Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Job 14:10
But man dieth, and wasteth away: yea, man giveth up the ghost, and where [is] he?
10. wasteth away] lit. is laid prostrate.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
But man dieth and wasteth away – Margin, Is weakened, or cut off. The Hebrew word ( chalash) means to overthrow, prostrate, discomfit; and hence, to be weak, frail, or waste away. The Septuagint renders it Aner de teleutesas ocheto – man dying goes away. Herder renders it, his power is gone. The idea is, he entirely vanishes. He leaves nothing to sprout up again. There is no germ; no shoot; no living root; no seminal principle. Of course, this refers wholly to his living again on the earth, and not to the question about his future existence. That is a different inquiry. The main idea with Job here is, that when man dies there is no germinating principle, as there is in a tree that is cut down. Of the truth of this there can be no doubt; and this comparison of man with the vegetable world, must have early occurred to mankind, and hence, led to the inquiry whether he would not live in a future state. Other flyings that are cut down, spring up again and live. But man is cut down, and does not spring up again. Will he not be likely, therefore, to have an existence in some future state, and to spring up and flourish there? The Romans, says Rosenmuller, made those trees to be the symbol of death, which, being cut down, do not live again, or from whose roots no germs arise, as the pine and cypress, which were planted in burial-places, or were accustomed to be placed at the doors of the houses of the dead.
Man giveth up the ghost – Expires, or dies. This is all that the word ( gava) means. The notion of giving up the spirit or the ghost – an idea not improper in itself – is not found in the Hebrew word, nor is it in the corresponding Greek word in the New Testament; compare Act 5:10.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Job 14:10
But man dieth . . . and where is he?
Am I to live forever
I. The belief indicated that mans nature is two fold. There are two distinct processes ever going on within our frame. We may lose our physical organs, but the soul may think, wish, or purpose, as energetically as ever. The brain is the organ of the mind; but this does not warrant our saying that the brain and the mind are of the same material, or that they are only different sides of that material thing. If there are manifestations in our constitution which matter cannot give account of, it would be absurd to follow that up by saying that man goes out of life altogether when he dies and wastes away. We should rather believe that as our nature is two fold, that part which is spiritual may survive that which is material.
II. A doubt expressed as to what becomes of the man when he dies. Death tells us nothing. There is no evidence in it of what becomes of the man. Death fails to prove anything as to the survival of the soul. Yet the belief has been general, that those who have passed away are still somewhere. Why should men have believed that the soul still had a place? Every sense was against it.
III. The grounds on which the conviction is built that man lives after death. I go behind the Bible, and look at the action of our own nature.
1. The indestructibility of force or energy. When once a force has begun to be in operation that force continues. It is never blotted out.
2. The incompleteness of mans life here. God is a teacher who sets us a task which we cannot prepare in school.
3. The best affections which distinguish this life speak of continuance beyond this present state.
4. When man dieth, we forecast a judgment for the deeds done in the body. It may be, indeed, it will be, that the judgment shall not be such as we pass upon one another. We look upon the outward appearance, God looks on the heart. We are to be judged. What are we to be judged for? (D. G. Watt, M. A.)
Where is he?
The certainty of the general truth referred to in our text, Man dieth and wasteth away; yea, man giveth up the ghost. And then we shall take up the concluding inquiry, And where is he? Now, the words translated man are different. There are two different words to express man in the original. The first properly means a mighty man: the second is Adam, man of the earth; implying that the mighty man dieth and wasteth away,–yea, man because he is of earth giveth up the ghost. It is quite unnecessary to attempt any proof of the solemn truth that man dieth. You all know that you must die. Yet how often does a mans conduct give a denial to his conviction. Hence it is needful for the ministers of the Gospel frequently to bring forward truths which are familiar to our minds, but which on that very account are apt to be little regarded. We are not unwilling to feel that others must die, but we are indisposed to bring the same conclusion home to ourselves; and yet it is the law of our being. It is appointed unto men once to die. The first breath we draw contains the germ of life and of destruction. The stem of human nature has never yet put forth a flower without a canker at the bud, or a worm at its heart. Why is this? By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned. It is of the greatest importance for us all to know that through the infinite merits of our gracious Redeemer the power of death has been broken and subdued, and the sting of death which is sin has been extracted, and thus may death become not an enemy but a welcome friend to introduce us to new, to holy, to immortal life. There are a thousand different ways by which mortals are hurried hence the lingering disease, the rapid fever, the devouring flames, the devastating tempest. But now our text suggests to us an important inquiry, And where is he? You must at once see that this is a question of the last importance to you and to me. We ought to be able to answer it. What has become of him? A short time since he was here in health and vigour, but where is he now? Where shall we seek for information on this interesting point? Shall we turn to some of our modern philosophers? Alas, they will afford but poor comfort! They will probably answer, Why, he is no more; he is as though he had never been. And do all the boasted discoveries of the present age which refuse to believe in the annihilation of matter, tend to raise our hopes no higher than annihilation for the soul? Shall we ask the Romanist, Where is he? We