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Don`t desire the night, When people are cut off in their place.
Verse Takeaways
1
Death is Not an Escape
Commentators overwhelmingly agree that Elihu is warning Job not to desire “the night,” a metaphor for death. Job had previously wished for death as an escape from his suffering. Elihu counters this, suggesting that to die in Job's current state of mind—unhumbled and in conflict with God—would not be a peaceful release but a final, terrible judgment.
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Book Overview
Job
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5
18th Century
Presbyterian
Desire not the night - That is, evidently, “the night of death.” The darkness of the night is an emblem of death, and it is not uncommon to …
19th Century
Anglican
Desire not the night — that is, of death, as Job had done (Job 16:22; Job 17:13, and other similar passage…
17th Century
Reformed Baptist
Desire not the night Either in a literal sense, which Job might do; not for secrecy to commit sin, as the thief, mur…
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Elihu shows that Job caused the continuation of his own trouble. He cautions him not to persist in obstinacy. Even good people need to be kept to t…
13th Century
Catholic
Elihu wanted to argue against two points he found in Job's words: first, Job's claim that he was righteous, and second, his accusation that God's j…