Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Job 24:12
Men groan from out of the city, and the soul of the wounded crieth out: yet God layeth not folly [to them].
12. Men groan from out of the city ] Rather, according to the pointing, from out of the populous city they groan. In this, however, there is no parallelism to the “soul of the wounded” in next clause. By a slight change of pointing, and as read by the Syriac, the sense is obtained: from out the city the dying groan. The phrase “from out” means merely “in connexion with” or in the cities, comp. Psa 72:16. Reference is made to the cities in order to indicate that this injustice and cruel oppression suffered by men is universal, in city and country alike.
layeth not folly to them ] Rather, regardeth not the folly, or, wrong. The same word occurred in ch. Job 1:22, see note. All this oppression is manifest on the face of the earth among men, but God giveth no heed to the wrong He appointeth no days ( Job 24:1) for doing judgment and staying the injustice.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Men groan from out of the city – The evident meaning of this is, that the sorrows caused by oppression were not confined to the deserts and to solitary places; were not seen only where the wandering freebooter seized upon the traveler, or in the comparatively unfrequented places in the country where the poor were compelled to labor in the wine presses and the olive presses of others, but that they extended to cities also. In what way this oppression in cities was practiced, Job does not specify. It might be by the sudden descent upon an unsuspecting city, of hordes of freebooters, who robbed and murdered the inhabitants, and then fled, or it might be by internal oppression, as of the rich ever the poor, or of masters over their slaves. The idea which Job seems to wish to convey is, that oppression abounded. The earth was full of violence. It was in every place, in the city and the country, and yet God did not in fact come forth to meet and punish the oppressor as he deserved. There would be instances of oppression and cruelty enough occurring in all cities to justify all that Job here says, especially in ancient times, when cities were under the control of tyrants. The word which is translated men here is mathym, which is not the usual term to denote men. This word is derived from muth, to die; and hence, there may be here the notion of mortals, or of the dying, who utter these groans.
And the soul of the wounded crieth out – This expression appears as if Job referred to some acts of violence done by robbers, and perhaps the whole description is intended to apply to the sufferings caused by the sudden descent of a band of marauders upon the unsuspection and slumbering inhabitants of a city.
Yet God layeth not folly to them – The word rendered folly tphlah means folly; and thence also wickedness. If this reading is to be retained, the passage means that God does not lay to heart, that is, does not regard their folly or wickedness. He suffers it to pass without punishing it; compare Act 17:30. But the same word, by a change of the points, tephllah, means prayer; and many have supposed that it means, that God does not regard the prayer or cry of those who are thus oppressed. This, in itself, would make good sense, but the former rendering agrees better with the connection. The object of Job is not to show that God does not regard the cry of the afflicted, but that he does not interpose to punish those who are tyrants and oppressors.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Job 24:12
Men groan from out of the city.
The groans of the city
The truth is, man as he walketh upon the surface of the earth, seeth but the surface of its inhabitants. Well is it that we see no more. Were we able to go under the surface, though it were but slightly, our knowledge might make us go mad. It ought to do so. The thought is terrible in its wonder, and astonishing in its terror of the knowledge which the God of the spirits of all flesh necessarily hath of the mighty aggregate of the earths depravities,–embracing in His boundless vision every iniquity that is, or ever was, meditated or executed, from the first entry of evil into the sphere of His dominions, to the last accent of defiance that shall be hurled at His throne. The shudder of such a thought sometimes affrighteth saintly souls. It seems here to have been laying hold of the patriarch. His plea is that, though men groan in the city, God, the judge of all, appears at present to be calling none of these to account for their misdeeds. With one of the moderns we might exclaim, It is very startling to see so much of sin with so little of sorrow (Dr. Arnold). But is Job altogether sceptical as to their punishment? Far from it. He is leaving Eliphaz to the inference, that if his reasoning be correct that a man must be guilty because he is afflicted, these evil-doers must be innocent because they are not afflicted. Did we, however, know the world as it is, not as it seems,–could we go under the surface of society, we might become acquainted with secrets of wickedness of which some of the wicked never dreamed, and with torments the existence of which the virtuous would scarcely believe. What misery would be revealed, where we see only the emblems of delight! Yea, what an empire of spiritual death in a universe of natural and artificial life! The patriarchs description of the city is as true and as fearful in its truth at this hour as in the day that he uttered it. As true of London or Paris now as of Babylon or Nineveh of old. The city is a place from out of which men groan, and the soul of the wounded cry out. The whole creation, through the apostasy of man, is represented by the great apostle as groaning; but the city being ever a vast concentration of guilt, what is true of the whole earth is preeminently true of it. In the city, transgression is a species of item–an enormous sum, indeed, in