Thomas Aquinas Commentary


Thomas Aquinas Commentary
"My spirit is consumed, my days are extinct, The grave is [ready] for me. Surely there are mockers with me, And mine eye dwelleth upon their provocation. Give now a pledge, be surety for me with thyself; Who is there that will strike hands with me? For thou hast hid their heart from understanding: Therefore shalt thou not exalt [them]. He that denounceth his friends for a prey, Even the eyes of his children shall fail. But he hath made me a byword of the people; And they spit in my face. Mine eye also is dim by reason of sorrow, And all my members are as a shadow. Upright men shall be astonished at this, And the innocent shall stir up himself against the godless. Yet shall the righteous hold on his way, And he that hath clean hands shall wax stronger and stronger." — Job 17:1-9 (ASV)
Job had previously shown the great number of his afflictions (Job 16:14), the humiliation of his mind (Job 16:16), his innocence (Job 16:18), and the brevity of a life definitively lost (Job 16:23), by which the wordiness of his friends is conclusively proven. In this chapter, he intends to prove these points and finally demonstrate their ignorance (Job 17:10). First, he begins to prove what he had said about the course of human life, presenting beforehand the cause of life’s shortness when he says, “My spirit will be weakened.”
The life of the body is sustained by vital spirits, which diffuse from the heart to all its members. The body lives as long as these spirits are strong within it. But when the natural caloric power (energy) begins to grow weak in the heart, these spirits diminish. By this diminishing and weakening, he means the weakening of the spirit. He then states the effect of this cause, saying, “my days will grow shortened.” For weakness of the vital spirit shortens the days of life.
To answer the objection that a spirit, once weakened, could be strengthened again within the confines of this mortal life, he says, “nothing remains for me but the tomb.” It is as if he is saying: Once the span of this present life is finished, nothing of this life remains for me except the grave and those things associated with it.
Next, Job shows their consolation to be vain in another way. They had consoled him by saying that sin was the cause of the adversities that had befallen him, and that if he repented, he would return to prosperity. But he rejects this, saying, “I have not sinned.” He says this because he had no remorse of conscience for any grave sin for which he might have incurred such great adversities. He even says later, “For my heart has not accused me in my whole life” (Job 27:6). Therefore, this does not contradict what is said in 1 John: “If we have said we have no sin, we lie to ourselves” (1 John 1:8). By this, he explains what he had said above about his innocence: “I have suffered these things without having evil on my hand” (Job 16:18).
He then says, “and my eye lingers on bitter things.” He uses the plural “bitter things” because of the many adversities he had listed before. He says his eye “lingers” because although he has humbled himself among these bitter things and has sewn a sack over his skin (Job 16:16), the bitter things nevertheless remain. He attributes these bitter things to the eye because of the weeping they cause, which he already expressed by saying, “My face was puffed up from weeping” (Job 16:17), and again, “my eye pours out for God” (Job 16:21). His eye was weeping among the bitter things, aiming only for divine help, which is why he continues here, “Free me.”
Job understood that only God, who had placed him in the power of the evil one (Job 16:12), could free him. He was not praying to be freed from adversity in the way of those who seek earthly prosperity after hardship. Instead, he prayed to be led to high-mindedness, and so he says, “and place me near you.” Since God is the very essence of good, it is necessary that whoever is placed close to God is freed from evil. A person is placed near to God insofar as they approach Him with their mind through knowledge and love, but this happens imperfectly in our state as sojourners on earth, where we suffer attacks. Because one is placed near to God, however, one is not overcome by them.
A person is perfectly placed near to God in their mind in the state of ultimate happiness, in which they can no longer suffer attacks. Job shows that he desires this when he says, “do not let the hand of anyone fight against me.” This is because no matter how much someone might want to attack him, if he were placed perfectly near to God, no one’s attack could disturb him. This, then, was the consolation Job expected in the midst of bitter things: the hope of being placed near to God, where he would not have to fear any attacks.
Job’s prattling friends did not understand this spiritual consolation, and so he says, “You have made their hearts far from learning”—that is, far from your spiritual teaching, through which you teach one to hope for spiritual goods and to hold temporal goods in contempt. Since they place their hope only in things that are weak and time-bound, they cannot arrive at this spiritual height and be placed near to God. He therefore expresses this by saying, “yet they will not be lifted up.”
From the fact that they were far from spiritual teaching, Job concludes that Eliphaz promises only temporal goods as a consolation (Job 5:18). He expresses this by saying, “He promises plunder to his companions,” meaning the procurement of temporal goods, which can only come to one person if another loses them. Thus, the acquisition of temporal goods is compared to plundering. It is not universally true that people recover temporal prosperity after repentance, since even the good do not always enjoy it. And so he says, “the eyes of his sons will fail.” He calls “his sons” those who believe his promise and hope for temporal rewards for the good they do; but when they do not attain them, their eyes fail, as they cease from their hope.
Just as Eliphaz promised temporal goods to those doing good, he also asserted that all temporal adversities arise from the sins of the one who suffers them. Since Job had suffered many adversities, Eliphaz used him as an example to the people. Job expresses this by saying, “He has used me as a proverb to the people and his example in their midst.” This is because, to prove his opinion about the cause of adversities, Eliphaz used Job as an example, presuming he was being punished for sin.
However, it is characteristic of the zeal of the just to be indignant when they see the righteousness of divine judgments perverted by false doctrine. Consequently, Job shows the greatness of his zeal in two ways.
One might think that this misting of sight is against justice and this anger is against innocence. To reject this, Job then says, “the just will be astonished at this.” It is as if to say: The just are rightly astonished when they see the doctrine of evil men, and he called this astonishment a “misting over.” The text continues, “and the innocent will arouse himself against the hypocrite.” This is, in effect, saying: It is not against innocence if someone is roused to anger against a hypocrite who perverts true doctrine out of a zeal for justice. And since, as has been said, zealous anger disturbs the soul but does not blind it, the just man is astonished or “misted over” by a zeal that does not withdraw from justice.
He expresses this by saying, “the just will preserve his course,” because he does not desert it out of zealous anger. Such anger does not precede reason but follows it, and so it cannot separate a person from justice. Zealous anger is useful because it makes a person rise up against evils with greater strength of soul. He expresses this by saying, “and add courage to pure hands,” being incited by zeal. And so Aristotle says in the Ethics III that anger aids courage.