Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Job 2:6
And the LORD said unto Satan, Behold, he [is] in thine hand; but save his life.
Behold, he is in thine hand – He is at thy disposal; see Job 1:12, Margin.
But save his life – Margin, only. This was to be the only limitation. It would seem that he had the power to make any selection of disease, and to afflict him in any manner, provided it did not terminate fatally. The keen sorrows which Job afterward endured showed the malignancy of the tempter; evinced his ingenuity in inflicting pain, and his knowledge of what thc human frame could be made to bear.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Job 2:6-10
Behold, he is in thine hand.
Satan malevolently dealing with Jobs personality
I. Satans low estimate of human nature. His language here clearly implies that even a good mans love of goodness is not supreme and invincible. He states–
1. That goodness is not so dear to him as life. Skin for skin, yea, all that a man hath will he give for his life. Self-preservation is a strong instinct in human nature, and therefore a Divine principle; but it is not true that it is ever the strongest feeling in the human heart. A man who has come under the dominion of love for the true, the beautiful, and the good, holds his life as subordinate to the high principles of genuine religion and godly morality. This is a fact which the history of martyrdom places beyond debate. Thousands of men in Christendom today can say with Paul, I count not my life dear unto me, etc. He states–
2. That great personal suffering will turn even a good man against God. Such is the connection of the body with the soul that great bodily suffering has undoubtedly a tendency to generate a faithless, murmuring, and rebellious spirit.
II. Satans great power over human nature. We infer–
1. That his great power moves within fixed limits.
2. That his great power is used to torture the body and corrupt the soul. The ancients ascribed many physical diseases direct to the devil. Physical evils do spring from moral, and the devil is the instigator of the morally bad. See how he corrupts Jobs wife. Then said his wife unto him, Dost thou still retain thine integrity? curse God and die. If you substitute the word bless for curse, you still have the impious spirit of the wife: then in heartless irony she counsels her husband to blaspheme his God. Perhaps she meant, Thou hast been blessing God under thine affliction thus far, go on with thy cant, and die, for death would be desirable both to thyself and me. Satan acted thus not only on Jobs body, but on the soul of Jobs wife, and both in order to tempt the patriarch to sin against his Maker.
III. Satans grand purpose with human nature. What was his master purpose? To turn Job against God. And is not this his grand purpose with all men? There is one thought about his purpose, however, suggested by the text, encouraging to us, it is frustratable. Up to the present point he failed with Job. Three things are worthy of attention here concerning Job in frustrating the purpose of Satan.
1. He reproves his wife. Thou speakest as one of the foolish women speaketh.
2. He vindicates God. What? shall we receive good at the hands of God, and shall we not receive evil?
3. He is commended by inspiration. Here is the Divine testimony to Jobs state of mind amid the torturing of the devil. In all this did not Job sin with his lips. (Homilist.)
Man in the hands of Satan
Job has held and still holds a unique place as the representative sufferer of the human race. This hero of meekness, all but overwhelmed with blank hopelessness, paralysed in the inmost nerve of his life, isolated from all that makes living bright and precious, and left, to all human seeming, absolutely helpless in the hands of a slandering and malignant fate, has so burnt his story into the imagination of mankind that it will never disappear so long as hearts are crushed by the wheels of care, and souls are bruised by the blows of temptation. The Old Testament has no more vital element. But is Job a real man, in the hands of a real devil, and sustained and made victorious by a real God, or have we nothing more substantial than fibrous figures woven into a beautiful tapestry by the deft fingers of a nimble fancy? It is plain that the author moves almost wholly in the poetical realm. So the conviction settles in our minds that the thought and fact of this book are cast into a mould as real as that of Agamemnon: a drama intended not for the eye of sense, but for the eye of the mind. Admitting the poetical form of the book, we must ask whether all our highest poetry does not rest on the immutable basis of fact. Illustrate from In Memoriam, George Eliots Spanish Gipsy, Adam Bede, etc. The history of Job is actual, and not a whit less so, because the form of the story is ideal and dramatic. The important question is, Are the truths which Jobs story embodies and illumines, eternal and universal; and do the ideas set forth concerning God and man, evil and good, go to the root of things, and expound the essential nature of our human life? The one thing urgent for us to know, is not, was there a Job, but is there a light from God in the history of Job that guides the reason and conscience? Does Job teach us how to live the best life, and cling with inviolable tenacity to God, not in Uz, but in London? Is God greater than evil? Can He subdue it, and will He? A glance at the prologue of the poem is enough to convince us that the book is expressly written to solve these deep and perplexing problems of the mind. Poem though it be in form, its exhaustless fascination is its philosophy. Like Miltons great classic, it is a defence of the ways of God to men; a bold facing of plausible but false interpretations of life and destiny; a thorough and tremorless exposure of their inherent absurdity and unreason, and an unfaltering vindication of the character of God from all the aspersions of lazily-thinking Zophars, parrot-like Bildads, and fatalistic Elihus. See the special motive of Jobs fierce trial. He is not suffering for his sins. It is not a case of the ancestral eating of sour grapes. Nor is Job put into the furnace of affliction that he may come forth as gold. His affliction is not the apprenticeship of a strong nature to the educational influences of sorrow and temptation. What then is the special motive for this singular and significant experience? Listen to the colloquy in heaven between Satan and God concerning Job! Satan, the slanderer, says, Doth Job fear God for nought? Job knows well enough what he is about, and is simply making the best investment of his powers the market of human life offers. The case is crucial. The test is faultless. The experiment is carried to the maximum of severity. No element of evil is omitted. There then is the stake! How fare the combatants? That is the question at issue. See the swift changes through which Job is put. Satan is permitted to do his worst, and he does it with terrible suddenness and completeness. But all experiments fail utterly. The idea remains triumphant, that God is lovable in Himself and for Himself. Disinterested love of the Eternal is its own reward. He is lovable, notwithstanding fearful evils in our lot, and in our world. (J. Clifford, D. D.)