shall be told he is in a state of purgatory, from whence, after having endured a sufficient degree of fiery punishment and after a sufficient number of masses have been said on his behalf, he will be delivered and received into heaven. Truly it may be said of all such, miserable comforters are ye all. Revelation alone can cherish and support in us a hope of glory hereafter. It replies to our inquiry thus, The dust shall return to the earth as it was, and the spirit shall return to God who gave it. Accordingly we are exhorted to fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul; but rather fear Him who is able to destroy both soul and body in hell. Now these passages are sufficient to show that the body and soul in man are distinct, the one from the other, and that while the one is in the grave mingling its dust with the clods of the valley, the other is in eternity, in happiness or misery. We therefore now ask your attention to the Word of God for an answer to the inquiry, Where is he? And here we must observe that however different individuals may appear to their fellow men, yet the Scriptures divide all mankind into two classes only, those who serve God, and those who serve Him not. Hence the reply given to the inquiry will have distinct reference to one or other of these classes. With respect to the question as relating to the righteous, Where is he? the Bible comforts us with the cheering answer, that absent from the body he is present with the Lord. For we know, says the apostle, that if our earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved, we have a building of God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens. Therefore we are always confident, knowing that whilst we are at home in the body, we are absent from the Lord. In accordance with this representation was our Lords promise to the penitent thief, Today shalt thou be with Me in paradise. Where are the righteous? In that happy place with the spirits of just men made perfect, waiting for the glorious time when the whole redeemed family shall be gathered in to celebrate the marriage supper of the Lamb. I go to prepare a place for you, said the Saviour, and I will come again and receive you to Myself, that where I am there ye may be also. So shall we ever be with the Lord. But then there is another class–the wicked, the impenitent. Where is he? The Scriptures afford a sad, though not less faithful answer. They inform us that the wicked is driven away in his wickedness,–that their condemnation slumbereth not. In order that we may bring the subject practically home to ourselves, let me put the question in a slightly altered form. Where are you now? What is your relation to God, and what preparation are you making for the period of death and judgment? We ask those who have never broken off their sins by true repentance and faith in Christ, where are you? Why, you are simply exposed to the vengeance of Gods law, which you know you have broken a thousand times. If you die as you have lived, Gods enemies–you must be condemned. You know that the Word of God says, The soul that sinneth, it shall die. The wages of sin is death. The Judge says, Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish. But I put the question, next, to those who seem to have got a step in advance,–who have heard the call to repentance, and are striving to forsake those sins which before had dominion over them. Where are you? It is a common deceit of Satan, when he sees that the sinner is really alarmed at his state and begins to cry to God for mercy, to persuade him that his altered life must needs be pleasing to God, and that his good deeds will certainly merit heaven for him. This is a delusion which I believe to be far more common than is supposed. People seem to think that by a moral life they are doing God service, forgetting that repentance is not the condition of our salvation, but faith. He that believeth not the Son shall not see life, said our blessed Lord. The wrath of God abideth on him. He that believeth not is condemned already. Oh, but, says one, are we not to repent? Assuredly! Repentance and a life of piety will be sure to be the necessary result of faith in Jesus as our Saviour. But, then, repentance can never undo a single sin you have committed, or pay the penalty of Gods broken law. But come with me to a death bed or two, and we will put the question there, Where is he? A death bed is a detector of the heart. Men may live fools, but fools they cannot die. No; the scene is then changed. The infidel then drops his mask. The hypocrite who through life has deceived himself and his fellow creatures, trembles as he draws near the valley of the shadow of death. Now, behold that pale emaciated wretch. That is the notorious infidel Thomas Paine. Where is he? He is dying, a victim of profligacy and of brandy. He is horrorstruck to be left alone for a minute. He dares not let those who are waiting upon him be out of his sight. He exclaims incessantly so as to alarm all in the house, O Lord, help me. Lord Jesus, help me. He confesses to one who had burned his infidel Age of Reason, that he wished that all who had read it had been as wise; and he added, If ever the devil had an agent on earth, I have been that one. And when the terror of death came over this most unhappy man, he exclaimed, I think I can say what they make Jesus Christ to have said, My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken me? In that state of mind he died, a stranger to penitence, in all the horrors of an accusing conscience. Infidelity has no support for its deluded followers on a death bed. The apostle when contemplating his end said, I have a desire to depart, and to be with Christ, which is far better. I have fought the good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith. Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, shall give me; and not to me only, but unto all them that love His appearing. This blessed experience is as much the inheritance of Christians now as it was in the apostles time, for there is the same Saviour, and the same sure word of promise on which to rely. The Rev. Holden Stuart when smitten with a sickness unto death, said to his medical attendant, Doctor, dont be afraid to tell me the truth, for the day of my death will be the happiest day of my life. Someone who had great experience of human nature, once remarked, Tell me how a man has lived, and I will tell you how he will die. (W. Windle.)
