any extended remarks. They urge the doctrine that God's earthly government is a full measure and...
RECEIVE, I PRAY THEE, THE LAW FROM HIS MOUTH,.... Not the law of Moses; for it is a question whether that was as yet, or could come to the knowledge of Job; rather any doctrine, as the word signifies,...
Receive, I pray thee, the law from his mouth, and lay up his words in thine heart. Ver. 22. _Receive, I pray thee, the law from his mouth_] Now he speaks Job fair whom before he had sufficiently ripp...
_Receive the law from his mouth_ Take the rule, whereby thou mayest govern thy thoughts, and words, and whole life, not from idolaters and profane heathen, whose opinion concerning God's providence th...
AN ADMONITION TO REPENT...
JOB'S SIN EXPOSED BEFORE GOD (vv.1-8) Eliphaz considered that he was representing God in speaking, and exposing what he imagined were the sins of Job. He first asks a question that it is well worth...
21-30 The answer of Eliphaz wrongly implied that Job had hitherto not known God, and that prosperity in this life would follow his sincere conversion. The counsel Eliphaz here gives is good, though, a...
Take the law and rule whereby thou governest thy thoughts, and words, and whole life, not from profane heathens, whose opinion concerning God's providence thou hast embraced, nor from thy own vain ima...
Job 22:22 Receive H3947 (H8798) instruction H8451 mouth H6310 up H7760 (H8798) words H561 heart H3824 receive - Deuteronomy 4:1-2; Proverbs 2:1-9; 1 Thessalonians 4:1-2 lay up - Job 23:12;...
CONTENTS: Eliphaz's third discourse, accusing Job again of hypocrisy. CHARACTERS: God, Eliphaz, Job. CONCLUSION: It is the duty of those especially who are in affliction to keep up a perfect acquain...
Job 22:5. _Is not thy wickedness great?_ This speech of Eliphaz is cruel, and very much embittered; for it was mere suspicion that Job had robbed the widow, and stripped the naked. Job replies to it m...
_And lay up His words in thine heart._ MEDITATION What is meditation? It is thinking steadily, continuously, repeatedly, on a subject. Surely we can find time to think in this steady way, of your bus...
_THIRD SPEECH OF ELIPHAZ THE TEMANITE_ Remonstrates with Job on his self-righteousness, and plainly charges him with grievous transgressions as the cause of his present sufferings; concludes with pro...
EXPOSITION JOB 22:1 Eliphaz returns to the attack, but with observations that are at first strangely pointless and irrelevant, _e.g._ on the unprofitableness of man to God (verses l, 2), and on the s...
So Eliphaz takes up the argument now. And the same old story: he accuses Job of being wicked and he actually makes many bad accusations. He said, Can a man be profitable unto God, as he that is wise...
1 Thessalonians 4:1; 1 Thessalonians 4:2; Deuteronomy 4:1; Deuteronomy 4:2; Deuteronomy 6:6; Jeremiah 15:16; Job 23:12; Luke 2:19; Luke 2:51;...
Receive — Take the rule whereby thou governest thy thoughts, and words, and whole life, not from thy own imaginations or passions, but from God, from his law, which is written in thy own mind, and fro...