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Am I a sea, or a sea-monster, That you put a guard over me?
Verse Takeaways
1
A Complaint of Being Watched
Job uses powerful metaphors to express his feeling of being unjustly imprisoned by God. Commentators explain that he compares himself to a raging sea or a dangerous sea monster (like a crocodile) to ask why God feels the need to watch and restrain him so intensely. He sees God's constant attention not as loving care, but as the oppressive vigilance of a guard watching over a powerful threat.
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Job
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6
18th Century
Presbyterian
Am I a sea? - That is, “am I like a raging and tumultuous sea, that it is necessary to restrain and confine me?” The sense of the v…
19th Century
Anglican
Am I a sea, or a whale ...? —This very hard verse, it seems most reasonable to explain, if we can, from Scripture itself.
F…
Baptist
Am I such an important thing, such a dangerous thing, that I ought to be watched like this, and perpetually hampered, and tethered, and kept within…
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17th Century
Reformed Baptist
[Am] I a sea, or a whale Like the restless sea, to which very wicked, profligate, and abandoned sinners are compared…
Plain truths concerning the shortness and vanity of human life, and the certainty of death, do us good when we think and speak of them, applying th…
13th Century
Catholic
After demonstrating through arguments that Eliphaz's consolation of earthly prosperity was inconsistent, Job now shows the same thing by arguing fo…
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