Where are the dead
Man was originally formed to be a representative of Gods moral perfections–His wisdom, goodness, holiness, and truth. By the apostasy of our first parents the scene is changed, and holiness and happiness must now be sought after in fairer worlds on high. Death is said to be of three kinds–natural, spiritual, eternal.
I. A most solemn and humiliating declaration. It cannot be questioned. What lessons may be deduced from it?
1. It is a very affecting truth.
2. Here is an instructive lesson–man should be humble.
3. Learn also the value of time.
4. Learn the nature of sin, the infinite evil, and the awful consequences of it.
5. God will most surely execute the judgments which He threatens in His most Holy Word.
II. A most momentous inquiry. It relates not to the body, but to the soul, to the man himself. The soul is still in existence, still thinks and feels. Guided by the light of Scripture, we may safely find an answer to the solemn inquiry, Where is he? For the very moment the soul bids farewell to this world he enters the world of spirits, enters upon a state of everlasting happiness or woe. (John Vaughan, LL. D.)
The great question
I. The solemn scene which is before us.
1. Man giveth up the ghost, not by an option, but by an obligation; not by a deed at will, but by the stern and just necessity of law. The surrender of life in the blessed Jesus was an option. But man gives up the ghost, and there is a Divine will in that surrender, a surrender which is resistless when that will makes it so. Death is just the absence of life–and what a mysterious thing is life! I do not stop to show that man has a ghost, an immaterial and immortal spirit. Ones own consciousness contradicts the materialist, and the Bible is in harmony with what one observes in nature, and human consciousness teaches.
2. The manner of the surrender is uncertain. Though its occurrence is mysterious, its actual occurrence is certain. There is but one mode of entering life, but there are a thousand methods of leaving it.
II. The inquiry of anxious affection when the scene is over. Where is he?
1. Death brings a change of condition, never a change of character.
2. Though death is a change of condition, it is not a change of companionship. The same style of company it is a pleasure to him to keep on earth, a man must expect to keep in eternity. (C. J. P. Eyre, A. M.)
Man is a dying creature
1. This is spoken of man twice in the text. In the original two different words are used, one meaning the strong man, and the other the weak man. In the grave they meet together.
(1) Man dies though he be (geber) a mighty man.
(2) Man dies because he is a man of the earth (Gen 2:7; Gen 3:10).
2. Man is a dying creature. He dies daily, some or other going off every day.
(1) Before death, he wasteth away. He is weakening. Even in health, certainly in sickness and old age, we are wasting away. Inference–
1. See how vain man is.
2. How foolish they are who waste any part of their short lives upon their lusts.
(2) In death man giveth up the ghost. Man expires by a sudden stroke. He breathes out his last.
(3) After death, where is he? He is not where he was. He is somewhere. Think where the body is. Think where the soul is. It is gone into the world of spirits to which we are so much strangers. It is gone into an unchangeable state; it is gone into eternity. After death the judgment. (M. Henry.)
The state of the dead
The stage of human existence which intervenes between death and the resurrection is naturally regarded by us with great curiosity and solicitude. On this subject nature is silent, and revelation does but whisper faintly and vaguely. We are able to form a much more distinct conception of the heavenly state than of that which immediately precedes it. The final condition of man is much more analogous to his present state than that which intervenes between the two. At death we enter upon a disembodied state of being, a state of life purely spiritual and immaterial. Of this we have no knowledge from experience or observation; and we can form no clear and satisfactory conception of it. We are so accustomed to the use of material organs and instruments, that we cannot understand how we can do without them. Incorporeal life seems to us impotent, cheerless, naked, unreal. The souls of men after death remain conscious, still percipient and active.
1. We seem warranted in regarding the interval between death and the resurrection as a period of repose. It is the sleeping time of humanity. The repose that awaits us there will be all the more welcome and delightful from contrast with the turmoil and vexation of the life that precedes it.
2. The intermediate state will be a condition of progress. Progress is the law of life, and we cannot reasonably suppose that its operation will be suspended during that long period which is to elapse between death and the resurrection.
3. To the clearer vision of spirit, purged from fleshly films and earthly obstructions, will truth unfold itself with increased clearness, certainty, and power.
4. The separate state will be a condition of hope. It is a season of waiting, the vestibule only of a more glorious state to which it is introductory. But there is nothing in this waiting that is wearisome or tedious. I have spoken only of the holy dead, of those who sleep in Jesus. The subject–
(1) Gives consolation to the bereaved.
(2) In it we find comfort in the prospect of our own approaching departure. (R. A. Hallam, D. D.)
The momentous event
Men generally live as though they should never die.
I. The solemn statement. Man dieth, and giveth up the ghost.
1. An event peculiarly affecting. The removal of man from society; from all the ties of kindred and friendship. Dissolution of the union between body and soul.
2. An event absolutely and universally certain. The seeds of death are in our nature.
3. It is an event to which we are liable every moment. We live on the borders of the grave, on the margin of eternity.
4. An event irreparable in its effects. Its melancholy results no power can repair.
5. An event which demands our solemn consideration. We should consider its certainty, its possible nearness, its awful nature.
II. The important interrogation. Where is he? Apply the question to–
1. The infidel.
2. The profane.
3. The worldling.
4. The afflicted Christian.
Learn–
(1) That death will surely come.
(2) That an interest in Christ can alone prepare us for the event.
(3) That eternal things should have in our hearts the constant preeminence. (J. Burns, D. D.)
Immortality of the soul
The people of France once wrote over the gates of their burial places, Death is an eternal sleep, but this was only when the nation had run mad. The ordinary mode of proving the immortality of the soul is simple enough.
1. It is argued from the nature of the soul itself–especially from its immateriality. The nature of God seems also to favour the idea that He who made the soul capable of such vast improvement, and such constant advances towards perfection, would never suffer it to perish.
2. Belief in mans immortality is universal. No race of savages can be found, so debased and blind, as not to have some glimmerings of this truth.
3. We claim immortality as the heritage of man, because, on any other supposition, all the analogies of nature would be violated.
4. Man must be immortal, because this is indispensable to explain certain inequalities of happiness and misery on earth–inequalities which a just God would never allow, unless it was His good pleasure to make them right. Man is generally called a rational being; but he hardly deserves the name, while attempting to undermine our faith in that consoling which alone renders life worth having, and robs death of its terrors. (John N. Norton.)
The mystery of death
This is one of Jobs discontented and querulous utterances. It is tinged, too, with all that indistinctness of view which is characteristic of the eider dispensation. Job expresses the general feeling in a somewhat exaggerated form. He speaks as if the hour of dissolution were the hour of extinction. Then he craves for himself that oblivion of anguish which he thinks is only to be obtained in the solitude and silence of the grave. The words of the text express a very natural feeling, of which we have all had more or less experience. Man giveth up the ghost, and where is he? Gone, say some, into absolute nothingness. The individual perishes. Gone, say others, into final felicity. All lives, whatever they have been, lead to one bourne, and that the bourne of happiness. These are daydreams, and dangerous daydreams too. Christianity knows nothing about them. She tells us that when life is over, we pass into a conscious but a fixed and unalterable condition. Gone, we say, to reap what he has sown. The life we are living here below is a seed. Eternity is only the development of this puny, petty life of ours. The Divine laws are immutable. Every seed bringeth forth after its kind. We are all of us gravitating towards a certain centre. We move to join our own companions. Gone to give account of himself before God. Human life is like a stage; there are many actors and many parts. When the play is ended, the question will be about the manner of playing it. Men will be seen, not in their circumstances but in themselves. An hour will come to us when all the world will seem absolutely nothing, and when Christ, and interest in Christ, will seem to be everything. (Gordon Calthrop, M. A.)
An anxious query answered
After all, this is a question. Reason and revelation leave it such. The speculations of the ancients, where Catholic sentiments prevailed and the voice of poetry, which is but the plaint of philosophy, leave it a question. It is obscure, spectral, vaporous and ghostly as an apparition, the figure of a restless, undeveloped being, beyond our knowledge, crude, cloudy, vague. Where is he? There runs a yearning through our nature, as the autumn breeze steals through the trees. It is the question. Its intensity is proportioned to its obscurity. Where is he? Other data are needed. We may ask, as we do in reference to a stranger of stately form or commanding voice, whom we meet on the sidewalk, Who is he? The question may be of eager interest and concern, of sympathy or of opposition. Or we may say of man, What is he? and institute a metaphysical analysis into the nature of matter and mind; then push the query, What is man, and what am I? All these problems depend on the disclosure of the ultimate destiny of man. Where is he at last? Now we may mistake the shadow for the substance, a ship in the distance for a cloud, a meteor for a star. Walking in the edge of a wood, looking out upon the water, I may see a forest of masts, and for an instant take them for dry trees, until I see those tall, quivering masts move and the vessels floated out upon the bosom of the bay. Human life cannot be distinctly defined until we find out all there is of a man. We want facts. Oftentimes we answer one question by asking another. So let us turn to history and seek a famous or infamous man, a Cyrus or a Caligula, a Washington or a Robespierre. Each may now be but a heap of ashes, but what was the real distinction all the way through the careers of these men? What is love, and what is honour? We cannot answer until we get the data. Notice, then, two things, the unsettled element, and the point of solution where light breaks in.
1. The unsolved question, Where is he? You have lost a child. Whither has he gone? You do not say that you have lost a treasure until you have gone to the place where you feel sure it is, and do not find it. You are bereaved because you are bewildered. You were talking to a friend by your side. Unexpectedly he vanished without your knowledge, and you find yourself talking to vacancy. The mother bends over and peers into the vacant cradle, takes up a little shoe, a toy, a treasure, and says, He was here, he ought to be here, he must be here! Where is he? Not here, is all the answer that nature gives her. She is bewildered. The same query touches scepticism. Though there be an intellectual, logical assent to the doctrine of immortality, there is a difficulty in entertaining the idea. We cannot see the spirit or its passage upwards. We enter the chamber of death. We see that still body, white and limp; the garments it wore, the medicines administered, and the objects it once beheld. We look out and see that the sky is just as blue as ever, and the tramp of hunting feet is heard, as usual, in the street. We cry aloud, Ho! have ye seen a spirit pass? Not here, comes back again. Where, where is he? This is the unsettled element.
2. Here is the point where light breaks in upon the bewildered soul. It is found in the revelation of a flesh form and a spirit form revealed in Christ, the risen one. Science tells us of material elements, unseen by natural vision, globules of ether, and crystals of light to be detected by instruments prepared by the optician. The microscope reveals atoms that the unaided eye never could find. So the New Testament reveals what nature and science cannot make manifest. Dissolution is not annihilation. We read, In Him was life. He came, He descended, and ascended again. When a candle goes out, where goes the light? Christ went out and back, to and fro, as you show a child the way by going into and out of a door. He came forth from God, and His first life was a glorious disclosure; but we must not forget His second life after His death, burial, and resurrection. He gave up the ghost, and He lay in the tomb; then stood up, walked and talked with the disciples, a human being. He showed the fact that because He lives we shall live also. I will that they whom Thou hast given Me be with Me, where I am. Let not your heart be troubled. I go to prepare a place for you. Now light, refluent and radiant, breaks upon our way. He is not here, but risen, and this same Jesus shall return again. I may ask a mother, Where are your children? She may say that they are at school, or at play, or somewhere on the premises. They are not lost, though she may not exactly locate them. Or, Where is your husband? He went out awhile ago, or, The children went out with him; their father took them from home early. So with our dear departed. Out of sight they are not out of mind; not out of your mind, of course, and,, you are not out of their mind, nor out of their sight, I think. They are somewhere about the premises, the many-mansioned universe of God, expanding, radiant everywhere. It is one abode. (Hugh S. Carpenter, D. D.)
The query of the ages
This interrogatory has Sounded down all the centuries, and thrills today every thoughtful heart. Hence, if Job uttered these words in a moment of doubt, it was because he sat in the twilight hour of revelation. Hence, also, we must seek our answer to the question from Jesus, rather than from Job, from the full and final revelation of the New Testament, rather than from the types and shadows of the Old.
I. He is somewhere. Death is not annihilation.
1. Jesus taught mans existence after death so often and in such emphatic terms that it became an essential in Christian doctrine. In His words to the Sadducees, in the parable of the rich man and Lazarus, when speaking to Mary and Martha, when comforting His disciples who were mourning His near departure, in His last prayer with and for them–everywhere He clearly implied that man continues to exist somewhere after death.
2. To this revelation of life and immortality our hearts gladly assent.
3. Reason, likewise, adds its sanction. Thus we believe the dead are somewhere, they have not ceased to be.
II. But where? This is the emphatic word.
1. Where surroundings correspond with character. In this life man finds the earth prepared for his occupancy, as a house that has been erected, furnished, heated, lighted. Believing in the universality and continuity of law, we expect the same provision and adaptation hereafter. It is the law of environment of the scientist, the Divine providence of the Christian. Revelation makes this expectation a certainty, The righteous enter a kingdom prepared for them from the foundation of the world; the wicked depart to a place prepared for the devil and his angels.
2. Where the law of spiritual gravitation carries him. In the United States Mint are scales constructed with an ingenuity and delicacy that are wonderful. In them all coins are finally tested. Each one is weighed by itself. From the balance every coin glides into one of several openings, according to its weight; if it is too light, into this one; if too heavy, into that; if it is right, into the third.
III. Where justice and mercy unite to place him. Justice and mercy unite to determine the destinies of both wicked and righteous. Redemption manifests both; so does retribution. Conclusion–It is not so much where, as what; for the what determines the where. We are ourselves determining the what, in our acceptance or rejection of Christ. (Byron A. Woods.)
A four-fold view of man alter death
1. Man is still on earth, as to his influence. The full amount of good or evil which anyone effects will not be ascertained till the end of the world.
2. Man is in the grave, as to his body. In this respect, all things come alike to all. As the saint, so is the sinner.
3. He is in eternity, as to his soul. Man consists of two parts-of soul and of body. At death these for a season separate. The body returns to its native dust; the soul returns to God, who gave it.
4. He is in heaven or hell, as to his state. What a solemn thought is this! (C. Clayton, M. A.)
The shortness and vanity of human life
1. Man is subject to decay, though he suffer neither outward violence nor internal injury. In the midst of life we are in death.
2. Numbers die by accident–suicide, violence, intemperance.
3. The mortality of the human race is universal.
4. Human life is so short and uncertain that it is invariably compared to those things that are most subject to change.
5. What a specimen we have of the ravages of death since the time of Adam.
6. Death is attended with painful circumstances. He giveth up the ghost.
1. This expression implies that after man has died and wasted away, the soul still remains in a separate state. This is one of those truths that even reason itself teaches.
2. That the soul remains in a separate state is certain, from Scripture passages and facts. Such as Samuels appearance to Saul. Moses and Elias at the Transfiguration.
At the resurrection of Christ many of the dead arose and appeared. And where is he?
1. This is a question very frequently and very naturally asked, when those are missing whom we constantly saw or heard speak of, or with whom we were wont to converse.
2. The affecting answer is, They have died and wasted away–they have given up the ghost. What is become of the soul? We only know that the final destiny of man depends upon his state and character at the hour of death, It is true that neither the righteous nor the wicked enjoy or suffer their happiness or misery until after the resurrection. The intermediate space affords ample time for reflection.
3. But what will be the subject of their reflection?
(1) Things present: the good; the blessings, the enjoyments, the company of paradise. The bad the horrors, the sorrows, the companions of the dark pit.
(2) Things absent: the godly, the departure of all evil; the ungodly, the absence of all good.
(3) Things past: the righteous, a long and perilous pilgrimage; the wicked, a useless and wicked life.
(4) Things to come: the saved, the glories of the last great day, the acquittal of the Judge, the union with the body, the prospect of never-ending felicity; the lost, the terrors of the great day, the presence and sentence of the Judge, the consciousness of having to endure eternal torments. (B. Bailey.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 10. But man dieth] No human being ever can spring from the dead body of man; that wasteth away, corrupts, and is dissolved; for the man dies; and when he breathes out his last breath, and his body is reduced to dust, then, where is he? There is a beautiful verse in the Persian poet Khosroo, that is not unlike this saying of Job: –
[Persic]
[Persic]
[Persic]
[Persic]
“I went towards the burying ground, and wept
To think of the departure of friends which
were captives to death;
I said, Where are they! and Fate
Gave back this answer by Echo, Where are they?
Thus paraphrased by a learned friend: –
Beneath the cypress’ solemn shade,
As on surrounding tombs I gazed,
I wept, and thought of friends there laid,
Whose hearts with warmest love had blazed.
Where are those friends my heart doth lack,
Whose words, in grief, gave peace? Ah, where?
And Fate, by Echo, gave me back
This short but just reply, Ah, where?
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Dieth, and wasteth away; his body by degrees rotting away; or, and is cut off, as this word is used, Exo 17:13; Isa 14:12.
Where is he? i.e. he is nowhere; or, he is not, to wit, in this world, as that phrase is commonly used. See Job 3:16; 7:8,21.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
10. man . . . manTwo distinctHebrew words are here used; Geber, a mighty man:though mighty, he dies. Adam, a man of earth: because earthly,he gives up the ghost.
wastethis reduced tonothing: he cannot revive in the present state, as the tree does. Thecypress and pine, which when cut down do not revive, were the symbolsof death among the Romans.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
But man dieth, and wasteth away,…. All men, every man, “Geber”, the mighty man, the strong man; some die in their full strength; the wise man, notwithstanding all his wisdom and knowledge, and even skill in the art of medicine; the rich man, with all his riches, with which he cannot bribe death, nor keep it off; the great and the honourable, emperors, kings, princes, nobles, all die, and their honour is laid in the dust; yea, good men die, though Christ has died for them; even those that are the most useful and beneficial to men, the prophets of the Lord, and the ministers of his word; and it is no wonder that wicked men should die, though they put the evil day far from them, make an agreement with death, or bid it defiance, their wickedness shall not deliver from it; all men have sinned, and death passes on them, it is appointed for them to die; not their souls, which are immortal, but their bodies, which return to dust, and are only the mortal part; death is a disunion or separation of soul and body: and now when this is made, the body “wasteth away” in the grave, and becomes rottenness, dust, and worms, and does not by the strength of nature spring up again, as a tree does; though some understand, by an inversion of the phrases, a wasting before death through diseases, as if the words were to be read, “but man wasteth away and dieth” z; he is enervated by sickness, his strength is weakened in the way, and when he dies there is none left in him; he is cut off a, as some choose to render it, or cut down as a tree is; but then there is no force or natural strength in him to rise again, as in a tree:
yea, man giveth up the ghost, and where [is] he? not in the same place he was; not in his house and habitation where he lived; nor in his family, and among his friends, with whom he conversed, nor in the world, and on the earth where he did business; he is indeed somewhere, but where is he? his body is in the grave; his soul, where is that? if a good man, it is in the presence of God, where is fulness of joy; it is with Christ, which is far better than to be here; it is with the spirits of just men made perfect; it is in Abraham’s bosom, feasting with him and other saints; it is in heaven, in paradise, in a state of endless joy and happiness: if a wicked man, his soul is in hell, in the lake which burns with fire and brimstone, with the devil and his angels, and other damned spirits; in a prison, from whence there is no release, and in the uttermost misery and distress, banished from the divine Presence, and under a continual sense of the wrath of God.
z So the Tigurine version, Vatablus, and some in Drusius; and some Hebrews in Ramban and Bar Tzemach. a “exciditur”, Beza, Piscator, Mercerus; so Kimchi & Ben Gersom.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
10 But man dieth, he lieth there stretched out,
Man giveth up the ghost, and where is he?