its daily concerns. All great cities are guilty of great sins. Those who inhabit the city are denizens of a place in which every day and every night multiplied iniquities are all but sure to be perpetrated, as surely as night and day succeed each other. Dreadful in the city are the groans of conscience. True, the world looks gay and thoughtless. Bright eyes and merry lips offer their enchantments on every side. Notwithstanding, it will be found that the awful verities of the eternal state have a stronger hold upon the majority of men than is generally imagined. Amongst the groans of the city are the groans of such as have dishonoured a Christian profession by open offences; groans these which for years may be without response but their own echoes; wounds inconceivably painful, blushing as they do with the crimson tide of Gods Lamb crucified afresh. Among these groans of the city are the groans of saintly men and holy women for the sins of those around them. Think of the world as it is, and withhold from it a groan, if you can. Hence doth the Christian groan in spirit for the sins of the world; being afflicted for Christ, as Christ was afflicted for him. (Alfred Bowen Evans.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 12. Men groan from out of the city] This is a new paragraph. After having shown the oppressions carried on in the country, he takes a view of those carried on in the town. Here the miseries are too numerous to be detailed. The poor in such places are often in the most wretched state; they are not only badly fed, and miserably clothed, but also most unwholesomely lodged. I was once appointed with a benevolent gentleman, J. S., Esq., to visit a district in St. Giles’s London, to know the real state of the poor. We took the district in House Row, and found each dwelling full of people, dirt, and wretchedness. Neither old nor young had the appearance of health: some were sick, and others lying dead, in the same place! Several beds, if they might be called such, on the floor in the same apartment; and, in one single house, sixty souls! These were groaning under various evils; and the soul of the wounded, wounded in spirit, and afflicted in body, cried out to God and man for help! It would have required no subtle investigation to have traced all these miseries to the doors, the hands, the lips, and the hearts, of ruthless landlords; or to oppressive systems of public expenditure in the support of ruinous wars, and the stagnation of trade and destruction of commerce occasioned by them: to which must be added the enormous taxation to meet this expenditure.
Yet God layeth not folly to them.] He does not impute their calamities to their own folly. Or, according to the Vulgate, Et Deus inultum abire non patitur; “And God will not leave (these disorders) unpunished.” But the Hebrew may be translated And God doth not attend to their prayers. Job’s object was to show, in opposition to the mistaken doctrine of his friends, that God did not hastily punish every evil work, nor reward every good one. That vice often went long unpunished, and virtue unrewarded; and that we must not judge of a man’s state either by his prosperity or adversity. Therefore, there might be cases in which the innocent oppressed poor were crying to God for a redress of their grievances, and were not immediately heard; and in which their oppressors were faring sumptuously every day, without any apparent mark of the Divine displeasure. These sentiments occur frequently.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Men groan under the burden of injuries and grievous oppressions.
From out of the city; not only in deserts or less inhabited places, where these tyrants have the greater opportunity and advantage to practise their villanies; but even in cities, where there is a face of order and government, and courts of justice, and a multitude of people to observe and restrain such actions; whereby they plainly declare that they neither fear God nor reverence man.
The soul of the wounded; either,
1. Properly, their soul sympathizing with the body, and being grieved for its insupportable miseries, crieth to God and men for help. Or rather,
2. The life or blood (which oft cometh under that name) of those who are there
wounded unto death, as this word properly signifies, Eze 30:24, crieth aloud unto God for vengeance, Gen 4:10; Rev 6:9,10, whereby God might seem in some sort obliged to punish them; and yet he did not, as the next words declare.
Yet God layeth not folly to them: so the sense is, yet God doth not impute or lay to their charge this folly or wickedness, which in Scripture is commonly called folly; i.e. he takes no notice of these horrid oppressions, nor hears the cries of the oppressed, nor punishes the oppressors. Or, yet God (who seeth and permitteth all this) disposeth, or ordereth, or doth, (for all these things this Hebrew verb signifies,) nothing which is absurd, or foolish, or unsavoury, i.e. doth nothing in this permission and connivance unworthy of himself, or which a wise and considerate man cannot relish or approve, or which is not in itself righteous and reasonable, though we do not always discern the reasonableness of it.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
12. Menrather, “mortals”(not the common Hebrew for “men”); so the Masoreticvowel points read as English Version. But the vowel points aremodern. The true reading is, “The dying,” answering to “thewounded” in the next clause, so Syriac. Not merely in thecountry (Job 24:11), but alsoin the city there are oppressed sufferers, who cry for help in vain.”From out of the city”; that is, they long to getforth and be free outside of it (Exo 1:11;Exo 2:23).
woundedby theoppressor (Eze 30:24).
layeth not follytakesno account of (by punishing) their sin (“folly” inScripture; Job 1:22). This isthe gist of the whole previous list of sins (Ac17:30). UMBREIT withSyriac reads by changing a vowel point, “Regards nottheir supplication.”
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Men groan from out of the city,…. Because of the oppressions and injuries done to them, so that not only the poor in the country that were employed in the fields, and oliveyards, and vineyards, were used exceeding ill; but even in cities, where not only are an abundance of people, and so the outrages committed upon them, which made them groan, were done openly and publicly, with great insolence and impudence, but where also courts of judicature were held, and yet in defiance of law and justice were those evils done, see Ec 3:16;
and the soul of the wounded crieth out; that is, the persons wounded with the sword, or any other instrument of vengeance, stabbed as they went along the public streets of the city, where they fell, these cried out vehemently as such persons do; so audacious, as well as barbarous, were these wicked men, that insulted and abused them:
yet God layeth not folly [to them]; it is for the sake of this observation that the whole above account is given of wicked men, as well as what follows; that though they are guilty of such atrocious crimes, such inhumanity, cruelty, and oppression in town and country, unheard of, unparalleled, iniquities, sins to be punished by a judge, yet are suffered of God to pass with impunity. By “folly” is meant sin, not lesser sins only, little, foolish, trifling things, but greater and grosser ones, such as before expressed; all sin is folly, being the breach of a law which is holy, just, and good, and exposes to its penalty and curse; and against God the lawgiver, who is able to save and to destroy; and as it is harmful and prejudicial, either to the characters, bodies, or estates of men, and especially to their immortal souls; and yet God that charges his angels with folly did not charge these men with it; that is, he seemed, in the outward dealings of his providence towards them, as if he took no notice of their sins, but connived at them, or took no account of them, and did not take any methods in his providence to show their folly, and convince them of it, nor discover it to others, and make them public examples, did not punish them, but let them go on in them without control; and this Job observes, in order to prove his point, that wicked men are not always punished in this life.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
(12) Men groan from out of the city.Here a survey of the oppressions wrought within the city walls is taken.
Yet God layeth not folly to them.That is, to those who are the cause of their wrongs, their oppressors.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
12. Men groan By changing the pointing of ( men) to ( the dead,) Ewald, Zockler, etc., read, “Out of the cities the dying groan;” but, against this, is the past participal form mathim, ( the dead.)
From out of the city Like scenes of enormity to those that darken desert and town are enacted within the crowded city, where, on the contrary, might be expected some outflow of sympathy, and not only the power, but the disposition, to redress wrong.
The wounded The slain, (Furst.) Even cold prose does not disdain to speak of “the cry of the slayers and the slain.” Thucydides, 7:70, 71.
Crieth out To heaven for vengeance, (Hitzig.)
Layeth not Regardeth not. The is the same as in Job 23:6, which see.
Folly In the sense of abomination or anomaly, subversive of all moral order in the world. Note on chap. Job 1:22. Omit to them.
Job 24:12. Men groan from out of the city Now follow the oppressions of the city, where the face of things is still worse; nothing to be heard but the groans of the dying, and the cries of the wounded. In the city the dying groan, and the soul of the wounded crieth aloud; yet God maketh no distinction. Heath.
Job 24:12 Men groan from out of the city, and the soul of the wounded crieth out: yet God layeth not folly [to them].
Ver. 12. Men groan from out of the city ] viz. Under the pressures of their oppressors. Thus did Jerusalem, that faithful city, when once become a harlot; it was full of judgment, righteousness lodged in it; but now murderers, Isa 1:21 . The like did the city of Rome, when, under the government of Marius set up against Sulla, she cried out that the remedy was worse than the disease; and under Pompey, Calamitas nostra magnus est; Our calamity is great, and under the Caesars, that the names of their good emperors might all be set down in the compass of a signet ring; and again under the popes, that for many years together she had not had the happiness to be ruled by any but reprobates; Heu, heu, Domine Deus, saith Fasciculus temporum, bitterly bewailing Rome’s misery under her turbulent tyrants, Hildebrand, Urban II (whom Cardinal Benno worthily calleth Turban), Boniface VIII, and many other such like monsters. Of most great cities it may be said, as of that strange vineyard in Palestine, Isa 5:7 , God “looked for judgment, but behold oppression” (Heb. a scab); “for righteousness, but behold a cry.”
And the soul of the wounded (of the deadly wounded) crieth out] Anima confossorum voci feratur, sc. For grief; and in prayer to God for ease.
Yet God layeth not folly to them Men. Hebrew. methim. App-14.
city. The Septuagint adds “and houses”.
GOD. Hebrew Eloah. App-4.
groan: Exo 1:13, Exo 1:14, Exo 2:23, Exo 2:24, Exo 22:27, Jdg 10:16, Psa 12:5, Ecc 4:1, Isa 52:5
wounded: Psa 69:26, Psa 109:22
yet God: Psa 50:21, Ecc 8:11, Ecc 8:12, Mal 2:17, Mal 3:15, Rom 2:4, Rom 2:5, 2Pe 3:15
Reciprocal: Gen 4:10 – crieth Job 34:28 – they Job 35:9 – they make Psa 102:20 – To hear Eze 30:24 – he shall Col 4:1 – give
24:12 Men {m} groan from out of the city, and the soul of the wounded crieth out: yet God {n} layeth not folly [to them].
(m) For the great oppression and extortion.
(n) Cry out and call for vengeance.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
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