He sealeth up the hand of every man; that all men may know his work.
7. He sealdh up the hand ] Effect of the winter rains and snow on men: all labour in the field is suspended; the hand of man is as it were “sealed up.”
that all men may know his work ] The Heb. must be rendered: that all men whom he hath made may know, lit. all men of his workmanship. The meaning is, that men by their enforced inactivity through His operations in nature may know His sovereign power and that they are subject to it. The sense given by the A. V. is that of some of the ancient Versions, but implies a different reading.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
He sealeth up the hand of every man – That is, in the winter, when the snow is on the ground, when the streams are frozen, and when the labors of the husbandman cease. The idea of sealing up the hand is derived from the common purpose of a seal, to make fast, to close up, to secure (compare Job 9:7, note; Job 33:16, note), and the sense is, that the hands can no more be used in ordinary toil. Every man in the snow and rain of winter is prevented from going abroad to his accustomed toil, and is, as it were, sealed up in his dwelling. The idea is exquisitely beautiful. God confines human beings and beasts in their houses or caves, until the winter has passed by.
That all men may know his work – The Septuagint renders this, That every man may know his own weakness – astheneian. Various interpretations have been given of the passage, but our common version has probably expressed in the main the true sense, that God thus interrupts the labors of man, and confines him in his home, that he may feel his dependence on God, and may recognize the constant agency of his Creator. The Hebrew literally is For the knowledge of all the men of his making; that is, that all the people whom he has created may have knowledge. The changing seasons thus keep before us the constant evidence of the unceasing agency of God in his works, and prevent the feeling which we might have, if everything was uniform that the universe was under the control of fate. As it is, the succession of the seasons, the snow, the rain, the dew, and the sunshine, all bear marks of being under the control of an intelligent Being, and are so regulated that we need not forget that his unceasing agency is constantly round about us. It may be added, that when the farmer in the winter is laid aside from his usual toil, and confined to his dwelling, it is a favorable time for him to meditate on the works of God, and to acquaint himself with his Creator. The labors of man are thus interrupted; the busy affairs of life come to a pause, and while nature is silent around us, and the earth wrapped in her fleecy mantle forbids the labor of the husbandman, everything invites to the contemplation of the Creator, and of the works of his hands. The winter, therefore, might be improved by every farmer to enlarge his knowledge of God, and should be regarded as a season wisely appointed for him to cultivate his understanding and improve his heart.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Job 37:7
He sealeth up the hand of every man.
God known by the sealing up of mans hand
The primary reference to this statement is to the season of winter. Then the earth is hard With frost, and perhaps covered with snow. This brings to man a diminution of power. Scope for his usual activity is cut off. Not only does the labour of the husbandman in great measure cease, but other forms of outdoor labour as well, the necessary materials being no longer plastic in the workmans hand. The hand of man is so effectually sealed that, for a time, numerous industries fail. While this is the primary reference of the statement, it may be much more widely applied. On every side God sets a limit to man. In relation to everything he comes to a point where he finds his hand sealed up. This, no doubt, is a necessity of his limited nature.
1. God sealeth up mans hand in the realm of nature, that we may know His work in the supply of our necessary food. For that we are dependent on the earth, and the elements: and we can do many things towards extracting from them the food which we need. We can plough, and sow, and harrow, and weed. But in this case man comes to a point where God sealeth up his hand. There is another class of operations which is equally necessary to secure the desired result. There must be apportionment of moisture and sunshine; and there may be mildew and blight. But as regards all this, man is utterly helpless. We have no power over the clouds and sunshine. All that kind of operation belongs entirely to God. This is a special reason for adoration and gratitude when the work is completed, seeing it is so peculiarly and manifestly the work of God. If the harvest were, from first to last, our own work, how proud should we be! how self-sufficient and how forgetful of God!
2. God sealeth up the hand of man by events in Providence, that all men may know His work as the Ruler of the world. Providence is just Gods work in this sense. It sets Him before us as the righteous Governor of the universe. Men can do many things, but they cannot do everything. This comes very much from the concealments of Providence. There is a thick veil spread over the doings of God in order that men may fear before Him. This applies to nations as well as to individuals. Both the one and the other must move very much in the dark as regards circumstances and results, but not as regards principles. For principles are immutable, and God intends us to act from these. How often does God actually arrest courses of human action by sudden combinations in providence which make them impossible–as in the confusion of tongues at Babel.
3. God sealeth up mans hand by affliction, that men may know His work in their individual life. Affliction is no doubt a part of providence, but it is an isolated part. It is individual in its action, and it enforces the knowledge of Gods work in the personal sphere. This it does by sealing up the hand. Then we feel how little we had in our own power even when we were at our best, and how completely we were at the mercy of a higher. And we see also how well things can go on without us.
4. God seals up the hand of every man when, by His Spirit, He convinces him of sin, that all may know His work in the matter of the souls salvation. Here we are in the region of conscience. Practical lesson. We must accept our weakness, and all the limitations of our present condition, if we are ever to know Gods work. (A. L. Simpson, D. D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 7. He sealeth up the hand of every man] After all that has been said, and much of it most learnedly, on this verse, I think that the act of freezing is probably intended; that when the earth is bound up by intense frost, the hand, yad, labour, of every man is sealed up; he can do no more labour in the field, till the south wind blow, by which a thaw takes place. While the earth is in this state of rigidity, the beasts go into their dens, and remain in their places, Job 37:8, some of them sleeping out the winter in a state of torpor, and others of them feeding on the stores which they had collected in autumn. However, the passage may mean no more than by the severity of the rains beasts are drawn to their covers; and man is obliged to intermit all his labours. The mighty rains are past. Who would have thought that on this verse, as its Scriptural foundation, the doctrine of chiromancy is built! God has so marked the hand of every man by the lines thereon exhibited, that they tell all the good or bad fortune they shall have during life; and he has done this that all men, by a judicious examination of their hands, may know his work! On this John Taisnier, a famous mathematician, lawyer, musician, and poet laureate of Cologne, has written a large folio volume, with more hands in it than fell to the lot of Briareus:-printed at Cologne, 1683.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
By these great snows and rains he drives men out of the fields, and seals or binds tap their hands from all that work, and drives them home to their houses, and in a manner shuts them up there. See Gen 7:16; Exo 9:19. Or, by his hand or power (i.e. by those powerful works of his hand here mentioned) he sealeth, or shutteth up, or keepeth close every man, to wit, in his house, as the beasts in their dens, Job 37:8. That all men may know his work; that men being hindered from action and their own work, and so being idle and at perfect leisure, may fall to a serious contemplation of these and other great and glorious works of God. Or, that he (i.e. every man, as was now expressed)
may know (or inquire into, or take an account of) all his workmen; for which the proper season is when they are all hindered from their work, and brought together into the house.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
7. In winter God stops man’sout-of-doors activity.
sealethcloseth up (Job9:7). Man’s “hands” are then tied up.
his workin antithesisto man’s own work (“hand”) which at other timesengages men so as to make them liable to forget their dependence onGod. UMBREIT moreliterally translates, That all men whom He has made(literally, “of His making”) may be brought toacknowledgment.”
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
He sealeth up the hand of every man,…. That is, by deep snows and heavy rains being on the earth; where, as travellers are stopped in their journeys, and cannot proceed, so various artificers are hindered from their work, and husbandmen especially from their employment in the fields; so that their hands are as it were shut up and sealed, that they cannot work with them. Sephorno interprets this of the fruits and increase of the earth being produced and brought to perfection by means of the snow and rain, and so gathered by and into the hands of men; whereby they are led to observe the work of God and his goodness herein, and so to love and fear him; which he takes to be the sense of the following clause,
that all men may know his work; either their own work; what they have to do at home when they cannot work abroad; or that they may have leisure to reflect upon their moral ways and works, and consider how deficient they are: or rather the work of God; that they may know and own the snow and rain are his work, and depend upon his will; or that they may have time and opportunity of considering and meditating on the works of God, in nature, providence, and grace. Some choose to read the words, “that all men of his work may know” l; may know him the author of their beings, and the God of their mercies. For all men are the work of his hands; he has made them, and not they themselves; and the end of all God’s dealings with them is, that they may know him, fear, serve, and glorify him.
l “omnes homines operis ipsius”, Schmidt, Michaelis; so Schultens.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
7. Sealeth up That is, through storms and cold. He compels men to cease from rural labours, that they who are his work (literally, all men of his work) may be led to reflect upon Him and his ways, “that every man may know his own weakness,” (Septuagint.) A Persian poet (Saadi) has aptly said of the green leaves of the forest,
In the eye of the intelligent,
Every single leaf, is a book of knowledge evincing a creator.
AEschylus uses a like phrase, “the sealing up of thunder,” for restraining it. ( Eumen., 830.) Dr. T. Lewis refers to the magnificent description of a thunder storm in Psalms 29, as witnessed from the sheltering temple, whilst at every thunder peal “every one in His temple (Job 37:9) is crying ‘Glory!’” ( .) Similarly, a sheltering home should lead to a like grateful recognition of God, as “he doth fly upon the wings of the wind,” letting loose the forces of nature, and controlling, while intensifying, their power. Palmistry the art of divining one’s fate by inspecting the lines and lineaments of the hand founded its foolish pretensions upon a false reading of this passage, making it to mean that God has sealed upon every man’s hand how long he shall live. See WEMYSS on Job, p. 300.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Job 37:7 He sealeth up the hand of every man; that all men may know his work.
Ver. 7. He sealeth up the hand of every man ] i.e. He, by his great showers, sendeth men home for shelter, glad to intermit their work till better weather. See Exo 9:19 . The Hebrews call rain Sagrir, Pro 27:15 , from shutting up; because it keeps men at home, from travelling or working abroad. Chiromancy palmistry finds here no footing, whatever some have doted; as if God had set certain signs and notes in men’s hands of what should hereafter befall them, and this text is alleged for proof; but absurdly (Vide Joan de Indeg.).
That all men may know his work
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
He: Job 5:12, Job 9:7
that: Job 36:24, Psa 46:8, Psa 64:9, Psa 92:4, Psa 109:27, Psa 111:2, Ecc 8:17, Isa 5:12, Isa 26:11
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
37:7 He {e} sealeth up the hand of every man; that all men may know his work.
(e) By rains and thunders God causes men to keep themselves within their houses.