11 The waters flow away from the sea,
And a stream decayeth and dryeth up:
12 So man lieth down and riseth not again;
Till the heavens pass away they wake not,
And are not aroused from their sleep.
How much less favoured is the final lot of man! He dies, and then lies there completely broken down and melted away ( ( yaw , in the neuter signification, confectum esse, rendered in the Targum by and ). The fut. consec. continues the description of the cheerless results of death: He who has thus once fallen together is gone without leaving a trace of life. In Job 14:11. this vanishing away without hope and beyond recovery is contemplated under the figure of running water, or of water that is dried up and never returns again to its channel. Instead of Isaiah uses (Job 19:5) in the oracle on Egypt, a prophecy in which many passages borrowed from the book of Job are interwoven. The former means to flow away (related radically with ), the latter to dry up (transposed , Jer 18:14). But he also uses , which signifies the drying in, and then , which is the complete drying up which follows upon the drying in (vid., Genesis, S. 264). What is thus figuratively expressed is introduced by waw ( Job 14:12), similar to the waw adaequationis of the emblematic proverbs mentioned at Job 5:7; Job 11:12: so there is for man no rising ( ), no waking up ( ), no ( ), and indeed not for ever; for what does not happen until the heavens are no more (comp. Psa 72:7, till the moon is no more), never happens; because God has called the heavens and the stars with their laws into existence, (Psa 148:6), they never cease (Jer 31:35.), the days of heaven are eternal (Psa 89:30). This is not opposed to declarations like Psa 102:27, for the world’s history, according to the teaching of Scripture, closes with a change in all these, but not their annihilation. What is affirmed in Job 14:10-12 of mankind in general, is, by the change to the plural in Job 14:12, affirmed of each individual of the race. Their sleep of death is (Jer 51:39, Jer 51:57). What Sheol summons away from the world, the world never sees again. Oh that it were otherwise! How would the brighter future have comforted him with respect to the sorrowful present and the dark night of the grave!
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
10. Wasteth away Lies powerless. (Furst.) Lies stretched out. (Delitzsch.) A like epithet is applied to death by Homer, ( Il., 8:70,) , “laying one out at length.” Like the tree when cut down, man, “the mighty man,” ( geber,) has no inward power of recovery; he “lies powerless.” He who swayed the sceptre of a world cannot now lift an eyelid.
And where he? The very question seems to imply the continued existence of the man; but where? It has often rang through the caverns of the grave, but without response. The ancient custom (still perpetuated at the death of a Roman pontiff) was a most touching one, that of thrice calling the name of the dead man over his own pale corpse.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
DISCOURSE: 464
DEATH
Job 14:10. Man giveth up the ghost, and where is he [Note: This is inserted, not as a set Discourse, but merely as a specimen of an easy, popular, and extemporaneous Address on occasion of a Funeral.]?
AFFLICTIONS, whilst they wean us from the love of this present world, serve to familiarize us with the thoughts of death, and to make that which to our nature is terrible, an object of desire and hope [Note: See Job 7:1-10 and ver. 1, 2. of the chapter before us.]. But it is proper for us to contemplate this subject whilst we are yet in a state of health and prosperity; and, especially, to make the removal of others to the eternal world an occasion of considering what our own state may shortly be.
Man consists of soul and body. These, in death, are separated; the body returning to its native dust, and the soul returning to God who gave it. This separation must speedily take place, whatever be our rank, our age, our employment. The very instant that our soul is required of us, it must be surrendered up; nor can the skill of all the physicians in the universe enable us to ward off the stroke of death one single hour.
And when the hour arrives for man to give up the ghost, Where is he? Whilst he is yet alive, we may find him. His office in life will assist us in our inquiry. The student, the mechanic, the man of pleasure, yea, and even the traveller, may be sought for, each in his own vocation, and may be found without great difficulty: but who shall find the man, when once his spirit has taken its flight to the invisible world? No more shall he return to his former abode; no more have intercourse with his former friends. The house he has built, or the books he has written, may remain: but he himself shall be far away, and the place he has inhabited shall know him no more. A tree that is cut down may sprout again: but not so the man that dies: he shall pass away as a morning cloud, and be no more seen [Note: Ecc 9:10.].
Then where is he,
I.
As to any opportunity of serving God?
[Once, he had one talent at least committed to him, and he might have improved it for God: but now it is taken from him: whatever he once possessed of corporeal or mental power, of time, of wealth, of influence, is all gone for ever; and he can do no more for God than if he had never existed in the world ]
II.
As to any means of benefiting his own soul?
[Time was, when he could read the blessed book of God, and draw nigh to a throne of grace, and pour out his soul in prayer, and lay hold on the promises of the Gospel, and seek from the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ, such communications of grace and mercy and peace as were needful for him: but this time is passed away: no access to God now; no help from the Saviour now; no scope for repentance now: none of these things remain to a soul that is once removed to the eternal world [Note: ver. 712.]: the work that is unfinished now will remain unfinished for ever ]
III.