But save his life.
The worth of a good man
I. Because it is good in itself. Everything of inherent worth is worthy of preservation, even apart from the idea of utility. The jewel, though it be seldom worn as an ornament, must be carefully kept. So faith in the unseen, a reverent trust in God and fervent piety, had given a jewel-like beauty and value to the character of Job. Hence it must be spared.
II. Because it is useful to society. There are many things useful to society. Genius, and the honest pursuit of commercial enterprise, aid the common good of men. But nothing is more beneficial to society than true moral character. Men like Job are the strength, hope, and inspiration of the race. Remove them, and social life becomes dark, cold, and barren. Society has need to pray for the longevity of good men.
III. Because it shall be a pattern to after generations. The Bible is a pattern book of moral life. It is not only a book of cold precepts, but of sympathetic lives. Men need patterns in every sphere of work–in the mechanical and architectural, as well as in the moral. Many a man has become an artist through looking at a beautiful picture. While gazing upon it, the fires of genius have kindled within him. So the lives of men like Job have awakened the desire for piety within many a heart.
IV. Because the devil would only have liked to put an end to it. Could he have killed Job, he would have put out the best light of the times; have plucked the richest blossom of the season. But God would not allow this. He had to expend more discipline on Job yet. God has more love for His people than to let the devil do whet he likes with them. The power of Satan is limited, but fearful enough as it is. Are you afflicted? God watches you. Fear not!
V. Are our lives worth saving? (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 6. But save his life.] His body thou shalt have permission to afflict, but against his life thou shalt have no power; therefore take care of his life. The original, naphsho shemor, may be translated, keep his soul; but the word also signifies life; yet in the hands of the destroyer the life of this holy man is placed! How astonishing is the economy of salvation! It is so managed, by the unlimited power and skill of God, that the grand adversary of souls becomes himself, by the order of God, the preserver of that which the evil of his nature incessantly prompts him to destroy!
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Do not attempt to take away his life, which I will not suffer thee to do.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
6. but saverather, “onlyspare his life.” Satan shows his ingenuity in inflicting pain,and also his knowledge of what man’s body can bear without vitalinjury.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And the Lord said unto Satan, behold, he [is] in thine hand,…. Well may a behold be prefixed to this, it being matter of wonder and astonishment that a saint and servant of God should be permitted to be in the hand of Satan; which yet must not be so understood; as if he was off of, and no more upon the heart of God; or as if he was out of the hands of God, and out of the hands of Christ; or as if he was become Satan’s property, and a child of his; for neither of these can be true of a good man: nothing can separate him from the love of God; not Satan and all his principalities and powers; nor can men or devils pluck them out of his hands, nor out of the hands of his son; nor can those who are the children of God be any more the servants of sin, or the vassals of Satan; or in other words, nor can any of them be a child of God one day, and a child of the devil the next, which is the divinity of some men: nor is the sense of this passage, that Satan had leave to do with Job as he pleased, for then he would have utterly destroyed him; but the power granted him was a limited one, as follows:
but save his life: or “soul” y; which some understand of his rational soul, that which remains after death, and which, Maimonides z observes, Satan has no power over; and according to some the meaning is, do not disturb his mind to distraction, so as to deprive him of his senses, and of the exercise of his rational powers, which through the influence of Satan men have sometimes lost; see Mr 5:4; this is barred against in the permission granted; for otherwise it would not have been a proper trial of Job’s integrity; for, should he have been deprived of his reason, and uttered ever such bad things, it would have been no proof of his insincerity; as may be observed in good men in a delirium, they will utter bad words, and do or attempt to do bad things, which is not to be ascribed to their want of grace, but to their want of reason: but rather “life” is meant; not Job’s spiritual life, for that was in no danger of being lost; all the devils in hell cannot deprive a truly good man of his spiritual life; grace in him is a well of living water, springing: up to eternal life; he can never die the second death; his life is hid with Christ in God, and is bound up in the bundle of life with the Lord his God, who so is out of the reach of Satan; but corporeal life, which the devil by permission may take away, and is said to have the power of death, which by leave he exercised over men, but here he is restrained from it: Job’s life must be spared, that it might fully appear he got the victory over Satan, and stood in his integrity; and that he might still glorify God in a course of afflictions he was yet to endure, in the exercise of his faith, hope, love, patience, humility, submission, and resignation of his will to God; and besides, his appointed time was not come, he had many more days, months, and years, the number of which were with God, to live in the world, as he accordingly did.
y “animum ejus”, Pagninus, Montanus, Cocccius, Schmidt, Schultens. z Moreh Nevochim, par. 3. c. 22. p. 398.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
The Grant of New Power:
6 And Jehovah said to Satan, Behold, he is in thy hand; only take care of his life.
Job has not forfeited his life; permission is given to place it in extreme peril, and nothing more, in order to see whether or not, in the face of death, he will deny the God who has decreed such heavy affliction for him. does not signify the same as ; it is the soul producing the spirit-life of man. We must, however, translate “life,” because we do not use “soul” in the sense of , anima .
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
(6) But save his life.Gods faithfulness cannot fail even if, as Satan hints, Jobs should do so (2Ti. 2:13). There was one who cared for Jobs life more than he cared for it himself.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
6. In thine hand “God did not himself smite Job lest Satan should carpingly say, Thou hast spared and not tried him to the utmost.” Chrysostom.
But save his life Only (margin) spare his life; , naphsho; according to others, his soul, that which gives life. Apart from its union with the spirit, there is no life of the body. (Jas 2:26.) According to Maimonides, (in Moreh,) God stipulated that his mind should not be touched, because it is of divine substance. “This limiting of his power that the mind should be spared,” the Talmud says, “was more grievous to Satan than to Job. As if one should permit the breaking of a flask on the condition that the wine be preserved.” The meaning here, however, must, as in Job 2:4, be “life.”
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Job 2:6 And the LORD said unto Satan, Behold, he [is] in thine hand; but save his life.
Ver. 6. And the Lord said unto Satan ] Who hath his request: it is not always a mercy to have what we wish. Deus saepe dat iratus, quod negat propitius. God often gives wrath because he denies his favour. Be sure we bring lawful petitions, and true hearts, Heb 10:22 , and then we shall have good things, and for our greatest good.
Behold, he is in thine hand
But save his life
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
save his life
ullet = save his soul. Hebrew. Nephesh. App-13.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Behold: Job 1:12
but: or, only
save: Job 38:10, Job 38:11, Psa 65:7, Luk 8:29-33, Luk 22:31, Luk 22:32, 1Co 10:13, Rev 2:10, Rev 20:1, Rev 20:2, Rev 20:7
his life: By naphsho, “his soul,” Maimonides understands “his mind,” or intellectual powers.
Reciprocal: Gen 16:6 – in Deu 28:35 – botch 2Ch 18:21 – Thou shalt Job 23:10 – he hath Psa 78:49 – by sending Mar 5:13 – gave Mar 9:20 – the spirit Luk 4:9 – brought Luk 8:32 – he suffered Luk 12:23 – General 1Co 5:5 – deliver 2Ti 2:26 – at Rev 9:4 – which Rev 9:5 – they should not
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Job 2:6. The Lord said, Behold, he is in thy hand I give thee permission to try him even in this way: do thy worst at him; afflict him to the uttermost of thy power. But save his life Do not attempt to take that away which I will not suffer thee to do. God had mercy in store for Job, after this trial, and therefore he must survive it; and how much soever he may be afflicted, his life must be given him for a prey. If God did not chain up the roaring lion, how soon would he devour us! As far as he permits the wrath of Satan and wicked men to proceed against his people, he will make it turn to his own praise and theirs, and the remainder thereof he will restrain. Job, in being thus maligned and afflicted by Satan, was a type of Christ; whose heel that infernal serpent was permitted to bruise, to touch even his bone and his flesh, yea, and his life also; because, by dying, he was to do what Job could not do, to destroy him that had the power of death.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
2:6 And the LORD said unto Satan, Behold, he [is] in thine hand; but save {g} his life.
(g) Thus Satan can go no further in punishing than God has limited him.