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I go mourning without the sun. I stand up in the assembly, and cry for help.
Verse Takeaways
1
Blackened, but Not by the Sun
Several commentators, including Albert Barnes and John Gill, argue that the phrase "I go mourning" is better translated as "I go about blackened." They explain that Job's skin had physically darkened from his severe illness, not from sun exposure. This detail makes his suffering a visible, physical manifestation of his internal agony, as if God's judgment had literally scorched him.
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Book Overview
Job
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5
18th Century
Presbyterian
I went mourning - Or rather, “I go,” in the present tense, for he is now referring to his present calamities, and not to what was past. The …
19th Century
Anglican
I went mourning without the sun. —Rather, I go mourning without the sun; or, according to some, “blackened, but not by th…
17th Century
Reformed Baptist
I went mourning without the sun So overwhelmed with grief, that he refused to have any comfort from, or any advantag…
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Job complains a great deal. Harbouring hard thoughts of God was the sin that, at this time, most easily beset Job. When inward temptations join wit…
13th Century
Catholic
After listing the many prosperous things he had enjoyed in the past, Job now lists the adversities he was suffering. He begins by showing that, in …