As to any hope of carrying into effect his purposes and resolutions?
[There are few so hardened, but they have some thought or purpose of turning unto God before they die. To the gay, the laborious, the dissolute, the fit time for religious services is not yet arrived: but all have a secret conviction, that the concerns of the soul deserve some attention; and they hope that, in a dying-hour at least, they shall regard what, in despite of all their levity, they know to be the one thing needful. Peradventure the young only waited till they were settled in life; or till their children should be grown up, and leave them more at leisure to follow the dictates of their better judgment: and those who were immersed in earthly cares only waited till they should be able to retire from the world, and to devote a good measure of their attention to heavenly things. But the day is closed upon them; and the night is come, in which no man can work: their soul being, as it were, prematurely and unexpectedly required of them, their hopes are never realized, their desires never are accomplished ]
IV.
As to any possibility of preparing for his eternal state?
[The fight is terminated; the race is closed; the crown awarded. There is no return to the field of action; no further scope for amended efforts: As the tree falls, so it lies; and so it will lie to all eternity. Pardon, peace, holiness, glory, are all at an unapproachable distance to him who dies without having attained the possession of them. There is an impassable gulf between him and heaven; and he must take his portion for ever in that place for which alone he is prepared ]
Permit me, then, now to ask,
1.
If the time were come for us to give up the ghost, where should we be?
[This is a thought which ought frequently and deeply to occupy all our minds. Of individual persons we can know but little: but respecting characters we may form a very correct judgment. For instance, we know where the man who dies impenitent shall be [Note: Luk 13:3; Luk 13:5.]; and where the man who has not fled to Christ for refuge [Note: Joh 3:18; Joh 3:36.]; and where also the hypocritical professor [Note: Mat 7:21-23.]. And if we will candidly search out our own character, we may form a very accurate estimate respecting our future destination. I beg you, then, to examine carefully into the state of your own souls, in reference to your penitence your faith your obedience to Gods commands and then to say, as before God, what expectations the result of that inquiry will authorize? Reflect, too, I pray you, on the inconceivable difference of those two states, to one of which you must go; and on the different emphasis with which the reflection in my text will be uttered by your surviving friends, according as their hopes or apprehensions respecting you are formed ]
2.
As the time for your giving up the ghost will shortly come, Where should you now be?
[Are the scenes of gaiety and dissipation those which you should chiefly affect? Should not rather the house of God be the place where you should delight to resort? and should not your own closet be frequented by you for the purposes of reading, and meditation, and prayer? In a word, should you not live as dying men, and improve your time in preparation for eternity? Realize the thought of your feelings in that day, when, in the eternal world, you shall say, Where am I? O! the blessedness of that reflection, if you died in a state of acceptance with God; and the anguish it will occasion, if you died under his displeasure! I pray you, Brethren, waste no more time in vanity and folly, but attend now to the great concerns of your souls; that, if the inquiry be made either here or in the invisible world, Where is he? the answer may be, He is happy for ever, in the bosom of his God.]
Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)
Job 14:10 But man dieth, and wasteth away: yea, man giveth up the ghost, and where [is] he?
Ver. 10. But man dieth, and wasteth away ] Heb. Strong and lusty man, Homo quantum vis robustus (Vat.), dieth and wasteth away, or is cut off, sc. worse than a tree, for he grows no more; or is discomfited, vanquished, as Exo 17:13 ; Exo 32:18 , sc. by death, and so carried clean out of this world.
Yea, man giveth up the ghost
And where is he?
Cum semel occideris, et de te splendida Minos
Fecerit arbitria,
Non, Torquate, genus, non te facundia, non te
Restituet pietas.
man = strong man. Hebrew. geber. App-14.
wasteth away = will decompose.
giveth up, &c. See note on Job 3:11.
where . . . ? Figure of speech Erotesis. App-6.
wasteth away: Heb. is weakened, or, cut off
man: Job 3:11, Job 10:18, Job 11:20, Job 17:13-16, Gen 49:33, Mat 27:50, Act 5:10
where is he: Job 14:12, Job 7:7-10, Job 19:26, Pro 14:32, Luk 16:22, Luk 16:23
Reciprocal: Job 7:9 – he Job 10:21 – I go whence Job 16:22 – whence Job 20:7 – shall say Job 27:19 – he is not Psa 37:10 – wicked Psa 39:13 – be no Psa 90:10 – for Psa 103:16 – it is gone Psa 146:4 – His breath Ecc 3:19 – as the Ecc 11:8 – yet Zec 1:5 – General Mat 2:18 – would 1Co 15:43 – weakness
14:10 {d} But man dieth, and wasteth away: yea, man giveth up the ghost, and where [is] he?
(d) He speaks here not as though he had no hope of immortality but as a man in extreme pain, when reason is overcome by afflictions and torments.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes