Biblia

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Job 29:12

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Job 29:12

Because I delivered the poor that cried, and the fatherless, and [him that had] none to help him.

12. and him that had none to help him ] Perhaps, the fatherless, that had none to help him, only two classes being referred to, the “poor” and the “fatherless.”

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Because I delivered the poor that cried – This is spoken of himself as a magistrate or judge – for the whole description relates to that. The meaning is, that when the poor man, who had no means of employing counsel, brought his cause before him, he heard him and delivered him from the grasp of the oppressor. He never made an appeal to him in vain; compare Pro 21:13; Pro 24:11-12.

And the fatherless – The orphan who brought his cause before him. He became the patron and protector of those whose natural protectors – their parents – had been removed by death; compare the notes at Isa 1:17.

And him that had none to help him – The poor man who had no powerful patron. Job says that, as a magistrate, he particularly regarded the cause of such persons, and saw that justice was done them – a beautiful image of the administration of justice in patriarchal times. This is the sense in which our translators understood this. But the parallelism seems rather to require that this should be applied to the fatherless who had no one to aid him, and the Hebrew, by understanding the (w) conjunctive as meaning when, will bear this construction. So it is understood by Rosenmuller, Umbreit, Herder, and Noyes.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Job 29:12

Because I delivered the poor that cried.

The use and application of wealth and authority

These words naturally lead us to reflect on the noble use and improvement this venerable person made of his former prosperity; to consider our own duty as represented to us in his example; and the proper objects of our compassion.


I.
The proper use and application of wealth and authority. The distinctions which arise from power and subjection, from riches and poverty, from ease and affliction, appear so unequally and irregularly divided among men, and with so little regard to moral reasons, that by some superficial observers they have been formed into an objection against the wisdom and justice of God. But they execute a wise and regular scheme of providence; are necessary to preserve the order and economy of human society, and unite and endear mankind to one another. Wealth and authority must be acknowledged to distinguish us only as superior servants, appointed by our common Master, to do justice in the family and give everyone their meat in due season. We are not to imagine these favours are indulged us merely for our own sakes, to enable us to live in splendour and ease. The poor have a right and property in the abundance of those who are better supplied. Neither is any man farther justified in engrossing and hoarding up the common bounties of heaven, than may consist with this claim. These pleas of natural reason and justice religion has enforced with the authority of a positive command. With regard to the object, we are to observe, that both the obligations of the duty, and the measures prescribed to it, are under some limitations; for though our benevolence is required to be universal, yet our abilities are confined to a much narrower compass, and therefore oblige us to choice and distinction in the external applications of our charity. The motives that should prevail with us to comply with these great obligations, laid on us by justice and our religion, are that inward joy and complacency which flow back upon the soul from acts of mercy and liberality; and above all, those inestimable rewards which the Gospel has taught us to expect from these duties; pardon of sin here, and the eternal treasures of heaven hereafter.


II.
The words allow us to take some inferior views into the account. While we are employed in the exercise of beneficence and charity, we appear in the venerable character of substitutes of God, commissioned by Him to reach down and distribute His blessings among our fellow subjects. On the returns of gratitude from the objects of our charity, and from the world who are witnesses of it, we are permitted to reflect with pleasure as a present encouragement designed by God to excite and reward our virtue. The other motive here proposed for our encouragement, the blessings of those whom we relieve, is in its nature properly religious; derives all its force from a conviction of our dependence on Providence, and the efficacy of human prayers. (J. Rogers, D. D.)

Eyes to the blind

That is not egotism. It is not the utterance of a puffed-up spirit. Egotism is too frequently the child of the shallows. Rarely, if ever, does it issue out of a deep and troubled heart. Egotism flourishes best where profound sorrow is least known. And here is a man who is overwhelmed with sorrow. Death has darkened every window in his home, and he is burdened with the weight of an almost intolerable grief. This is no place in which to find light, egotistical speech. Whatever words this man may speak will be crushed out of him by the very burden of his grief. It is a man going into his yesterdays to find some solace for the sorrow of today. He is calling upon memory to provide a little hearts ease for his present bitter distress. Thrice happy the man who can call such memories to help him in the hour of his distress! The poor that cried, and the fatherless, and those ready to perish, and the widow and the lame and the blind still make their appeals in the land, and it is true today as ever that the only Christian response is the one that was made by the patriarch Job. I have noticed that controversy about the distressed and the unfortunate is often regarded as a substitute for their relief. Abstract discussions often result in misty speculations which only obscure ones personal duty. It is often the case that controversy abounds where sympathy should reign. Again and again we find this illustrated in the experiences of our Lord. You find controversialists discussing the abstract question why such and such a man was born blind, while the blind man himself was soliciting practical aid. I believe that there is a vast amount of suffering and distress which might be effectually checked by some rearrangement of our social and economic conditions. I do not think that in these matters legislation is altogether impotent. At any rate, we can see to it that legislation puts a premium upon virtue, and not upon vice. But when legislation has done its utmost, misfortune will still be with us. In the presence of these things, surrounded by them on every side, what is the Christian attitude? The attitude of the patriarch Job. Christianity is a gospel of compassion and practical help, and to be devoid of these things is to be altogether an alien from the commonwealth of Israel. This is not new. The youngest child in this assembly could tell us that Christianity without helpfulness is a great absurdity. But while we all know these things, the danger is that we have got the right ideas without the correspondingly right feelings. It is so easy to be orthodox in mind but heterodox in heart; to have Christian ideas, but non-Christian feelings. Our Christianity may be intelligent but not sympathetic. What we want is the orthodox feeling united to the orthodox thought. How is this to be attained? I do not think we shall ever have a really deep feeling for our fellow sufferers until we have deeply suffered too. You begin to pray for the sailors when your own boy is on the deep. When you have a crippled child what a heart you have for the maimed! It sometimes seems as though God cannot draw us together in common feeling without taking us through a common sorrow. There is nothing so welds hearts together. I know of nothing more pathetic in the life of Browning than the reconciliation of himself and the great actor Macready. They had been close and intimate friends, but for some trifle or other they quarrelled, and each went his own way, and for years their helpful intercourse was broken. Then came a great trouble. About the same time they lost their wives, and a little while after, as each was walking out in his loneliness in a quiet way in a London suburb, they suddenly met face to face, and Browning, with a great burst of emotion, seized his old friends hand, and said, Oh, Macready; and Macready, with an aching heart, replied, Oh, Browning. That was all they could say to each other, and in the fires of a great and common grief the two severed lives were welded again. But if we have not been deepened by suffering, we can do something to deepen ourselves. Let us get face to face with realities. First of all we can remember the old trite commonplace that truth is stranger than fiction. We can find more pitiful things to weep over in any one street in this city than in all the works of fiction which may issue from the press in the course of the year. I dont know what Christ will have to say to people who weep over their novels, but who never weep over the great cities as He did because of their distresses and their woes. (J. H. Jowett, M. A.)

Sympathy should be practical

An Italian coastguard officer reported a shipwreck to his Government in these words: We saw the wreck, and we attempted to give every assistance possible through the speaking trumpet. We shouted ourselves quite hoarse, and notwithstanding which next morning twenty corpses were washed ashore. A well-known Scotch professor used to tell this story, and add: Too much of our benevolence is of the speaking trumpet variety, and even this we boast about. The Samaritan of the New Testament represents the benevolence of which the world stands in greatest need.

Piety and riches


I.
The text shows the nature of a truly righteous and powerful character, aided by great secular possessions. Job was very rich; he was also very pious

1. His impartial justice.

2. His broad charity.

3. His timely assistance of the needy.

4. His exemplary leadership.

In all these we see a truly powerful and noble character. Piety, charity, justice, grandly blended and exemplified. We see at least that there is no incompatibility between a holy character and vast secular wealth.


II.
The text shows that the most perfect piety is no security against the loss of great secular abundance. Wealth may go, but piety shall remain.


III.
The text shows that the rich pious man, being in danger of losing his wealth, should, while he possesses it, use it wisely. This should inspire us–

1. To promptitude and liberality in our gifts; and

2. To a right discretion of the objects we support. It would be difficult to estimate such a life as is here set forth. A rich good man abounds with resources of good in every direction of Gods glory and the welfare of man. And if so be that the wealth be taken from us, we never lose our piety, which is the far greater possession. (Thomas Colclough.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 12. Because I delivered the poor that cried] This appears to be intended as a refutation of the charges produced by Eliphaz, Job 22:5-10, to confute which Job appeals to facts, and to public testimony.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

I delivered from his potent oppressor. They did not honour me for my great wealth or power, but for my impartial justice and pity to the afflicted, and courage in maintaining their cause and right against their mighty adversaries.

None to help him; none that would own or help them, partly because they were poor, and unable to recompense them for it; and partly because their enemies were great, and likely to crush both them and their helpers; which made Jobs virtue more glorious.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

12-17. The grounds on which Jobwas praised (Job 29:11), hishelping the afflicted (Ps 72:12)who cried to him for help, as a judge, or as one possessed of meansof charity. Translate: “The fatherless who had none to helphim.”

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

Because I delivered the poor that cried,…. This honour and esteem he had not because of his grandeur and riches, because of his worldly wealth and substance, but because of the goodness of his disposition, and because of the good he did to men, his acts of pity and compassion to the poor, and of the justice he did to all men; the poor and the afflicted, when they cried to him for help, he delivered them out of the hands of their oppressors:

and the fatherless; the care and defence of which belongs to judges and civil magistrates, see Ps 82:1;

[and him that] had none to help him; as the poor and fatherless seldom have; there is power on the side of the oppressors of them, but they have few or none to take their parts, and to be their comforters, Ec 4:1; in these instances Job imitated God, and was a follower of him, as a dear child of his; who, when this and the other poor man cries unto him, he hears, saves, and delivers out of all their troubles; he is the helper, yea, the father of the fatherless, and the judge of the widow; and, when there is no help from men, he is a present help in times of need.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

12. A most courteous reply to the cruel calumnies of Eliphaz, Job 22:6-9.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Job Speaks of his Benevolence and the Honor Accorded Him

v. 12. Because I delivered the poor that cried, making a plea for assistance, and the fatherless, and him that had none to help him, the orphan who had no helper, Job practised true benevolence, dispensed real charity.

v. 13. The blessing of him that was ready to perish came upon me, the forsaken and miserable ones blessed him with grateful wishes for the help he gave them; and I caused the widow’s heart to sing for joy, by the willing charity which he dispensed, relieving her of all her cares of this life.

v. 14. I put on righteousness, and it clothed me, putting it on as a robe, wearing it always, so that the proper holy conduct at all times was identified with him; my judgment was as a robe and a diadem, justice and fairness in all his dealings were his mantle and his turban, characterizing him before all men.

v. 15. I was eyes to the blind, and feet was I to the lame, his charity and largess was so great as to make men forget their misfortunes, no matter whether these consisted even in lameness or blindness.

v. 16. I was a father to the poor, attending to the wants of the needy like a natural father; and the cause which I knew not I searched out, he made it his business to find out about the friendless in the community, in order to come to their assistance in anything they needed.

v. 17. And I brake the jaws of the wicked, of all the hard-hearted, who oppressed the poor, especially of unrighteous judges, and plucked the spoil out of his teeth, rescuing them from the power of the wicked, as out of the claws of beasts of prey. In this way had Job spent his days, dispensing benevolence on all sides.

v. 18. Then I said, I shall die in my nest, safe in the bosom of his family, and I shall multiply my days as the sand, dying in a ripe old age, after the grains of sand in the hour-glass of his life had fully run their course.

v. 19. My root was spread out by the waters, he had hoped that he would flourish like a tree plentifully watered, and the dew lay all night upon my branch, like the moisture which sustains the life of the desert plant.

v. 20. My glory was fresh in me, he thought he would always be given the honor which he then enjoyed, and my bow was renewed in my hand, the bow being a symbol of manliness and strength, which, he trusted, would always grow young again.

v. 21. Unto me men gave ear and waited, they paused for Job to speak first, his counsel being decisive, and kept silence at my counsel, not presuming to contradict him.

v. 22. After my words they spake not again, his solution of the matter under consideration being final; and my speech dropped upon them, as the refreshing rain does upon the dry soil eager for its fructifying power.

v. 23. And they waited for me as for the rain, to have his counsel come to them as such a gentle shower; and they opened their mouth wide as for the latter rain, the rain of early spring, which determines the richness of the harvest.

v. 24. If I laughed on them, they believed it not, literally, “when they had no confidence,” when they were despondent about something, his cheering smile gave them new courage; and the light of my countenance they cast not down, could not darken; no matter how cheerless the prospect, they could not take the hopefulness out of Job’s heart nor the encouraging smile from his face.

v. 25. I chose out their way and sat chief, he took pleasure in attending their assemblies and in taking part in their affairs, and dwelt as a king in the army, assuming the leadership altogether naturally, as one that comforteth the mourners, with the encouragement which a true leader will give to those depending on him. Such was Job’s happiness and prosperity, and such were his hopes for the future in the days when he was an honored man in the community.

Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann

Job 29:12 Because I delivered the poor that cried, and the fatherless, and [him that had] none to help him.

Ver. 12. Because I delivered the poor that cried ] Here are set forth the true causes of that great respect that was generally given Job; he was a good justicer, such as Jethro describeth, Exo 18:21 . He hated, much more than did Mithridates, such as maliciously persecuted virtue forsaken of fortune. And as James V of Scotland was called the poor man’s king, so might Job well have been; for no sooner could a poor body cry to him for help but he relieved him, and rescued him out of the hands of his oppressor (Cassiodor.). Theodoric of old, and Gustavus, king of Swedes, of late, are famous for so doing (Mr Clark).

And the fatherless, and him that had none, &c. ] The fatherless and friendless, from whom he could not expect any reward. He was not of those who follow the administration of justice as a trade only, with an unquenchable and unconscionable desire of gain, but held out a constant course of integrity, and righted those whom others would have slighted.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

poor = wretched. Hebrew. ‘anah. See note on Pro 6:11.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Job 29:12-17

Job 29:12-17

THE REASONS WHY THEY HONORED HIM

“Because I delivered the poor that cried,

The fatherless also that had none to help him.

The blessing of him that was ready to perish came upon me;

And I caused the widow’s heart to sing for joy.

50put on righteousness, and it clothed me:

My justice was as a robe and a diadem.

I was eyes to the blind,

And feet was I to the lame.

I was a father to the needy:

And the cause of him that I knew not, I searched out.

And I brake the jaws of the unrighteous,

And plucked the prey out of his teeth.”

The impressive thing here is how effectively Job’s deeds emphasized his righteousness and compassion for the unfortunate. With a record such as Job claimed here, with the silence of his friends standing as an eloquent proof of what he said, it is almost inconceivable that they should have accused him of so many crimes during the dialogues. The two themes of this chapter are: (1) Job’s former security, and (2) his prominent and positive role in society; “And these two themes will be repeated in Job 29:18-25.”

E.M. Zerr:

Job 29:12. This and some following verses will explain that the respect given to Job was not in the spirit of flattery. It was because he was a friend to the poor.

Job 29:13. Job helped the man ready to perish by supplying him with the needful things. This caused that man to pronounce his blessing on the benefactor. The Pharisees would “devour widows’ houses” (Mat 23:14), but Job rejoiced the heart of the widow by supplying her with the necessities of life.

Job 29:14. Paul instructed the disciples to put on the Lord Jesus Christ (Rom 13:14), and Job wore the garment of righteousness.

Job 29:15. This means Job assisted those who could not see their way, or who were unable to travel in their needful walks of life.

Job 29:16. All known cases of destitution Job relieved. A call might come to him that was somewhat uncertain as to its worthiness. He did not dismiss it on the pretext that it was doubtful but made inquiry to learn if it was a worthy call.

Job 29:17. When it was necessary Job would use force to defend the helpless against the wicked who would rob them of their goods.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

I delivered: Job 22:5-9, Neh 5:2-13, Psa 72:12, Psa 82:2-4, Pro 21:13, Pro 24:11, Pro 24:12, Jer 22:16

the fatherless: Exo 22:22-24, Deu 10:18, Psa 68:5, Jam 1:27

Reciprocal: Rth 2:20 – Blessed 2Sa 14:4 – Help Job 4:6 – the uprightness Job 6:27 – the fatherless Job 15:34 – the tabernacles Job 16:17 – Not for Job 22:9 – widows Job 31:21 – lifted Job 34:28 – they Job 36:6 – giveth Psa 41:1 – Blessed Psa 82:4 – Deliver Pro 21:15 – joy Pro 22:22 – oppress Pro 31:9 – General Jer 5:28 – judge Jer 22:3 – do no violence Amo 5:24 – let

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

29:12 Because I delivered the {i} poor that cried, and the fatherless, and [him that had] none to help him.

(i) Because his adversaries did so much charge him with wickedness, he is compelled to render account of his life.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes