Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Job 5:12
He disappointeth the devices of the crafty, so that their hands cannot perform [their] enterprise.
12 16. Job 5:10-11 describe how the stream of God’s goodness acts when it moves directly, bearing up upon it the humble and those that mourn towards safety or salvation. These verses describe how the stream moves when it meets with obstacles, such as craft and evil.
he disappointeth ] The same word is rendered, he frustrateth, Isa 44:25.
their enterprise ] A difficult word to translate. It is a technical term of the Hebrew Wisdom or Philosophy, and, except in Isa 28:29, Mic 6:9, occurs only in Job and Proverbs. It seems to mean that which is essential. Hence it is said of a state or action when it corresponds to the idea; and conversely of thought when it corresponds to the reality, as ch. Job 11:6, Job 12:16. It is used here in the former sense (cf. ch. Job 6:13), and the words mean, their hands perform nothing effectual (Sept. true), or nothing to purpose.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
He disappointeth the devices of the crafty – He foils them in their schemes, or makes their plans vain. This too was the result of close observation on the part of Eliphaz. He had seen instances where the plans of crafty, designing, and artful people had been defeated, and where the straightforward had been prospered and honored. Such cases led him to believe that God was the friend of virtue, and was worthy of entire confidence.
So that their hands – So that they. The hands are the instruments by which we accomplish our plans.
Their enterprise – Margin, Or, anything. Hebrew tushyah. This word properly means uprightness from yasha; then help, deliverance, Job 6:13; then purpose, undertaking, enterprise, that is, what one wishes to set up or establish. Gesenius. This is its meaning here. Vulgate, Their hands cannot finish (implere) what they had begun. Septuagint, Their hands cannot perform that which is true – alethes. The Chaldee Paraphrase refers this to the defeat of the purposes of the Egyptians: Who made vain the thoughts of the Egyptians, who acted wisely (or cunningly – ) that they might do evil to Israel, but their hands did not perform the work of their wisdom Job 5:13, who took the wise men of Pharaoh in their own wisdom, and the counsel of their perverse astrologers he made to return upon them. The general sense is, that artful and designing men – people who work in the dark, and who form secret purposes of evil, are disappointed and foiled. Eliphaz probably had seen instances of this, and he now attributes it to God as rendering him worthy of the confidence of people. It is still true. The crafty and the designing are often foiled in such a manner as to show that it is wholly of God. He exposes their designs in this way, and shows that he is the friend of the sincere and the honest; and in doing this, he shows that he is worthy the confidence of his people.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Job 5:12
He disappointeth the devices of the crafty.
The disappointment of the crafty
The word crafty may mean prudent, but usually it denotes such as are wickedly cunning. The meaning of the text is, that with how much art and subtilty soever wicked men may lay their plots and ill designs, there is a God who both can and frequently doth disappoint and baffle them, make them vain, and of none effect.
I. When may we suppose the disappointments of crafty mens devices to be from God? That is, as the extraordinary effects of His particular and special providence. Reference need not be made to such as are miraculous.
1. When a disappointment shall be brought about in a way evidently strange, surprising, and unusual.
2. The hand of God is in those disappointments which involve men either in those very mischiefs which they had prepared for others, or at least in others, for their grievousness and soreness, not unlike them.
3. When the devices of wicked men shall luckily meet with a disappointment, just at that very time, when they are ripe and ready for execution.
4. When good men, at the very time of their praying for their enemys disappointment, shall obtain their desire.
5. When a great number of unexpected accidents shall, as it were, conspire to begin, carry on, and at last consummate any notable disappointment.
II. How eminently Gods hand appeared in the deliverances of this nation. Which we this day, Nov. 5, commemorate.
III. Practical inferences. Gods deliverances should–
1. Discourage the crafty from forming any more schemes.
2. Encourage us, in all our straits and difficulties, to place our hope and confidence in God.
3. To make our earnest prayers to God for help in our time of need.
4. Since God has done such wonderful things for us, we must be sure not to forget to glorify Him. (Sir Wm. Dawes, Bart. , D. D.)
The designing projects of ambitious men defeated
1. It hath been a matter of fatal experience that there always were, in all ages of the world, devices of wicked men, and designs of mischief; and it is consistent with the wisdom and goodness of God to suffer designing men to carry on their ambitious projects with a probable show of success.
(1) Possibly to exercise the prudence and courage of the innocent, and virtuous, when their designs are laid very deep.
(2) To discover the inveterate malice and secret cruelty of those mens tempers, who, under the calm, mild, and endearing names of religion, and the public good, do stick to no villainies to push on their black designs.
(3) Perhaps that God may manifest His particular and vigilant care of His Church, even reduced to extremities.
2. These devices have been, by the good providence of God, miraculously defeated. They have been vain, not only in respect of others against whom they were levelled, but also mischievous to those that contrived them.
3. The natural result of these particulars is to praise God, and we, being delivered, ought to glorify Him. (Tho. Whincop, D. D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 12. He disappointeth the devices of the crafty] All these sayings refer to God’s particular providence, by which he is ever working for the good, and counterworking the plots of the wicked. And as various as are the contingent, capricious, and malevolent acts of men, so varied are his providential interferences; disappointing the devices, snares, and plots of the crafty, so that their plans being confounded, and their machinery broken in pieces, their hands cannot perform their enterprises.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Of the crafty; such as are cunning to work evil, and to cover it with fair pretences, as hypocrites use to do, and as Jobs friends charged him with doing: God breaks the hopes and designs of such men; as he hath now blasted thy expectation, and taken away thy outward happiness, which was the thing thou didst design in taking up the profession of religion.
Their enterprise; or, any thing; or, what is solid or substantial; or, wisdom, i.e. their wise counsel or crafty design. They cannot execute their cunning contrivances.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
12. enterpriseliterally,”realization.” The Hebrew combines in the one wordthe two ideas, wisdom and happiness, “enduring existence”being the etymological and philosophical root of the combined notion[UMBREIT].
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
He disappointeth the devices of the crafty,…. Or, “it disappointeth”; that is, the rain, as some Jewish commentators m interpret it, and the whole paragraph to this sense; the rain coming upon the earth makes it fruitful, and causes it to produce a plentiful crop, whereby the schemes of crafty men are disappointed, who in a time of drought withhold the corn, and enhance the price of it, and distress the poor; and this in order to make a penny of them, according to Am 8:4; but through the rain falling are not able to gain their end, but are obliged to bring out their corn, and sell it at a low price, and so are taken in their own craftiness; their counsel becomes brutish, and they are brought into bad circumstances themselves, and the poor saved from being ground and oppressed by them, and have hope for the future of plenty of provisions, to the confusion and astonishment of their oppressors: but the Targum interprets this of the Egyptians cunningly devising mischief against the Israelites, without success; and not amiss, since that affair might be well known to Eliphaz, and he might have it in view: the fact was this, a new king of Egypt, after the death of Joseph, observing the great increase of the people of Israel in his dominions, and fearing, in case of a war, they should join the enemy, and get out of the land by such an opportunity, calls his nobles, courtiers, and counsellors together, to form some wise schemes how to diminish them, Ex 1:8; and the first was to set taskmasters over them, and afflict them with hard bondage, but this succeeded not, Ex 1:11; for the more they were afflicted the more they multiplied and grew; another decree was, to order the midwives to kill the male children of the Israelites, and save alive the females, Ex 1:15; but the midwives, fearing God, obeyed not the order, and the people still multiplied, Ex 1:17; and then a third project was formed, to cast every son born to the Israelites into the river, and drown them, Ex 1:22; but notwithstanding this they were preserved, as Moses, Ex 2:10, and doubtless many others; the people increased so, that they went out of Egypt six hundred thousand men, Ex 12:37; this was a recent thing, it may be in the times of Eliphaz, and which he might easily call to mind: and he might also have respect to a more remote case, that of the builders of Babel, who devised a scheme to build a tower, whose top should reach to heaven, and secure them from a dispersion of them throughout the earth, Ge 11:1; when God descended in the display of his power and providence, confounded their language, so that they were obliged to desist from their enterprise, and were scattered throughout the earth, which by their scheme they thought to have prevented: this may be applied to wicked crafty men in common, who devise schemes to commit sin, and gratify their lusts, to get for themselves riches and honour, and to do mischief to others, which God in his providence breaks, frustrates, and makes of none effect; and to false teachers, that walk in craftiness, lie in wait to deceive, and make use of cunningly devised fables, coin new doctrines, invent new forms of worship, and appoint new ordinances, and contrive different ways and methods of salvation; all which is foolishness with God, and to such persons Job 5:13 is applied by the Apostle Paul, 1Co 3:19: and this may likewise respect wicked princes and potentates, with their counsellors and wise politicians, who in former, as well as in later times, have formed designs against their neighbours, and to the hurt of the interest of true religion particularly; but have been baffled and confounded by Divine Providence, of which, as there were many instances in Israel of old, so in our British Isles of late:
so that their hands cannot perform [their] enterprise; what their heads have contrived, what they have resolved and determined upon, and what they have began to effect, but could not go on with; or, “bring it soundly to pass”, as Mr. Broughton renders it; that is, could not complete it, or bring it to perfection; and indeed not able to do “any thing” n, as some translate the word, not anything of what they devised and contrived: it signifies “that which is”, which has a being and substance, and solidity in it o, but nothing of this kind could be done; it is sometimes rendered “wisdom”, and “sound wisdom”, Pr 2:7; and so it is here by some p, and may signify, that though their counsels were deeply laid, and wisely formed, according to the best rules of wisdom and prudence, they yet are not able to bring them to pass; which shows the infinitely superior wisdom of God, and his overruling providence, and which therefore must be a great encouragement to seek unto him, and leave every cause and case with him.
m Aben Ezra, Jarchi, R. Simeon Bar Tzemach. n “quicquam”, Pagninus, Vatablus, Drusius, Junius Tremellius, Piscator “quicquam rei”, Cocceius, Michaelis so Kimchi in Sepher Shorash, rad. . o “Consistentiam”, Montanus; “nihil solidi”, Tigurine version. p “Sapientiam”, Schmidt; so Aben Ezra & Syr. ver. “astu”, Codurcus.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
12 Who bringeth to nought the devices of the crafty,
So that their hands cannot accomplish anything;
13 Who catcheth the wise in their craftiness;
And the counsel of the cunning is thrown down.
14 By day they run into darkness,
And grope in the noon-day as in the night.
15 He rescueth from the sword, that from their mouth,
And from the hand of the strong, the needy.
16 Hope ariseth for the weak,
And folly shall close its mouth.
All these attributes are chosen designedly: God brings down all haughtiness, and takes compassion on those who need it. The noun , coined by the Chokma, and out of Job and Proverbs found only in Mic 6:9; Isa 28:29, and even there in gnomical connection, is formed from , essentia , and signifies as it were essentialitas, realitas : it denotes, in relation to all visible things, the truly existing, the real, the objective; true wisdom (i.e., knowledge resting on an objective actual basis), true prosperity, real profiting and accomplishing. It is meant that they accomplish nothing that has actual duration and advantage. Job 5:13 cannot be better translated than by Paul, 1Co 3:19, who here deviates from the lxx. With , God’s seizure, which prevents the contemplated achievement, is to be thought of. He pours forth over the worldly wise what the prophets call the spirit of deep sleep ( ) and of dizziness ( ). On the other hand, He helps the poor. In the second is local: from the sword which proceeds from their mouth (comp. Psa 64:4; Psa 57:5, and other passages). Bttch. translates: without sword, i.e., instrument of power (comp. Job 9:15; Job 21:9); but with leads one to expect that that from which one is rescued is to be described (comp. Job 5:20). Ewald corrects , which Olsh. thinks acute: it is, however, unhebraic, according to our present knowledge of the usage of the language; for the passives of are used of cities, countries, and peoples, but not of individual men. Olsh., in his hesitancy, arrives at no opinion. But the text is sound and beautiful. with pathetic unaccented ah (Ges. 80, rem. 2, f), from = , as Ps. 92:16 Chethib.
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
(12) So that their hands cannot perform their enterprise.Or, so that their hands can do-nothing that is sound or of worth, can accomplish nothing effectual.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
12. Crafty From , to spin, twist. Furst cites three Hebrew words expressive of cunning or evil thought, (he might have added pathal, froward, Job 5:13,) whose roots give the same idea of spinning. However men may work in the dark, spinning their evil devices, God “breaks them to pieces,” (disappointeth,) .
Enterprise , toushiyyah. The root of the word indicates being, substance, that which is. See note on Job 6:13. It stands in contrast with , evil, which signifies, also, emptiness, nothingness, which is its root idea. The wicked can accomplish nothing substantial.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Job 5:12 He disappointeth the devices of the crafty, so that their hands cannot perform [their] enterprise.
Ver. 12. He disappointeth the devices of the crafty ] He vacateth and rendereth ineffectual the curious contrivances of the world’s wizards, full of serpentine subtilty, and so setteth his people in safety by out plotting their enemies; served he not Pharaoh so (who dealt craftily with our fathers, , saith Stephen, Act 7:19 )? and Saul, that subtle tyrant? and Herod, that crafty fox? Luk 13:32 ; and all the primitive and modern persecutors, to whom the old dragon had lent his seven heads to plot, and his ten horns to push against the people of God, but all to no purpose? God disappointed the devices of those malignants: so the Vulgate rendereth this text, which the Chaldee appropriateth to Pharaoh and his counsellors, who said, Come, and let us deal wisely; when as (in laying hard tasks upon the Israelites to keep them from increasing) they never dealt more foolishly; for who knows not that your labouring men have the most and the lustiest children.
So that their hands cannot perform their enterprise
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
enterprise = something stable. See note on “sound wisdom”. Pro 2:7.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
disappointeth: Job 12:16, Job 12:17, Neh 4:15, Psa 33:10, Psa 33:11, Psa 37:17, Pro 21:30, Isa 8:10, Isa 19:3
their hands: Psa 21:11, Isa 37:36, Act 12:11, Act 23:12-22
their enterprise: or, anything
Reciprocal: Gen 11:7 – confound Gen 31:22 – General Gen 41:8 – but there 2Sa 1:15 – Go near 2Sa 11:9 – General 2Sa 15:31 – turn the counsel 2Sa 16:23 – all the counsel 2Sa 17:14 – to defeat 2Ki 6:8 – took Ezr 6:13 – so they did Job 18:7 – his own Job 37:7 – He Psa 5:10 – let Psa 140:8 – Grant not Psa 146:9 – the way Pro 22:12 – he Isa 19:11 – the princes Isa 44:25 – turneth Jer 8:8 – We Jer 8:9 – The wise men are Jer 9:23 – wise Jer 19:7 – I will make Jer 49:7 – Is wisdom Dan 2:27 – cannot Oba 1:8 – even Mat 2:8 – go Mar 12:17 – And they Luk 10:21 – thou hast Luk 20:8 – General Luk 20:26 – they could Joh 7:53 – General Joh 8:9 – went out Act 5:38 – for 1Co 1:19 – General
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Job 5:12. He disappointeth the devices of the crafty On the contrary, he defeats the craftiest designs of evil and subtle men to exalt themselves. They may place a great deal of confidence in their own abilities, and, without any regard to the overruling hand of Providence, may imagine that their good or bad success in the world depends wholly on their own wisdom and efforts: they may form deep and secret designs; and, to the utmost stretch of their knowledge and foresight, may contrive and project measures which will have the most plausible appearance of accomplishing their purpose. But after all this dexterous management, should the Almighty once interpose, and throw an obstacle in their way, all their crafty devices are frustrated, and their promising expectations vanish away. So that their hands cannot perform their enterprise Hebrew, , tushijah, a word of an extensive meaning, implying that which is solid and substantial, or which is wise, good, and virtuous. Instead of executing any thing of moment, any thing advantageous or praiseworthy; instead of having the satisfaction of seeing a prosperous event of their best-formed counsels, they quickly perceive with what weak hands they have been labouring, and that all their aspiring attempts are vain and fruitless.