Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Job 14:15
Thou shalt call, and I will answer thee: thou wilt have a desire to the work of thine hands.
Thou shalt call, and I will answer thee – This is language taken from courts of justice. It refers, probably, not to a future time, but to the present. Call thou now, and I will respond. It expresses a desire to come at once to trial; to have the matter adjusted before he should leave the world. He could not bear the idea of going out of the world under the imputations which were lying on him, and he asked for an opportunity to vindicate himself before his Maker; compare the notes at Job 9:16.
Thou wilt have a desire to the work of thine hands – To me, one of thy creatures. This should, with more propriety, be rendered in the imperative, do thou have a desire. It is the expression of an earnest wish that God would show an interest in him as one of his creatures, and would bring the matter to a speedy issue. The word here rendered, have a desire ( tkasaph), means literally to be or become pale (from keseph), silver, so called from its paleness, like the Greek arguros from agros, white); and then the verb means to pine or long after anything, so as to become pale.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Job 14:15
Thou shalt call, and I will answer Thee.
God calling in death
Mr. Moody used to say, Some day you will read in the papers that Dwight L. Moody is dead. Dont you believe it. When they say I am dead, I shalt be more alive than I ever was before. Now, it is very easy to say that when one is well and strong, but the last hours Mr. Moody had on earth he lay looking death right in the eye without a quiver. Early in the morning of his last day on earth, before daylight, his son Will, who was keeping watch beside his bed, heard him whispering something, and leaning over the bed, caught the words, Earth is receding, heaven is opening, God is calling! Will was disturbed, and called the other members of the family into the room. No, no, father, he said; not so bad as that. His father opened his eyes, and, seeing the family gathered round, said, I have been within the gates. I have seen the childrens faces–those of his two grandchildren who had died during the summer and spring. In a little while he sank into unconsciousness again, but again became conscious, and opened his eyes and said, Is this death? This is not bad. There is no valley. This is bliss!–this is sweet!–this is glorious! Then his daughter, with breaking heart, said, Father, dont leave us! Oh, he replied, Emma, I am not going to throw my life away. If God wants me to live, I will live; but if God is calling me, I must up and off! A little while later, someone tried to arouse him; but he said faintly, God is calling me; dont call me back. This is my Coronation Day; I have long looked for it! And so he went up for his coronation! (A. R. Torrey, D. D.)
Thou wilt have a desire to the work of Thine hands.—
Confidence in the Creator
The Book of Job seems to me the most daring of poems; from a position of the most vantageless realism it assaults the very citadel of the ideal. Job is the instance type of humanity in the depths of its misery. Seated in the heart of a leaden despair Job cries aloud to the might unseen, scarce known, which yet he regards as the God of his life. But no more than that of a slave is his cry. Before the Judge he asserts his innocence, and will not grovel–knowing, indeed, that to bear himself so would be to insult the holy. He feels he has not deserved such suffering, and will neither tell nor listen to lies for God. Prometheus is more stoutly patient than Job. Prometheus has to do with a tyrant whom he despises. Job is the more troubled, because it is He who is at the head and the heart, who is the beginning and the end of things, that has laid His hand upon him. He cannot, will not, believe Him a tyrant. He dares not think God unjust; but not, therefore, can he allow that he has done anything to merit the treatment he is receiving at His hands. Hence is he of necessity in profoundest perplexity, for how can the two things be reconciled? The thought has not yet come to him, that that which it would be unfair to lay upon him as punishment, may yet be laid upon him as a favour. Had Job been Calvinist or Lutheran the Book of Job would have been very different. His perplexity would then have been–how God, being just, could require of a man more than he could do, and punish him as if his sin were that of a perfect being, who chose to do the evil of which he knew all the enormity. From a soul whose very consciousness is contradiction, we must not look for logic; misery is rarely logical; it is itself a discord. Feeling as if God had wronged him, Job yearns for the sight of God, strains into His presence, longs to stand face to face with Him. He would confront the One. Look closer at Jobs way of thinking and speaking about God, and directly to God. Such words are pleasing in the ear of the Father of spirits. He is not a God to accept the flattery which declares Him above obligation to His creatures. Job is confident of receiving justice. God speaks not a word of rebuke to Job for the freedom of his speech. The grandeur of the poem is that Job pleads his cause with God against all the remonstrance of religious authority, recognising no one but God, and justified therein. And the grandest of all is this, that he implies, if he does not actually say, that God owes something to His creature. This is the beginning of the greatest discovery of all–that God owes Himself to the creature He has made in His image, for so He has made him incapable of living without Him. It is not easy at first to see wherein God gives Job any answer. I cannot find that He offers him the least explanation of wily He has so afflicted him. He justifies him in his words. The answers are addressed to Job himself, not to his intellect; to the revealing, Godlike imagination in the man, and to no logical faculty whatever. The argument implied, not expressed, in the poems seems to be this–that Job, seeing God so far before him in power, and His works so far beyond his understanding, ought to have reasoned that He who could work so grandly beyond his understanding, must certainly use wisdom in things that touched him nearer, though they came no nearer his understanding. The true child, the righteous man, will trust absolutely, against all appearances, the God who has created in him the love of righteousness. God does not tell Job why He had afflicted him; He rouses his child heart to trust. (George Macdonald, D. D.)
The believers confidence
It would seem as if in using these words Job had reference to the resurrection of the body. We may regard them, in a more general way, as an assertion of the patriarchs confidence in God; of his assurance that he should be kept unto everlasting life. Believers are invariably witnesses that the more cause a man has to be full of hope and of confidence, the more diligent will he be in the use of appointed means of grace. The privileges of true religion have no tendency to the generating presumption. The man who has the strongest scriptural warrant for feeling sure of heaven is always the man who is striving most earnestly for the attainment of heaven. Never venture to appropriate to yourselves the rich assurances which are found in the Bible, unless you have good reason to believe that you are growing in hatred of sin, and in strivings after holiness. Fear not to take to yourselves all the promises made by God to His Church, so long as it is your honest desire, and your hearty endeavour, to become more conformed to the image of your Saviour.
1. The language of confidence. Thou wilt call, and I will answer thee. Remember in how many ways God calls. Jobs words indicate great confidence of final salvation. We should greatly rejoice to know that you had all been able to cast away doubt and suspicion, and to feel yourselves begotten again to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled. But we do dread your resting your assurance on insufficient grounds. These are two great features of genuine piety–the not being content with present acquirements, and the resting for the future on the assistances of God.
2. Job strengthens himself in the persuasion that God will have a desire to the work of His hands. Amid all the reasons which Job might have urged why God should watch over him, he selects that of his being the work of Gods hands. There is, however, a second creation more marvellous, more indicative of Divine love, than the first; and on this, probably, it was that Jobs thoughts were turned. The human soul was formed originally in the image of God, but lost that image through the transgression of Adam. So marvellous is its restoration, so far beyond all power but the Divine, that it is spoken of as actually a new creation, when reimpressed with the forfeited features. (Henry Melvill, B. D.)
The rights of creation
Such a chapter as this does not stand by any means alone in the Old Testament. Nature then, as now, lent but ugly dreams to the inquirer after immortality. For one hint from nature, which tells in favour of immortality, you may find a hundred from the same quarter which tell against it. In his search for a solid ground upon which to build some hope, however scanty, for the unknown future beyond death, the writer is driven at last to the simplest and most solid ground of all–the fact of creation, and what is involved in creation. Every chapter of his work is pervaded with the feeling of mystery, vastness, and awe, whenever he speaks of God. But he holds firmly by his faith in a Creator, whose creature–made in His likeness–he himself is. His argument is this–The creature simply as a creature, by virtue of creation, has a Claim upon the Creator, which the Creator will be the first to avow. It may, perhaps, sound bold to speak thus of creation, as giving a title to the Creators care. If the Creator were an unfaithful, an unrighteous Creator, there would indeed be no limit to the power of dealing with, and disposing of His creatures. It is our happiness to know that might is not right with Him; that the Almighty is also the All-righteous and the All-merciful. Every created thing or person has certain rights and claims as towards the Creator. These rights and claims are determined by his or its capacities. Man is capable of knowing and doing his Creators wilt He who is capable of fellowship with God will never be suffered by the Creator to perish in death. We are in the hands of a Father, a Creator, who knows what He would do with us, knows what we are capable of, knows what He created us for; and who assuredly will not leave us until He hath done that which He hath spoken to us of. Jobs confidence in God was justified to the uttermost. (D. J. Vaughan, M. A.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 15. Thou shalt call] Thou shalt say There shall be time no longer: Awake, ye dead! and come to judgment!
And I will answer thee] My dissolved frame shall be united at thy call; and body and soul shall be rejoined.
Thou wilt have a desire] tichsoph, “Thou wilt pant with desire;” or, “Thou wilt yearn over the work of thy hands.” God has subjected the creature to vanity, in hope; having determined the resurrection. Man is one of the noblest works of God. He has exhibited him as a master-piece of his creative skill, power, and goodness. Nothing less than the strongest call upon justice could have induced him thus to destroy the work of his hands. No wonder that he has an earnest desire towards it; and that although man dies, and is as water spilt upon the ground that cannot be gathered up again; yet doth he devise means that his banished be not expelled from him. Even God is represented as earnestly longing for the ultimate reviviscence of the sleeping dust. He cannot, he will not, forget the work of his hands.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
I trust there is a time coming when thou wilt grant me the mercy which now thou deniest me, to wit, a favourable hearing, when thou wilt call to me to speak for myself, and I shall answer thee; which I know will be to thy satisfaction and my comfort. Compare this with Job 13:22, where the same words are used in this same sense. Or, Thou shalt call me out of the grave of my calamities, and I shall answer thee, and say, Here I am, raised out of the pit in which I was buried by thy powerful and gracious command. To the work of thine hands, i.e. to me, who am thy workmanship in divers respects, from whom thou now seemest to have an aversion and abhorrency; but I doubt not thou wilt have a desire, i.e. show thy affection or good will to me; or a desire to look upon me, and to deliver me. Nor is it strange that Job, who lately was upon the brink of despair, doth now breathe out words of hope; such ebbings and flowings being usual, both with Job elsewhere, as Job 13:15,16, and with David frequently in the Psalms, and with others of Gods people.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
15. namely, at the resurrection(Joh 5:28; Psa 17:15).
have a desire toliterally,”become pale with anxious desire:” the same word istranslated “sore longedst after” (Gen 31:30;Psa 84:2), implying the utterunlikelihood that God would leave in oblivion the “creature ofHis own hands so fearfully and wonderfully made.” It is objectedthat if Job knew of a future retribution, he would make it theleading topic in solving the problem of the permittedafflictions of the righteous. But, (1) He did not intend to exceedthe limits of what was clearly revealed; the doctrine was thenin a vague form only; (2) The doctrine of God’s moral government inthis life, even independently of the future, neededvindication.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Thou shall call, and I will answer thee,…. Either at death, when the soul of than is required of him, and he is summoned out of time into eternity, and has sometimes previous notice of it; though not by a prophet, or express messenger from the Lord, as Hezekiah had, yet by some disease and distemper or another, which has a voice, a call in it to expect a remove shortly; and a good man that is prepared for it, he answers to this call readily and cheerfully; death is no king of terrors to him, he is not reluctant to it, yea, desirous of it; entreats his dismission in peace, and even longs for it, and rejoices and triumphs in the views of it: or else at the resurrection, when Christ shall call to the dead, as he did to Lazarus, and say, Come forth; and when they shall hear his voice, even the voice of the archangel, and shall answer to it, and come forth out of their graves, the sea, death, and the grave, being obliged to deliver up the dead that are therein; though some think this refers to God’s call unto him in a judicial way, and his answers to it by way of defence, as in
Job 13:22; but the other sense seems more agreeable to the context:
thou wilt have a desire to the work of thine hands; meaning his body, which is the workmanship of God, and a curious piece of workmanship it is, wonderfully and fearfully made, Ps 139:14, and curiously wrought; and though it may seem to be marred and spoiled by death, yet God will have a desire to the restoration of it at the resurrection to a better condition; even the bodies of his people, and that because they are vessels chosen by him, given to his Son, redeemed by his blood, united to his person, and sanctified by his Spirit, whose temples they are, and in whom he dwells: wherefore upon these considerations it may be reasonably supposed that Father, Son, and Spirit, have a desire to the resurrection of the bodies of the saints, and in which they will have a concern; and from which it may be concluded it will be certainly effected, since God is a rock, and his work is perfect, or will be, both upon the bodies and souls of his people; and the work of sanctification will not be properly completed on them until their vile bodies are changed, and made like to the glorious body of Christ; which must be very desirable to him, who has such a special love for them, and delight in them. Some render the words with an interrogation, “wilt thou desire [to destroy] the work of thine hands” e? surely thou wilt not; or, as Ben Gersom,
“is it fit that thou shouldest desire to destroy the work of thine hands?”
surely it is not becoming, it cannot be thought that thou wilt do it; but the former sense is best.
e “perdere desiderabis?” Pagninus, Vatablus.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
15. Have a desire Pine or yearn for; primarily, become pale, (like silver,) as when, under strong emotion, the blood withdraws from the face. The figure is a forcible one to express the divine yearning over the dead, a yearning that culminates in their recall to life.
Thou shalt call And that “call” shall penetrate into sheol.
The work of thine hands The human body (comp. Job 10:9). This passage (Job 14:13-15) is one of prime significance in the olden theology of hope. Hitherto Job’s despair had surrounded the abode of the dead with the deepest gloom. To his disconsolate mind it was “a land of darkness, as darkness itself.” Job 10:22. But now, trembling rays of light arise from the distant horizon from the other side of sheol. As in the total eclipse of the sun the opposite horizon is lighted up with the bright tints of an early dawn, so here, where there was apparently an entire extinction of hope, a dawn rises upon the sky. “The hope of eternal life,” says an old commentator, “is a flower which grows on the verge of the abyss.”
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Job 14:15 Thou shalt call, and I will answer thee: thou wilt have a desire to the work of thine hands.
Ver. 15. Thou shalt call, and I will answer thee ] At the resurrection of the just thou shalt call me out of the grave by thine all powerful voice, uttered by that archangel, with the trump of God, 1Th 4:16 1Co 15:52 Psa 50:3-4 , and thou shalt not need to call twice; for as I shall not need then to fear (as the hypocrites will) to show my face, so I will readily answer, Here I am; yea (as that dying saint did so), I will say, I come, I come, I come. I will even leap out of the grave to obey thine orders; and I doubt not but, to draw me out of that dark prison, thou wilt lend me that hand of thine whereof I have the honour to be the workmanship.
Thou wilt have a desire to the work of thine hands
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
desire = a longing.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
shalt call: Job 13:22, Psa 50:4, Psa 50:5, 1Th 4:17, 1Jo 2:28
thou wilt have: Job 7:21, Job 10:3, Job 10:8, Psa 138:8, 1Pe 4:19
Reciprocal: Psa 16:9 – my flesh Son 7:10 – his
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Job 14:15. Thou shalt call and I will answer thee 1st, At death, thou shalt call my body to the grave and my soul to thyself, and I will cheerfully answer, Here I am. Gracious souls readily answer deaths summons, and appear to his writ. Their spirits are not forcibly required of them, as was that of the rich man, Luk 12:20, but willingly resigned by them, and the earthly tabernacle not violently pulled down, but voluntarily laid down. 2d, At the resurrection thou shalt call me out of the grave by the voice of the archangel, and I will answer and come at thy call. For thou wilt have a desire to the work of thy hands A love for the soul, which thou hast made, and new-made by thy grace; and for the body, which is also the work of thy hands, and to which thou wilt have a desire, having prepared glory for it in a world of glory.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
14:15 Thou shalt call, and I will {h} answer thee: thou wilt have a desire to the work of thine hands.
(h) Though I am afflicted in this life, yet in the resurrection I will feel your mercies and answer when you call me.