An Interpretation of the English Bible
THE POETICAL
BOOKS
THE BIBLE
by B. H. CARROLL
Late President of Southwestern Baptist
Edited by
J. W. Crowder
Grand Rapids, Michigan
New and complete edition
Copyright 1948, Broadman Press
Reprinted by Baker Book
House
with permission of
Broadman Press
ISBN: 0-8010-2344-0
First Printing, September
1973
Second Printing, September
1976
PHOTOLITHOPRINTED BY GUSHING
- MALLOY, INC.
ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA
1976
I General
Introduction Hebrew Poetry
II An Introduction
to the Book of Job
III The
Prologue of Job
IV An
Introduction to the Poetical Drama and Jobs Complaint
V The First
Round of Speeches
VI The Second
Round of Speeches
VII The Third
Round of Speeches
VIII Jobs
Restatement of His Case
IX Elihus
Speech, Gods Intervention and the Epilogue
X The Book
of Job in General
XI And
Introduction to the Book of Psalms
XII An
Introduction of the Book of Psalms (Continued)
XIII The
Psalm of Moses and the Psalm of Davids Early Life
XIV The Psalms
of Davids Early Life (Continued)
XV Psalm After
David Prior to the Babylonian Captivity
XVI The
Messianic Psalms and Others
XVII The
Messiah in the Psalms
XVIII An
Introduction to the Book of Proverbs
XIX The
Instruction of Wisdom
XX The
Instruction of Wisdom (Continued)
XXI The Instruction
of Wisdom (Continued)
XXII Miscellaneous
Proverbs
XXIII The
Proverbs of the Wise
XXIV Other
Proverbs of Solomon and the Appendices
XXV An
Introduction to the Book of Ecclesiastes
XXVI The
Prologue and Three Methods Applied
XXVII Other
Methods Applied
XXVIII The Means
Used to Solve the Problem Condemned and the Final Conclusions
XXIX An
Introduction to the Song of Solomon
XXX An
Interpretation of the Song of Solomon as an Allegory
As we are to deal with poetry, in the main, in the following discussions, it
becomes necessary that we should here give attention briefly to some important
matters relating to the poetry of the Bible. This is essential as the
principles of interpretation are so different from the principles of the
interpretation of prose.
Hebrew poetry, rich and multifarious as it is, appears to be only a remnant of
a still wider and fuller sphere of Semitic literature. There are references to
this poetic literature in several places in the Old Testament, viz: Joshua
10:13; 2 Samuel 1:18, where it is expressly said that they were written in the
book of Jashar which was most probably a collection of national songs written
at various times.
The character of the poetry of the Hebrews is both deeply truthful and
earnestly religious. Much of the contents of the Scriptures has all the
ordinary characteristics of poetry. Though prosaic in form, it rises, by force
of the noble sentiment which it enunciates and the striking imagery with which
these sentiments are adorned, into the sphere of real poetry. Example, Ruth
1:16-17:
"And Ruth said, Entreat me not to leave thee, and to return from following
after thee; for whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will
lodge; thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God; where thou diest,
will I die, and there will I be buried; Jehovah do so to me, and more also, if
aught but death part thee and me." This passage arranged in poetic form
would appear as follows: Entreat me not to leave thee, And to return from following thee; For
whither thou goest I will go, And where thou lodgest I will lodge; Thy people shall be my people, And thy God shall be my
God; Where thou diest I will die, And there will I be buried; Jehovah do so to
me and more also, If aught but death part thee and me.
We find the first poetry in our Bible in Genesis 4:23-24, the Song of Lamech, a
little elegiac poem (See the American Standard Version), reciting a lamentation
about a domestic tragedy, thus: And Lamech said unto his wives: Adah and Zillah,
hear my voice; Ye wives of Lamech, hearken unto my speech: For I have slain a
man for wounding me, And a young man for bruising me: If Cain shall be avenged
sevenfold, Truly Lamech seventy and sevenfold.
For an interpretation of this passage, see Carroll's Interpretation, Vol. 1.
We now note all poetry found in the Pentateuch, as follows:
Genesis 4:23, the Song of Lamech, already referred to;
Genesis 9:25-27, a little poem reciting Noah's curse and blessing on his sons;
Genesis 25:23, a single verse, forecasting the fortunes of Jacob and Esau;
Genesis 27:27-29, a beautiful gem, reciting Isaac's blessing on Jacob;
Genesis 27:39-40, another gem recording Isaac's blessing on Esau;
Genesis 49:2-27, Jacob's blessings on his sons;
Exodus 15:1-18, Moses' song of triumph over Pharaoh;
Numbers 6:24-26, the high priest's benediction;
Numbers 21:14-15, a war song of Amon;
Numbers 21:17, 18, a song at the well of Be-er;
Numbers 21:27-30, a song of victory over "Sihon, king of the
Amorites";
Numbers 23:7-10, Balaam's first prophecy;
Numbers 23:18-24, Balaam's second prophecy;
Numbers 24:3-9, Balaam's third prophecy;
Numbers 24:15-24, Balaam's fourth prophecy;
Deuteronomy 32:1-43, Moses' song;
Deuteronomy 33:2-29, Moses' blessing on Israel.
The poetry found in the historical books (Josh.-Esther) is as follows:
Joshua 10:12-13, Joshua's little song of victory;
Judges 5:1-31, Deborah's song;
Judges 14:14, Samson's riddle;
Judges 14:18, Samson's proverb;
Judges 15:16, Samson's song of the jawbone;
1 Samuel 2:1-10, Hannah's song of exultation;
1 Samuel 21:11, the song of the women about Saul and David;
2 Samuel 1:19-21, David's lamentation over Saul and Jonathan;
2 Samuel 3:33-34, David's lamentation over Abner;
2 Samuel 22:2-51, David's song of triumph over his enemies;
2 Samuel 23:1-7, David's last words;
1 Chronicles 16:8-36, David's song of thanksgiving.
A great deal of the writings of the prophets is highly poetic, and many
quotations from them in the New Testament are given in poetic form in the
American Standard Version, but only a few passages appear in poetic form in the
books of the Old Testament. These are as follows:
Isaiah 38:9-20, Hezekiah's song;
Lamentations;
Jonah 2:2-9, Jonah's prayer;
Habakkuk 3:1-19, the prayer of Habakkuk.
Besides these passages, the great bulk of Hebrew poetry found in the Old
Testament is in the poetical books Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and
Song of Solomon practically all of which is poetical in form, except
Ecclesiastes which is poetic prose. These books constitute the basis of our
present study.
There is quite a lot of poetry in the New Testament, consisting of original
poems and many quotations from the Old Testament and some other writings, for
the citations of which I refer the reader to the American Standard Version of
the New Testament. These passages are in poetic form wherever they occur. This
will give the reader some idea of the mass of poetical literature found in our
Bible and it should impress him with the importance of understanding the
principles by which it may be rightly interpreted.
On the distinguishing characteristics of Hebrew poetry, I commend to the reader
most heartily Dr. John R. Sampey's Syllabus of the Old Testament. Dr. Sampey
was a great Hebrew scholar and his discussion on any point touching the Hebrew
language must be considered authoritative. Since there is no better statement
on these matters to be found anywhere, I give you in the following paragraphs a
brief summary of his discussion on the forms and kinds of Hebrew poetry, noting
especially what he says about parallelism, the grouping of lines, the stanza,
the meter, and the kinds of Hebrew poetry. The general characteristics of
Hebrew poetry are: (1) verbal rhythm, (2) correspondence of words, (3)
inversion, (4) archaic expression and (5) parallelism.
Recent research goes to show that the Hebrew poets had some regard for the
number of accented syllables in a line. They were guided by accentual beats
rather than by the number of words or syllables. The most common form called
for three accents to each line. The difficulty in getting an appreciation of
the verbal rhythm in Hebrew lies in the fact that there is almost a complete
loss of the true pronunciation of the Hebrew.
By correspondence of words is meant that the words in one verge, or member;
answer to the words in another, the sense in the one echoing the sense in the
other, the form corresponding with form and word with word. Some examples, as
follows: Why
art thou cast down, O my soul? And why art thou disquieted within me? Psalm
43:5 He turneth rivers into a wilderness, And watersprings into a thirsty
ground. Psalm 107:33 The memory of the righteous is blessed; But the name of
the wicked shall rot. Proverbs 10:7
By inversion is meant to invert the grammatical order or parts in a sentence
for the purpose of emphasis or for adjustment. Though inversion holds a
distinguished place in the structure of Hebrew poetry, it is only a modified
inversion that prevails and by no means does it compare favorably with that of
the Greeks and Romans in boldness, decision, and prevalence. Examples: In thoughts from the visions
of the night, When deep sleep falleth on men. Job 4:13 Unto me men gave ear,
and waited, And kept silence for my counsel. Job 29:21 And they made his
grave with the wicked, And with a rich man in his death; Although he had done
no violence, Neither was any deceit in his mouth. Isaiah 53:9
The archaical character of Hebrew poetry refers to the antiquity of the
poetical elements as found in the Hebrew poetry, to the license, poetic hue and
coloring, which cannot be confounded with simple, low, and unrhythmical diction
of prose. Two elements, a poetical temperament and a poetical history, which
are necessary to the development of a poetic diction, the Hebrews had as
perhaps few people have ever possessed. Theirs was eminently a poetic
temperament; their earliest history was heroic while the loftiest of all truths
circulated in their souls and glowed on their lips. Hence their language, in
its earliest stages, is surpassingly poetic, striking examples of which may be
found in Genesis and Job.
By parallelism in Hebrew poetry is meant that one line corresponds in thought
to another line. The three most common varieties of parallelism are: (1)
synonymous, (2) antithetic, (3) synthetic. We will now define and illustrate
each variety, thus:
(1) By synonymous parallelism is meant that in which a second line simply repeats in
slightly altered phraseology the thought
of the first line. Examples: He that sitteth in the heavens will laugh: The Lord will have them in
derision.
Psalm 2:4 And these lay wait for their own blood; They lurk privily for their
own lives. Proverbs 1:18
Is it any pleasure to the Almighty, that thou art righteous? Or is it gain to
him that thou makest thy ways perfect?
Job 22:3 For thou hast taken pledges of thy brother for naught, And stripped
the naked for their clothing. Job 22:6 But as for the mighty man, he had the
earth; And the honorable man, he dwelt in it. Job 22:8 Therefore snares are
round about thee, And sudden fear troubleth thee. Job 22:10
(2) By antithetic parallelism is meant that in which the second line is in
contrast with the first. Examples: A wise son maketh a glad father; But a foolish son
is the heaviness of his mother; Proverbs 10:1 He that gathereth in summer is
a wise son; But he that sleepeth in harvest is a son that causeth shame;
Proverbs 10:5 The memory of the righteous is blessed; But the name of the
wicked shall rot. Proverbs 10:7
Most of the 376 couplets in Proverbs 10:1 to 22:16 are antithetic.
(3) By synthetic parallelism is meant that in which the second line supplements
the first, both together giving a complete thought. Examples: My son, if sinners entice
thee, Consent thou not. Proverbs 1:10 Withhold not good from them to whom it
is due, When it is in the power of thy hand to do it. Proverbs 3:27 Say not
unto thy neighbor. Go, and come again, And to-morrow I will give: When thou
hast it by thee. Proverbs 3:28 Devise not evil against thy neighbor; Seeing
he dwelleth securely by thee. Proverbs 3:29 Strive not with a man without
cause, If he hath done thee no harm. Proverbs 3:30
The less common varieties of parallelism found in Hebrew poetry are: (1)
climactic, (2) introverted, and (3) emblematic. These are defined and
illustrated as follows:
(1) In the climactic parallelism the second line takes up words from the first
and completes them. Example: Ascribe unto Jehovah, O ye sons of the mighty, Ascribe unto Jehovah glory
and strength. Psalm 28:1 The rulers ceased in Israel, they ceased, Until that
I Deborah arose, That I arose a mother in Israel. Judges 5:7
(2) In the introverted parallelism the first line corresponds with the fourth,
and the second with the third. Example: My son, if thy heart be wise, My heart will be glad,
even mine; Yea, my heart will rejoice, When thy lips speak right things.
Proverbs 23:15
3) In the emblematic parallelism the second line brings forward something
similar to the first, but in a higher realm. Take away the dross from the silver, And
there cometh forth a vessel for the refiner; Take away the wicked from before
the king, And his throne shall be established in righteousness. Proverbs 25:4
A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in network of silver. As an ear-ring
of gold and an ornament of fine gold, So is a wise reprover upon an obedient
ear. As the cold snow is the time of harvest, So is a faithful messenger to
them that send him; For he refresheth the soul of his masters. Proverbs
25:11-13 As clouds and wind without rain, So is he that boasteth himself of his
gifts falsely. Proverbs 25:14 Confidence in an unfaithful man in time of
trouble Is like a broken tooth, and a foot out of joint. Proverbs 25:19 As
one that taketh off a garment in cold weather, and as vinegar upon soda, So is
he that singeth songs to a heavy heart. Proverbs 25:20 For lack of wood the
fire goeth out; And where there is no whisperer, contention ceaseth. As coals
are to hot embers, and wood to fire, So is a contentious man to inflame strife.
Proverbs 26:20-21
The lines in Hebrew poetry are grouped as follows:
(1) Monostichs (Ps. 16:1; 18:1);
(2) Distichs (Ps. 34:1; Prov. 13:20) ;
(3) Tristichs (Ps. 2:2; 3:7);
(4) Tetrastichs (Gen. 49:7; Ps. 55:21; Prov 23:15f);
(5) Pentastichs (Prov. 25:6f);
(6) Hexastichs (Gen. 48:15f);
(7) Heptastichs(Prov.23:6-8);
(8) Octostichs (Prov. 30:7-9),
A stanza in Hebrew poetry consists of a group of lines or verses upon the same
subject or developing the same thought. There are four kinds of these stanzas,
viz: the couplet, or a group of two lines; the tristich, or a group of three
lines; the tetrastich, or a group of four lines; and the hexastich, or a group
of six lines. In Psalm 119 we have the strophe consisting of eight verses, each
verse in this strophe beginning with the same letter.
There are four kinds of Hebrew poetry, viz: (1) lyric, (2) gnomic, (3)
dramatic, (4) elegiac. These are defined and illustrated thus:
(1) Lyric is derived from the word, "lyre," a musical instrument to
accompany singing. There are many snatches of song in the historical books from
Genesis to Esther. The Psalms are an imperishable collection of religious
lyrics.
(2) By "gnomic" is meant proverbial. Proverbs, part of Ecclesiastes,
and many detached aphorisms in other books of the Old Testament are examples.
(3) By "dramatic" is meant that form of literature that gives
idealized representations of human experience. Job is a splendid example of
this kind of literature.
(4) By "elegiac" is meant that form of poetry which partakes of the
nature of the elegy, or lamentation. Lamentations is a fine example of this
kind of poetry. There are other dirges in the historical books and in the
prophets. 2 Samuel 1:19-27 and Amos 5:1-3 are examples. Much of Isaiah's
writing is poetic in spirit and some of it in form. (See Isa. 14:53.) So of the
early prophetic writers, especially the early prophets. Now, according to this
classification of Hebrew poetry, it should be an easy and profitable work for
the reader to classify all the poetry of the Bible. This can be readily done
with the American Standard Revised Version in hand. All the poetry of the Bible
is written in poetic form in this version, and every student of the Bible
should have it.
QUESTIONS
1. What can you say, in
general, of the Hebrew poetry as we have it in the Bible?
2. What of the character of
the poetry of the Hebrews?
3. Where do we find the
first poetry in our Bible and what ia the nature of this little poem?
4. Locate all the poetry
found in the Pentateuch.
5. Locate all the poetry
found in the historical books (Josh.; Esther).
6. Locate the poetic
passages in the prophets.
7. Where do we find the
great bulk of Hebrew poetry in the Bible?
8. What of the poetry of the
New Testament and how may it be located?
9. What book commended by
the author on the forms and kinds of Hebrew poetry?
10. What the general
characteristics of Hebrew poetry?
11. What is meant by rhythm and
what renders an appreciation of verbal rhythm in the Hebrew now so difficult?
12. What is meant by
correspondence of words? Illustrate.
13. What is meant by
inversion? Illustrate.
14. What is meant by the
archaical character of Hebrew poetry?
15. What is meant by
parallelism and what the three most common varieties? Define and illustrate
each.
16. What the less common
varieties of parallelism? Define and illustrate each.
17. How are the lines in
Hebrew poetry grouped? Give example of each.
18. What is a stanza in
Hebrew poetry? How many and what kinds are found?
19. How many kinds of Hebrew
poetry? Name, define, and illustrate each.
20. What suggestion by the
author relative to classifying all the poetry of the Bible?
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE BOOK OF JOB
This book is one of the most remarkable in all literature. When we fairly
consider the loftiness of its themes; the profundity of its philosophy; the simplicity
of its arrangement; the progress, power, and climax of its argument; the
broadness of its application; we must, in many respects, give it precedence in
rank over Homer's Iliad, Virgil's Aeneid, Dante's Inferno, Milton's Paradise
Lost, Goethe's Faust, or any other uninspired production. In philosophy it
surpasses Socrates, Plato, Zeno, Epicurus, yea, all the finest productions of
Greek and Roman classics. Even apart from its inspiration, every section is
worthy of profound study.
Strangely enough this book is one of the volumes of the Jewish Sacred
Scriptures whose place and inspiration have never been questioned by them
though it treats of God's dealings with and acceptance of one of another nation
on the broadest lines of humanity. Its usual position in the Jewish Bible is in
the third great division of their sacred oracles, viz: The Law, The Prophets,
and The Holy Writings. It is the third book of that division Psalms,
Proverbs, Job. In our English Bible it follows Esther and precedes the Psalter.
It treats of patriarchal times. The proof is manifold:
1. Religious. The head of the family is the priest and the offerings and
worship as in the days of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. (See 1:5; 42:8-9.) There
was no Bible or authoritative written standard clearly defining men's relations
and duties toward God and authoritatively disclosing the methods and principles
and purposes of the divine government. Indeed for such a revelation Job prays
(31:35). All appeals in the argument bearing on this point are made to the
traditions of the fathers. There was, as yet, no particular nation set apart as
God's people and the custodians of his oracles. In every nation, tribe, or clan
descended from Noah, God was worshiped according to traditional preservations
of past revelations. We see an illustrious example in Melchizedek, King of
Salem and priest of the most high God. God himself, in all the poetic
discussion) with one exception, is El Sheddai, the Almighty, and not Jehovah
(Cf. Ex. 6:3). The form of idolatry cited in the book (31:26-28) is the
earliest in historic development, the worship of the heavenly bodies.
2. The length of Job's life, more than 200 years (Cf. 1:2; 32:6; 42:16) places
him in the patriarchal days long before the time of Moses. Indeed every reference
in the book calls for an early age.
3. The manners, customs, institutions, and general mode of life are all
patriarchal. The city life (chap. 28) is exactly that of the earliest settled
communities, with councils of gray bearded elders, judges in the gate (29:17),
the chieftain at once judge and warrior (29:25), yet with written indictments
(31:35) and settled forms of legal procedure (9:33; 17:3; 31:28), all of which
belong to the patriarchal times. Some place these times between Genesis 11 and 12,
but it seems better to place them somewhere between Abraham and the Egyptian
bondage. The events herein described should immediately follow those of Genesis
22, and the book must have been written in or near the patriarchal times, since
no man living in a later age could have written a book that so minutely enters
into and describes the manners, customs, and institutions of that age.
The probable author of the book was Moses. The arguments tending to prove that
Moses in Midian wrote the book of Job as the first Bible book written are as
follows:
1. As Midian, where Moses lived forty years, touched Job's country, as there
was much intercommunication, as both were occupied by Semite population, Moses
had exceptional opportunity to learn of Job.
2. All the internal evidence shows that Job lived in patriarchal times,
anywhere between Abraham and Moses, and all the idioms of speech in the book
show that the author lived near the times of the scenes described. No late
author could have so projected his style so far back.
3. The correspondence between the Pentateuch and the book of Job is abundant
and marvelous.
4. The man who wrote the song of deliverance at the Red Sea and the matchless
poems at the close of Deuteronomy (3233) is just the man to write the poetic
drama of Job.
5. The problem of the book of Job, the undeserved afflictions of the righteous,
was the very problem of the people of Moses.
6. The profound discussions in the book call for just such learning, wisdom, philosophy,
and Oriental fire as Moses alone of his age possessed.
7. The existence and malevolence of a superhuman evil spirit (Job 1-2) alone
could account for these afflictions, a being of whom Job himself might be
ignorant, but well known to Moses in the power behind the magicians and
idolatries of Egypt.
8. The purpose of the book is to show: (a) the necessity of a written
revelation (Job 31:35); (b) the necessity of a daysman, mediator, redeemer (Job
9:33) to stand between God and sinful man both point to a period when there
was no written revelation and no clear understanding of the office of the
daysman in the plan of salvation, and the necessity of a manifestation of God,
visible, audible, palpable and approachable (Job 23:3-9) all indicate a period
when there was no Bible, but a desire for one, revealing the daysman and
forecasting his incarnation, and make the presumption strong that Job was the
first book of the Bible to be written and such a book could find no author
but Moses.
9. The book must have been written by a Jew to obtain a place in the canon of
the Scriptures. All the conditions meet in Moses and in him alone of all men.
This book is history, not a moral lesson based on supposititious characters.
There is no rational interpretation except as history. Ezekiel (14:14, 20) and
James (5:11) refer to it only as such. The poetical parts are too true to
nature, realistic, and personal to be regarded as a mere philosophical
discussion.
The problems of the book are two:
1. The prologue contains the problem of disinterested righteousness ;
2. The poetry, the problem of undeserved afflictions of the righteous, and
undeserved prosperity of the wicked of this world.
The objects of the book are to suggest the necessity of and to prepare the way
for a wider revelation from God:
1. A revelation of God incarnate. Job felt that God was too far away, too vague
for him to know. Hence his prayer, "Oh, that I could find him!" is
for a revelation that would reveal God as visible, palpable, audible, approachable,
and human.
2. A revelation, a book setting forth God's will, explaining the problem of
human suffering, man's duties to God and of future judgments in the next world.
This is seen in the prayer, "Oh, that mine adversary had written a
book!" Job's case was very different from Paul's. Job, suffering without a
full revelation) complains; Paul, suffering in the splendor of a complete
revelation, glories.
The prose sections and their relations to the poetical parts are as follows:
1. The prologue, chapters 1-2, introduces and gives the occasion of this
division;
2. Chapter 32:1-6, introducing Elihu;
3. Chapter 38:1, introducing God;
4. Chapter 40:1, introducing God;
5. Chapter 42:7-17 is the epilogue which gives the outcome.
The poetical sections constitute a most remarkable drama, but the poetry is
very archaic and simple.
Some questions have been raised against the integrity of the book:
1. It is objected that the prologue and epilogue do not fit the poetry and must
belong to a later time. Reply: To any fair-minded student they do fit admirably
and the whole work would be unintelligible without them.
2. It is objected that the part of Job's speech in 27:8-23 does not fit into
Job's speech and that this must be the lost third speech of Zophar. Mediating
critics say that it is Job's language, but that he retracts some things said
prior to this.
Reply: No such jumbling parts could have occurred. It is not a speech of
Zophar, for he had no third speech. It is the language of Job in the restatement
of his case, and applies to the wicked after death and is not a retraction.
3. It is objected that chapter 28 is not the language of Job because it is not
in line with his theme, but is a choral interlude, written by the author.
Reply: To thus designate this passage is sheer fancy without a particle of
proof. It thoroughly harmonizes with Job's contention that God's providence is
beyond human comprehension.
4. It is objected that the five chapters attributed to Elihu are out of harmony
with the rest of the book, and that nothing is said of him in the closing part
of the book nor at the beginning.
Reply: The interposition of Elihu was altogether proper and essential to the
full development of the subject. The whole book follows the same general plan.
The other characters are not mentioned till there is need for them and only
then are they mentioned.
5. It is objected that God did not explain the problem of the book when he came
upon the scene.
Reply: To have done this would have been to anticipate, out of due time, the
order of the development of revelation: Job must be content with the revelation
of his day, and trust God, who, through good and evil, would conduct both Job
and the world to proper conclusions.
This book shares the singularity with the book of Jonah in that they are the
only books of the Jewish Bible that speak of other nations as accepted of God.
It may here be noted that the modern commentaries are best for the exegesis of
Job but the older ones are best for the exposition. Some valuable helps are now
commended:
1. The common version to be compared with the Standard Version, Leeser's
Translation, and Conant's Translation;
2. Sampey's Syllabus to be compared with Tanner's Syllabus
and the author's analysis;
3. Two books are especially commended, viz: (a) Rawlinson's Commentary (Pulpit
Commentary) and (b) Green's Argument of the Book of Job Unfolded.
Now we give, not an analysis, but a brief introductory outline of the book, as
follows:
1. Introduction: Historical setting in prose, chapters 1-2.
2. The poetical discourses, chapters 3:1 to 42:6:
(1) Job's complaint (3)
(2) Debate of Job with his three friends (4-26)
(3) Job's restatement of his case (27-31)
(4) The interposition of Elihu (32-37)
(5) The intervention of Jehovah (38:1 to 42:6)
3. The epilogue, or concluding prose (42:7-17).
For purposes of comparison I here give the "Syllabus of the Book of
Job" by John S. Tanner of Baylor University, for his students in Baylor
University.
SOME INTRODUCTORY MATTERS
I. Purpose and Method of Study
1. Purpose:
(1) Better understanding and appreciation of the book
(2) More especially, method of Scripture-study
2. Fundamentals in Method:
(1) To the book itself rather than to treatises about it. The latter only for
suggestion and after-study of difficult points
(2) To the book itself rather than to the professor. Studies, not lectures.
Teacher gives method, not matter; only directs the student's energies to
fruitful ways
(3) To the book itself rather than to the student, "Let the Word mean what
it wants to mean"
(4) To the book itself rather than to other scriptures, referring to them only
as they assist toward the meaning of this
II. Some Helpful Literature
(1) Revised Version (Best text and indispensable. Use the marginal readings)
(2) Moulton's Modern Reader's Bible, volume on Job (modern
printing and notes helpful)
(3) Best commentary is that of A. B. Davidson in Cambridge Bible for Schools
and Colleges
(4) Driver's Introduction to the Literature of the Old Testament, chapter 9
(5) Introductory chapter in Moulton's Literary Study of the Bible
(6) Article (especially good) by Dickinson in Bibliotheca Sacra,
for January, 1900
III. General Questions to Be Answered by the Study
1. Is the book primarily history, philosophy, science, or aesthetics? If
philosophy, what the problem? What its solution?
2. What the final purpose of the book?
3. Is the plan didactic or artistic? If artistic, wherein?
4. If any poetry, how much? And wherein do the poetic content and form consist?
5. If poem, is it lyric, epic, or drama?
6. When, where, and by whom written?
7. Evidence for and against unity and integrity of the book?
8. Teaching of the book about:
(1) God
(2) Providence
(3) Future life
(4) Faith
(5) Repentance
(6) Righteousness
(7) Proper attitude toward current beliefs
9. Element of truth and of error in the position of each speaker?
10. Literary merit of the book?
11. Religious value? From each study preserve classified notes on these
questions for summing up at the close.
THE PROLOGUE (PROSE) JOB 1-2
I. Narrative (master the events in order and
detail). Fact or Parable?
II. Geography.
1. Uz (Cf. Gen. 36:21; I Chron. 1:38, 42; Lam. 4:21)
2. Teman. (See Gen. 36:15; Jer. 48:7, 20; Ezek. 35:13; Obad. 9; Amos l:llf.)
3. "The East." (See Gen. 25:6; Jer. 49:28.)
III. Persons
1. Job. (Cf. Ezek. 14:14; James 5:11). Was he an Israelite? Note social, industrial,
and religious customs.
2. Job's wife. (Job 2:9; Cf. Job 19:14-17).
3. "Sons of God" men or angels? (Cf. Job 38:7.)
4. Satan. The devil or a prosecuting angel? (See Job 2; 3b; Cf. 1 Kings
22:21f.; I Chron. 21:1; Zech. 3:lf.; Luke 22:31f.; 2 Chron. 12:7; Rev. 12:10.)
5. The three friends.
IV. The Trials. Order, progression, severity.
Differing purposes of God and Satan? What trial overcame Job?
V. Proposed Solutions of the Mystery of the
Sufferings of This Saint.
1. That revealed in the transaction, viz: God's permission:
(1) To convict and conquer Satan (Job 2:3)
(2) To test and improve Job (Cf. Luke 22:32; 1 Peter 1:7; James l:2f, 13f)
(3) To glorify God in both
2. That of Job's wife (Job 2:9), viz: Tyranny of God
3. That of Job (Job 1:21; 2:10), viz: God's exercise of his sovereignty in
severity within the limits of his grace
VI. Remarkable Literary Features:
1. Theme of profoundest and universal practical interest, viz: The problem of
sufferings of the righteous.
2. The hero chosen is of such character as to illustrate the problem and its
solution in extreme and yet most fair and impressive form.
3. The blessed state of the hero at the opening of prologue is a fit climax for
a good novel; the moral triumph at the close would be a peerless climax in
secular literature. At such dizzy heights this drama begins.
4. By the narrative in the prologue the reader is taken into confidence and
given the secret while the actors in the drama are in the dark. By this the
interest of the plot is rather increased than diminished.
ANALYSIS OF THE DRAMA
Act 1. Job's Complaint, Job 3
1. That he was ever born (3:1-10)
(1) Curses the day of his birth (3:4f.)
(2) Curses the night of his conception (3:6-10)
2. That he had not died at birth (3:11-19)
3. That he cannot now die (3:20-26) This complaint the three friends understand
to imply accusation against God.
Act II. Debate with the Three Friends, Job 4:26
Scene 1. First Round of Speeches (4-14)
1. Speech of Eliphaz (4-5)
(1) You show weakness to break down under afflictions wherein you have
comforted others (4:1-5)
(2) Your integrity is ground for hope, since only the wicked are utterly
destroyed (4:6-11)
(3) It is folly to question God's providence (4:12 to 5:7)
(a) It is irreverent (4:12-21)
(b) It is through impatience self-destructive (5:1-5)
(c) It is erroneous, since trouble is conditioned by man's own moral nature
(5:6f.)
(d) God is good, and will therefore deliver you since you are really a
righteous man (5:8-27)
2. Job's Reply (6-7)
(1) My impatience has adequate cause in my afflictions (6:1-13)
(a) My affliction is exceedingly heavy (6:1-7)
(b) I am not rebellious but undone (6:8-13)
(2) Sympathy from you as a friend would be more timely than blame (6:14-27)
(3) Likewise from God my helplessness should elicit pity rather than this
continued torture (6:28 to 7:21)
3. Speech of Bildad (8)
(1) You wrongfully imply injustice in God (8:1-3)
(2) If you will go to God aright in prayer he will give relief (8:4-7)
(8) For only the wicked are permanently cut off (8: 8-19)
(4) Because you are a just man God will surely restore you (8:20-22)
4. Job's Reply (9-10) Proposition: I cannot get a fair trial of my case (9:1f).
(1) Because my adversary (God) is too powerful for me (9:3-13).
(2) Because my adversary is judge in the case; my right is not heard (9:14-21).
(3) He is an unjust judge, dispensing rewards and punishments without moral discrimination
(9:22-24).[This marks the climax of the moral tragedy. And this is the tragedy
of tragedies. It is the deepest depth of the moral world. The climax of the
debate and of the drama are reached later.]
(4) There is no use for me to try; moral improvement will do no good (9:25-31)
(5) Oh, for a third party to act as umpire and protect me against God's tyranny
(9:32-35)
(6) God made me weak and yet takes advantage of this to afflict me (10:1-22)
5. Speech of Zophar (11)
(1) Your arrogant speech is provoking and deserves punishment (11:1-6)
(2) God's wisdom is beyond your grasp (11:7-12)
(3) But if you will turn to God and pray he will deliver you (11:13-20)
6. Job's Reply (12-14)
(1) Your attempt to explain and defend God to me is contemptible presumption
(12:1 to 13:12)
(2) I will dare to plead my cause before God and challenge him to convict me
(13:13-28). (Read 12:15a, "Though he . . . I will not wait")
(3) Man's natural weakness, the brevity of life, and the uncertainty of a future
life call for leniency in the Almighty (14:1-22)
[Thus far the friends have made no attempt to explain the cause or purpose of
Job's affliction. The only charge they bring is that of a wrong spirit toward
God in the affliction. The debate centers in the nature and conduct of God.]
Scene 2. Second Round of Speeches (15-21)
1. Speech of Eliphaz (15)
(1) Your talk is imprudent and self-condemnatory (15:1-13)
(2) It is preposterous that you, iniquitous fellow, should justify yourself
before God in whose sight good men and even angels are unclean (15:14-16)
(3) The explanation of your calamities is the doctrine of retribution. Your
terrible forebodings verify it (15:16-35)
2. Job's Reply (16-17)
(1) Your speech is vain; the matter cheap, and the method cruel (16:1-5)
(2) My awful affliction is not punishment for sin (16: 6-17)
(a) That men think so according to an accepted doctrine only intensifies my
sorrow (16:6-8)
(b) There were no forebodings all was sudden (16:9-15)
(c) I am innocent, both in deed and thought (16:16f.)
(3) I turn from men to God; my only hope is that God will vindicate me after
death (16:18 to 17:9)
(4) To talk of restoration in this life is foolish (17:10-16)
3. Speech of Bildad (18)
(1) You are talking senseless rage (18:1-4)
(2) Retribution is the clear explanation of your case. The extent and severity
of your calamities prove it (18:5-21)
4. Job's Reply (19)
(1) You are doing me no good (19:1-4)
(2) The occasion of my affliction is not in me, but God (19:5-22)
(3) I am more sure that I shall be vindicated beyond the grave (19:23-29)
5. Speech of Zophar (20) Certainly your sorrow is the fruit of sin. The brevity
of your dashing prosperity and the suddenness and completeness of your fall, prove
it so before reason and tradition
6. Job's Reply (21) Your theory is not supported by the facts; the wicked often
prosper indefinitely and pass away in peace [In the second round the interest
has centered in the moral perversity of Job as cause of his sorrows. While the
conflict of debate is sharper, Job's temper is more calm; and he is perceptibly
nearer a right attitude toward God. He is approaching a victory over his
opponents, and completing the more important one over himself.] Scene 3. Third
Round of Speeches (22-26)
1. Speech of Eliphaz (22)
(1) Your sin is the only possible ground for your suffering; for God does not
afflict you for any selfish interest, and certainly not because you are pious
(22-1-4)
(2) Denial only aggravates your original guilt. Yours is highhanded wickedness,
well known to God and men (22:5-14)
(3) It is mad folly for you to persist in the wicked way whose course and end
are an old story (22:15-20)
(4) Repent and reform, and God will forgive and greatly bless you (22:21-30)
2. Job's Reply (23-24)
(1) The weight of my affliction I have not adequately expressed (23: If.)
(2) Conscious of my integrity, I expect final vindication, but am puzzled and
grieved to be held in the dark at this helpless distance from God (23:3-17)
(3) As for your doctrine of universal and even retribution, the facts utterly
disprove it and puzzle me (24:1-25). [Climax of the debate.]
3. Speech of Bildad (25) Ignore your facts. You have no right to be heard
before the majesty of God.
4. Job's Reply (26) You help me not; it is not the fact of God's power that I
seek to know, but his use of it. [Job's victory is complete; Zophar does not
speak; the debate is closed. The traditional and prevalent doctrine that all
sin is punished in this life and that all suffering is punishment of specific
sin, is confuted by Job. This result, however, is negative; the explanation of
his calamities he has not found. It is clear that along with Job's struggle for
theoretical solution of the mystery, a far more significant one is waging in
his moral attitude toward God in the affliction. With calmer temper and
hopefulness, he is steadily ascending from the depths (9-10) to this practical
heart solution of the problem.]
Act III. Job's Formal Restatement of His Case
(27-31)
Introduction: My statement shall be in conscious integrity and the fear of God
(27:1-12)
1. I maintain the 'great doctrines which I have been supposed to deny (27:13 to
28:28)
(1) God's justice in punishing the wicked (27:13-23)
(2) God's wisdom in ordering the universe (28:1-27)
(3) That the highest human wisdom is to fear God and live righteously (28:28)
2. Now my experience I will place side by side with this current creed which I
also hold (29-30)
(1) My former blessed state (29)
(2) My present miserable state in contrast (30)
3. The experience is not explained by the doctrines. These would point to moral
obliquity in me which I solemnly deny. There must be a hitherto unrecognized
principle in God's providence (31)
Act IV. Interposition of Elihu (32-37)
The author's narrative prose introduction (32:1-5) The speaker's introduction
(32:6 to 33:7)
(1) In spite of my deference to age I must speak, imperiled by the failure of
these distinguished men to convict Job of his guilty error (32:6-22)
(2) My speech will be sincere and candid (33:1-5)
(3) Job, I will discuss with you in God's stead (33:6f.)
1. Job, you are very wrong; God's concealed and severe providences are to wean
men from their evil and work their good (33:8-33)
2. You wise men have allowed Job to triumph in his rebellious implications of
injustice in God. His facts are not pertinent, since God's plans are
inscrutable to men (34)
3. Human conduct affects only men, not God. Your challenge is arrogance, which
it is well for you that he has not visited with due punishment (35)
4. God's works are mighty, his dispensations just, his designs merciful, his
counsels inscrutable. Therefore, fear him (36-37)
[Elihu makes a distinct advance on the three friends toward the true meaning of
the mystery. They claimed to know the cause; he, the purpose. They said that
the affliction was punitive; he, beneficent. His error is that he, too, makes
sin in Job the occasion at least of his sorrow. His implied counsel to Job approaches
the final climax of a practical solution.]
Act V. Intervention of God (38:11-42:6)
[Out of the storm cloud which has been gathering while Elihu spoke, God now
addresses Job.]
Scene 1. First Arraignment and Reply (38:11040:5)
1. God's arraignment of Job (38:1 to 40:2)
It is foolish presumption for a blind dependent creature to challenge the
infinite in the realm of providence. The government of the universe, physical,
and moral, is one; to question any point is to assume understanding of all.
Job, behold some of the lower realms of the divine government and realize the
absurdity of your complaint.
2. Job's Reply (40:3-5) I see it; I hush.
Scene 2. Second Arraignment and Reply (40:6 to 42:6) To criticize God's government
of the universe is to claim the ability to do it better. Assuming the role of
God, suppose, Job, you try your hand on two of your fellow creatures, the
hippopotamus and the crocodile.
2. Job's Reply (42:1-6) This new view of the nature of God reveals my wicked
and disgusting folly. Gladly do I embrace his dispensations in loving faith.
[Here is completed Job's moral triumph, and this is the practical solution, of
the great problem and the climax of the drama.]
The Epilogue (Prose) Job 42:7-17
1. God's rebuke of the three friends (42:7f.) God commends Job's earnest,
honest, though impatient, search for the truth rather than the friends'
vehement unthinking defense of him upon a popular half-truth that has become an
accepted creed. Apparently Elihu's position is so nearly correct as not to call
for censure.
2. Job's Exaltation (42:9-17)
SOME CONCLUSIONS
1. There seems no ground to question the integrity of the book. The portions
refused by some part of Job's restatement and the whole of Elihu's discourse
are thoroughly homogeneous and essential to the unity of the book. Likewise
the prose portions.
2. It has been complained that the problem of the book that of the suffering
of the righteous receives no solution at the close from Jehovah. The truth of
life and the master stroke of the production is that the theoretical solution
is withheld from the sufferer while he is led to the practical solution which
is a religious attitude of heart rather than an understanding of the head.
3. The final climax is the highest known to human heart or imagination. A
vital, personal, loving faith in God that welcomes from him all things is the
noblest exercise of the human soul. Dr. Moulton is not guilty of extravagance
when he says that the book of Job is the greatest drama in the world's
literature.
4. The moral triumph came by a more just realization of the nature of God. This
gives motive to all good and from all evil. It is a cure for most human ills.
Much helpful literature on this book is cited by Dr. Tanner, but the author
cautions the student to bear in mind that Davidson and Driver are radical
critics. This syllabus is the best analysis of the book of Job in literature,
but there are two serious faults with it, or objections to it:
(1) In the first speech of Eliphaz, his interpretations are rather weak and not
very clear. The reader will do well to compare these with those of the author
which are given at the proper place in his interpretation of the book.
(2) The main objection is that he failed to see the necessity of a revelation
from God to man.
QUESTIONS
1. In general terms what of
the book of Job? 2 Where do we find this book?
3. Of what times in the
world's history does it treat and what the proof?
4. In the Genesis early world
history where would you place these times?
5. Was it written in or near
the times of which it treats?
6. Who the probable author
and what the arguments tending to prove it? 7 Is it history or a moral lesson
based on supposititious characters and what the proof?
8. What the problems of the
book?
9. What the objects of the
book?
10. What the prose sections
of the book and what their relations to the poetical parts?
11. What the literary
character of the poetical sections?
12. What questions have been
raised against the integrity of the book and the author's reply to each of
them?
13. What singularity does
this book share with the book of Jonah?
14. In general, what may be
noted of the commentaries on this book?
15. In particular, what helps
commended by the author?
16. Give a brief
introductory outline to the book.
17. Whose syllabus on this
book is given here and why?
18. What Tanner's express
purpose and method in his treatment of the book?
19. What helpful literature on
the book cited by Tanner and what caution with respect to some of these by the
author?
20. According to Tanner what
important questions to be answered in the study of this book?
21. What the author's
criticism of this syllabus, both favorable and unfavorable?
THE PROLOGUE OF JOB
Job 1-2.
The book of Job divides itself into three parts: The Prologue, the Poetical
Drama, and the Epilogue. The Prologue is a prose narrative but intensely dramatic
in form and recites the occasion of the poetical drama which constitutes the
body of the book. The Epilogue, also dramatic in prose, recites the historical
outcome of the story.
The analysis of the Prologue consists of chapters Job 1-2 with forward
references elsewhere in the book.
I. Two scenes and a problem.
1. An earth view of a pious, prosperous, and happy man (1:1-5; with 29:1-25;
31:1-34)
2. An earth view in which his piety is considered in the crosslights of divine
and of satanic judgment (1:6-12)
3. A problem: Can there be disinterested piety?
II. First trial of Job's piety Satan permitted to conduct the trial under limitations (1:13-22)
1. Satan's stroke on Job the farmer (1:14-15)
2. Satan's stroke on Job the stockman (1:16)
3. Satan's stroke on Job the merchant (1:17)
4. Satan's stroke on Job the father (1:18-19)
5. Result of first trial (1:20-22)
III. Second trial of Job's piety (2:1-10)
1. Another heaven view in which Job is vindicated and the malice of Satan
condemned, but further trial permitted under limitation (2:1-6)
2. Satan's fifth stroke Job's person smitten with leprosy (2:7-8)
3. Satan's sixth stroke on Job the husband (2:9)
4. Result (2:10) IV. Satan's continued trial (2:11-13; and other references in
the book)
1. Satan's seventh stroke on Job the kinsman, neighbor, and master (19:13-19)
2. Satan's eighth stroke on Job's social position (30:1-15)
3. After long interval Satan's ninth stroke on Job the friend (2:11-13)
4. Satan's tenth and master stroke in leading Job to attribute the malice of
these persecutions to God and to count him an adversary without mercy or
justice. (See 9:24, "If it be not he, who then is it?"; 19:11;
30:35.)
The Prologue opens with two remarkable scenes, an earth view, a heaven view,
and a problem. (See the analysis of the Prologue.)
The earth view (1:1-5) presents a pious, prosperous, and happy man. The length,
extent, and unbroken character of this prosperity, Job's ascription of it to
God, the healthful effect on his piety and character, are all marvelous. It had
lasted all his life without a break. It gave him great wealth, a numerous and
happy family, health for every member, great wisdom, extensive knowledge and
power, high honor among men, and yet did not spoil him. He was a model husband
and father, successful merchant, farmer, and shepherd, benevolent and just
toward men, pure in life, and devout toward God. (See chapters 29-31.)
The heaven view (1:6-12) in which Job's piety is considered in the contrasted
light of divine and of satanic judgment, is every way marvelous and
instructive. It reveals the fact that on stated occasions, angels, both good
and bad, must report their work to the sovereign God; that Satan's field of
movement is restricted to this earth. He has no work in heaven but to report
when God requires it, and then under inquisition he must tell where he has
been, what he has seen, what he has even thought, and what he has done. It must
not be supposed that he attends this angelic assembly from curiosity or from
audacity, but is there under compulsion. Though fallen and outcast he is yet
responsible to God, and must account to his Sovereign.
The bearing of this Prologue on the chief object of the book, namely, to
suggest the necessity of and to prepare the way for a wider revelation, is as
follows:
1. None of the actors or sufferers on earth know anything of this extraneous
origin, purpose, and limitation of his fiery ordeal through which Job and his
family must pass. Hence the need of a revelation that man may understand how
the spiritual forces of heaven and hell touch his earthly life.
2. How far short all the several philosophies of Job and his friends in
accounting for the cause, purpose, or extent of the great suffering which
befell Job. Hence the conclusion that unaided human philosophy cannot solve the
problem of human life, and therefore a revelation is needed.
Satan's power is manifested in four simultaneous scenes of disaster:
(1) The stroke on Job, the farmer (1:14-15);
(2) The stroke on Job, the shepherd, or stockman (1:16);
(3) The stroke on Job, the merchant (1:17);
(4) The stroke on Job, the father (1:18-19).
The cunning, malice and cumulative power of Satan's strokes are seen, as
follows:
(1) The mockery of the date of all these disasters, the elder son's birthday,
the gathering of all the children in one house, and the joyous feasting.
(2) The timing of Job's reception of the news of the several disasters shows
that it was stroke upon stroke without intermission.
(3) The sparing of one survivor alone from each disaster, and him only that he
might be a messenger of woe.
(4) The variety, adaptation, and thorough naturalness of these means, none of
them so out of character as to suggest the supernatural: the Sabeans, the fire
of God (a Hebraism), the Chaldeans, the desert tornado. Why suspect
supernatural agents when the natural causes are all possible, evident, and
credible?
(5) The refinement of cruelty in sparing Job's wife that she might add to his
wretchedness by her evil counsel.
(6) The making of his kindred, neighbors, friends, servants, and the rabble
instruments of torture by their desertion, reproach, and mistreatment.
(7) Knowing that Job's intelligence must perceive that such a remarkable
series, even of natural events, could not result from chance, but must have
been timed and directed by one endowed with supernatural power, and full of
malice, he reveals the very depths of his wickedness and cunning in leading Job
to attribute this to God.
The scene of Job's reception of the direful news (1:14-20) is very remarkable.
See the cumulative power of blow on blow without intermission for breathing.
Job's grief is great, but his resignation is instant. He ascribes all the
disasters to the divine Sovereign, without a thought of Satan, and without any
knowledge of the divine purpose. Here ends Job's first trial in complete
victory for him.
The second scene, in heaven, shows angels, good and bad, reporting divine and
satanic judgment on Job's piety and Satan rebuked for malice against Job but
permitted a further test (2:1-6), in which he was given power over Job's person
with one limitation. Satan's power over Job's person, and yet hidden from Job,
may be seen by comparison of 2:7 with other references in the book. The nature
of this affliction is found to be elephantiasis, a form of leprosy, usually
attributed to the direct agency of God. Yet, it was a well-known disease in that
country, and might be explained by natural causes. So Satan's agency is again
hidden and Job has no thought of him.
The awful pain and loathsomeness of this disease, then and now, isolated the
patient from human association and sympathy, and human judgment said it was
incurable. The law of Moses on the isolation and treatment of lepers is found
in Leviticus 13:45f.; Numbers 5:1-4; 12:14. Their degredation and isolation in
New Testament times, Christ's sympathy for them, and his healing of them may be
seen in Luke 17:11-19 and other references. Lew Wallace, in Ben Hur,
Book VI, chapter 2, "Memorial Edition," gives a vivid description of
leprosy in the case of Ben Hur's mother and sister:
Slowly,
steadily, with horrible certainty, the disease spread, after a while bleaching
their heads white, eating holes in their lips and eyelids, and covering their
bodies with scales; then it fell to their throats, shrilling their voices, and
to their joints, hardening the tissues and cartilages, slowly, and, as the mother
well knew, past remedy, it was affecting their lungs and arteries and bones, at
each advance making the sufferers more and more loatheeorne; and so it would
continue till death, which might be years before them.
He sets forth the awful state of the leper thus:
These four are accounted as dead, the blind, the leper, the poor, and the
childless. Thus the Talmud.
That is, to be a leper was to be treated as dead to be excluded from the city
as a corpse;. to be spoken to by the best beloved and most loving only at a
distance; to dwell with none but lepers; to be utterly unprivileged; to be
denied the rites of the Temple and the synagogue; to go about in rent garments
and with covered mouth, except when crying, "Unclean! Unclean!" to
find home in the wilderness or in abandoned tombs; to become a materialized
specter of Hinnom and Gehenna; to be at all times less a living offense to
others than a breathing torment to self; afraid to die, yet without hope except
in death.
N. P. Willis in his poem on the leper (The Poetical Works of N. P. Willis,
pp. 5-9) gives a fine poetic description of the leper, the progress of the
disease and a typical leper healed by Jesus. The substance of this poem is as
follows:
In the first section is a description of the approach of the leper, at which
the cry is heard,
Room for the
leper I Room I And as he came
The cry pass'd on Room for the leper! Room! Then the response by the leper, "Unclean! Unclean!" In the
second section is a description of a young man before the attack of the disease
and then a leper after the disease had laid hold upon him. The blighting
effect, of the disease is here depicted very forcefully. In the next section we
find the most horrifying denunciations of the leper. He makes his way to the
temple and, standing before the altar, he hears his doom: Depart! depart, O child Of
Israel, from the temple of thy God I For He has smote thee with His chastening
rod: And to the desert-wild, From all thou lov'st away, thy feet must flee,
That from thy plague His people may be free. Depart I and come not near The
busy mart, the crowded city, more; Nor set thy foot a human threshold o'er; And
stay thou not to hear Voices that call thee in the way; and fly From all who in
the wilderness pass by. Wet not thy burning lip In streams that to a human
dwelling glide; Nor rest thee where the covert fountains hide; Nor kneel thee
down to dip The water where the pilgrim bends to drink. By desert well or
river's grassy brink; And pass thou not between The weary traveller and the
cooling breeze; And lie not down to sleep beneath the trees Where human tracks
are seen; Nor milk the goat that browseth on the plain, Nor pluck the standing
corn, or yellow grain. And now, depart! and when Thy heart is heavy, and thine
eyes are dim, Lift up thy prayer beseechingly to Him Who, from the tribes of
men, Selected thee to feel His chastening rod. Depart! O Leper I and forget not
God!
Then follows a description of the leper departing and going into the wilderness
where Jesus found him and healed him. The closing lines of the poem are as
follows:
His leprosy was
cleansed, and he fell down
Prostrate at Jesus' feet and worshipp'd Him.
The counsel of Job's wife and Job's reply to it are found in Job 2:9-10. Here
ends Job's second trial in victory as complete as in the first trial. Satan
drops out of the story after the second trial. Now, the question is, How do we
know he is yet taking part? The answer is, we see his tracks. Job's wife in 2:9
quotes the very words of Satan in 2:5. Satan, though hidden, uses Job's wife
against him as Eve was used against Adam (Cf. 2:5; 2:9). Washington Irving, on
a wife's influence in helping her husband to recover from a great misfortune,
says, I have
often had occasion to remark the fortitude with which women sustain the most
overwhelming reverses of fortune. Those disasters which break down the spirit
of man, and prostrate him in the dust, seem to call forth all the energies of
the softer sex, and give such intrepidity and elevation to their character,
that at times it approaches to sublimity. Nothing can be more touching than to
behold a soft and tender female, who had been all weakness and dependence, and
alive to every trivial roughness, while treading the prosperous paths of life,
suddenly rising in mental force to be the comforter and support of her husband
under misfortune, and abiding with unshrinking firmness the bitterest blasts of
adversity. Sketch Book.
In this sifting of Satan, Job's piety surpasses that of Adam's in that Adam
with eyes open, through love of his wife, heeded her advice and fell, but Job,
blind to many things that Adam was not, withstood the temptation of his wife,
and held fast his integrity. In another part of this book Job himself claims to
be superior to Adam (See Job 31:33), in that he did not attempt to hide his sin
as did Adam.
Satan further appears to be taking part, though he now ostensibly disappears
from the story. He is really present, using Job's friends and tempting Job
himself.
Now, Job's words in 1:21, and his reply to his wife in 2:10 solve the first
problem suggested by Satan, "Can there be sincere and disinterested
piety?" Hypocrites may serve for the loaves and the fishes, but the true
children of God serve him even in the loss of all things and in excruciating
sufferings. See case of Paul in the New Testament.
The results of Satan's three trials are as follows: Job's complete triumphs in
the first and second; the third was a downfall. Satan failed in the main point,
but he got Job into a heap of trouble.
There are proofs from the book that a considerable time elapsed between the
smiting with leprosy and the visit of the three friends, so that the time of
the intervening events prepares the mind to understand the subsequent debates,
and enables it to appreciate this man's heroic fortitude and patience before he
uttered a word of complaint. Their coming by appointment or previous
arrangement has a bearing on the lapse of time since he was smitten with
leprosy. The time necessary for each friend to hear of Job's calamity, and then
to arrange by communication with each other for a joint visit, and then for the
journey, show that considerable time elapsed in this interval.
On the same point the time necessary for the intervening events set forth in 19:13-19;
30:1-15, namely, desertion by wife, brothers, sisters, and friends, and the
horrible treatment he received from young people, from criminals whom he had
punished, and from the cruel rabble, all of which preceded the visit of his
three friends must be considered here in order to maintain the thread of the
story.
What he himself says on the length of time since his last affliction may be
noted (7:3): "So am I made to possess months [literally moons] of
misery"; and (29:2): "Oh that I were as in the months of old."
The time intervening between the last scene with his wife and the visit of his
friends could not have been less than two months and was doubtless three or
four; so we correlate his sufferings and losses in their order thus: loss of
all his property, loss of all his children, loss of his health, alienation of
wife and kindred, loss of honor among men and every exalted position, followed
by contempt and disgust of the rabble. As he himself puts it (12:5): "In
the thought of him that is at ease there is contempt for misfortune."
Now the reader must connect all these things and vividly see them following in
order for so long a time, a time of unremitting pain, horrible by night and by
day, in order to grasp the idea of this man's heroic patience before he uttered
a word of complaint.
The last straw that broke down the fortitude of Job, that broke his spirit, was
the seven days' silence of his friends, staring upon his wretchedness without a
word of comfort. Comparing the Satan of Job with the serpent (Gen. 3) ; the
Satan of David (2 Sam. 24:1; I Chron. 21:1); the Satan of Joshua, the high
priest (Zech. 2:1-5); the Satan of Jesus (Matt. 4:1-11); the Satan of Peter
(Luke 22:31 with 1 Peter 5:8-9) ; the Satan of Paul (1 Cor. 5:5; 2 Cor. 12:7; Eph.
6:11, 16); the Satan of John (Rev. 12:7-13), and the scene in 1 Kings 22:19-23,
we find:
1. That the case of the Satan of Job is in harmony with the other cases of the
Bible.
2. That when Satan is permitted to try men he is an agent of God.
3. That there are several scriptural names of him and that each one has its own
meaning, thus:
(1) "Satan" which means adversary, suggesting that he is the
adversary of God and his people.
(2) "Devil," which means an accuser and slanderer; he is the cunning
and malignant suspecter and accuser of the righteous; he accuses men to God and
slanders God to men.
(3) "Apollyon," which means "destroyer" and indicates the
nature of his work.
(4) "Beelzebub" which means prince, or chieftain. He is the prince,
or chief, of demons.
(5) "Dragon" which means serpent, and refers to his slimy work in the
garden of Eden where he took the form of a serpent.
4. That his field of operation is restricted to the earth.
5. That he is limited in power.
6. That he must make stated reports to God.
7. That he can touch the righteous only by permission.
8. That he can touch them only in matters that try their faith.
9. That he cannot take them beyond the intercession of the High Priest.
10. That he cannot touch their lives.
11. That he cannot touch them except for their good, and therefore his trials
of the righteous are included in the "all things" of Romans 8:28.
12. That no philosophy which knows only the time life of men and natural causes
can solve the problem of life.
QUESTIONS
1. What the natural
divisions of the book, and what the relation of these parts to each other?
2. Give an analysis of the
Prologue.
3. What the two scenes and
the problem of the Prologue?
4. Describe the earth view,
5. What of the heaven view
and its revelations?
6. What bearing has this
Prologue on the chief object of the book, namely, to suggest the necessity of
and to prepare the way for a wider revelation?
7. How is Satan's power
manifested here?
8. Show the cunning, malice,
and cumulative power of Satan's strokes.
9. Describe the scene of
Job's reception of this news.
10. Describe the second
scene, in heaven.
11. What the further test of
Job permitted to Satan?
12. How was Satan's power on
Job's person manifested and yet hidden from Job?
13. Describe this disease
and its effect on Job's social relations.
14. Compare the law of Moses
on the isolation and treatment of lepers.
15. Show their degradation
and isolation in New Testament times, Christ's sympathy for them, and his
healing of them.
16. Give Ben Hur's vivid
description of leprosy in the case of his mother and sister and the substance
of N. P. Willis' poem on the leper.
17. What the counsel of
Job's wife and what Job's reply?
18. Since Satan drops out of
the story after the second trial, how do we know he is yet taking part?
19. What has Washington
Irving (Sketch Book) to say on a wife's influence in helping her husband to
recover from a great misfortune?
20. In this sifting of Satan
where does Job's piety surpass that of Adam?
21. Where else, in the book
of Job, does Job himself claim to be superior to Adam?
22. How does Satan further
appear to be taking part?
23. How is the first problem,
as suggested by Satan, solved?
24. What was the result of
Satan's three trials?
25. Give proofs from the
book that a considerable time elapsed between the smiting with leprosy and the
visit of the three friends, so stating in order the intervening events as to
prepare the mind to understand the subsequent debates, and enable it to
appreciate this man's heroic fortitude and patience before he uttered a word of
complaint.
26. What the last straw that
broke down the fortitude of Job?
27. Give a summary of the
Bible teaching relative to Satan.
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE POETICAL DRAMA AND
JOB'S COMPLAINT
Job 3:1-26.
The names and lineal descent of the human persons in the drama, their relationship,
and their religious ideas are as follows:
1. Job was a descendant of Uz, the son of Nahor, who was the brother of Abraham
(Gen. 22:20-21). The father of Abraham and Nahor was an idolater, but Nahor
shared in the light given to Abraham. Hence it is said, "The God of
Abraham and the God of Nahor." So, also, Nahor's descendants shared the
knowledge of the true God.
2. Eliphaz was a descendant of Teman, the son of Esau, the son of Isaac, the
son of Abraham. Hence his knowledge of God. Eliphaz, himself a prophet,
received revelations (4:12-17). Teman, his country, ages later, was renowned
for wisdom (Jer. 49:7).
3. Bildad was a descendant of Shuah, the son of Abraham and Keturah (Gen.
25:1-2). Hence his traditional knowledge of God.
4. Zophar was a Namathite. Naamah in Joshua's time was a city bordering on Edom
and included by conquest in Judah's territory. Hence, probably, Zophar was also
a descendant of Esau, or possibly one of the Amorite confederates of Abraham '
(Gen. 14:13).
5. Elihu, the Buzite, was a descendant of Buz, the brother of Uz the son of
Nahor the brother of Abraham (Gen. 22:20). Hence his knowledge of the true God.
The religious ideas of these men were founded on the tradition of special
revelations from God. Eliphaz was a prophet and probably received revelations
direct from God. The agreement of their ideas doubtless was due to their common
source and wherein they disagreed was due to deviations caused by not having a
written revelation and the different points of view from which they made
observations) as individuals. It is probable that Job's ideas with reference to
sin and suffering were the same as these three friends which were commonly
accepted as the theory till his experience upset them and put Job to thinking.
Elihu was most correct of all, but not that he had more light than the others
but because, in all probability, he was more balanced in his observations, and
thus formed better conclusions. In view of the striking and distinguishing
characteristics of these five men, the peculiarities of mind, temper, and
creed, the good and bad elements of their respective arguments, so clearly
brought out in the development of this discussion, and in view of their
peculiarities of style, idioms of speech and local references, bearing on the
times, country, and habitat assigned to each, and in view of subsequent Old
Testament and New Testament references to the story, to which one of these two
conclusions are we driven:
1. Are they fictitious persons, children of the writer's creative brain, who
weaves his background of story in the drapery of a parable, and then sets forth
in the literary form of a poetical drama his philosophy concerning divine
providence?
2. Is this history; are these real persons voicing their own actual experiences,
observations, and convictions; is everything true to character the time, the
persons, the events, the style, and the idioms of speech?
They are not fictitious persons, children of the writer's creative brain, like
the characters of a novel, but are real persons, voicing their own actual
experiences, observations, convictions, and their several philosophies of life.
They are all descendants of Shem and of the two brothers, Abraham and Nahor,
though none of them in the promised line through Abraham which developed into
the chosen nation. The place of the book is Uz, a district of central Arabia,
southeast of Palestine, touching or connecting with Edom on the south, the
lower Euphrates on the east, and on the northeast the mountains east of the
Jordan. In loose terms, it is known as the East Country, a country largely
desert, traversed by caravans, largely pastoral, but with agricultural sections
and with settled communities here and there that in that time were called
cities.
The time in general and in particular is as follows:
1. In general, the patriarchal days somewhere between the time of Jacob and the
bondage in Egypt
2. In particular, some months after Job was smitten with leprosy (7:3,29:2)
The theme of the poetical drama is the mystery of divine Providence in the
government of men prior to revelation, and the three necessities which this
trial of Job reveals as relating to law, worship, the future state, prayer, and
the supernatural interference with men, as illustrated in the case of Job are
as follows:
1. The necessity of a revelation
2. The necessity of the incarnation
3. The necessity of a daysman (See Psalm 19; 73.)
Now the following is a good, brief outline of the poetical drama and epilogue:
THE POETICAL
DRAMA, JOB 3:1 TO 42:6
Act 1. Job's complaint (3)
Act II. Debate with the three friends (4-26)
Scene 1. First round of speeches (4-14)
Scene 2. Second round of speeches (15-21)
Scene 3. Third round of speeches (22-26)
Act III. Job's formal restatement of his case (27-31)
Act IV. Interposition of Elihu (32-37)
Act V. Intervention of God (38:1 to 42:6)
Scene 1. First arraignment and reply (38:1 to 40:5)
Scene 2. Second arraignment and reply (40:6 to 42:6)
THE EPILOGUE,
PROSE, (42:7-17)
1. God's rebuke of the three friends (42:7)
2. Job's intercession (42:8)
3. Job's exaltation (42:9-17)
It will be noted that this drama consists of five acts and many scenes. It
commences with chapter 3 and closes with 42:6.
The several acts are Job's complaint, the debate with the three friends, Job's
restatement of the case, Elihu's interposition, and Jehovah's intervention.
The problem of the prose prologue, "Can there be disinterested
piety?" having been solved affirmatively, now gives way for an entirely
new and broader problem: The solution of the mystery of God's providential
dealings with man on earth and in time, particularly in the undeserved
sufferings of the righteous and in the undeserved prosperity of the wicked.
This problem assumes in the progress of the discussion many shades of
interrogative form, as follows:
1. Is exact justice meted out to man on earth so that we may infallibly infer
his moral character from the blessings or sufferings which come upon him?
2. If this be true in general, in the case of the individual, to what extent is
the problem complicated by the unity and responsibility of society as blessings
or sufferings come upon a community, a city, a tribe, or a nation? What becomes
of the individual case in this larger view? How much greater the complications
when the individual is seen to be only an infinitesimal part of the universe?
3. Can the finite mind solve such a problem? Is this life the whole of man's
life? If not, what the folly of inferring character from an imperfect view of a
fragment of earth life and of seeking a final judgment in each passing
dispensation of time?
4. Considering man's ignorance of the extraneous and supernatural forces, both
good and bad, which touch man's life, can he confidently infer the cause,
purpose, and extent of temporal adversity and prosperity?
5. Are all earth sufferings penal and all of its blessings a reward of desert?
6. Can unaided man find out and comprehend the Almighty and Omniscient? Can man
contend with the Almighty without a Surety? Is there not a necessity for a
divine incarnation so that man unterrified may talk to God face to face as with
a friend? Shall not God become visible, palpable, and human before a solution
is possible? In view of human imperfection and divine perfection is not a
superhuman interpreter needed in order to man's full understanding? In view of
sin, is not a daysman, or mediator, needed? In view of requisite holiness and
the dreadfulness of sin, is not a written revelation, and infallible standard
of right, needed that man may authoritatively know the indictment against him
and how to meet it?
The discussion of these and kindred questions not only set this book apart as
the profoundest philosophy of time, but also clearly indicates its object,
namely, a preparation for a written revelation and an incarnation which will
supply the needed surety, umpire, daysman, mediator, and redeemer. Now I will
give a summary of Job's complaint which is a brief outline of chapter 3. He complains:
1. That he was ever born (3:1-10)
2. That he had not died at birth (3:11-15)
3. That he had not been an abortion, failing of being before reaching the
period of quickening (3:16-19)
4. That he cannot now die (3:20-26) He means, by cursing the day of his birth,
this: Let not God regard it; let man leave it out of the calendar; let those
who curse days neglect not to curse this one; let it be eclipsed by darkness
and let this darkness be the deepest, even the shadow of death.
By cursing the night of his conception he means: Let it be solitary and barren;
let it have no dawn; let it be an eternal night.
Days may become accursed or blessed in the popular mind, by association with
great events. Friday, or hangman's day, is counted unlucky for marriages, the
undertaking of new enterprises, or the commencing of a journey. November 5 as
long marked for celebration in the English Calendar because the date of the
discovery of the Guy Fawkes' gunpowder plot to blow up the Houses of
Parliament. 60, in the American Calendar, July 4 becomes Independence Day. The
presumption of cursing one three-hundred-and-sixty-fifth part of all future
time because of one calamity to one man is an awful presumption, yet Job
himself afterward called these words "rash words," extorted by great
anguish (6:1-3) and that as "speeches of one that is desperate; they are
as wind" and called not for serious reproof (6:26).
In Job 3:13-19 we have Job's idea of the peace and restfulness of death, so far
as its subjects can be touched by the living. He says that there they are
quiet, asleep, at rest, with counselors, and princes, like unborn infants; no
troubles from the wicked and no oppression of servants. Though Job 80
thoroughly believed that his disease was incurable, his restoration to former
prosperity impossible, was hopeless of vindication in his life, and so
earnestly longed and begged for a speedy death, yet he never did think of
suicide, and the bearing of this on the superiority of his religion over all
the great heathen philosophies is tremendous. Compare Hamlet's soliloquy
commencing, "To be, or not to be, that is the question." Job's idea
of man's responsibility to God pre-vented him from thinking of suicide. He
believed in the absolute ownership of God as to human life, and man therefore
has no right to take his own life. He understood the disposition of life to
belong to God. On the other hand, heathen philosophies taught that if life's
ills became unbearable, man had a right to end his own life under such
circumstances by his own hand. They never realized the sanctity of human life
as taught by the Christian religion. Thus, Job had a better religion than men
attained to by philosophical inquiry.
The meaning of "shadow of death," in the book of Job, in the Psalms,
and the Prophets is not death itself, but as a shadow it may fall across the
path of life at any point. In Pilgrim's Progress Bunyan locates the
"Valley of the Shadow of Death," early in the pilgrimage and not just
before death. "Death" is one thing, and the "shadow of
death" is an entirely different thing.
There is a difficulty in the text, translation and meaning of Job 3:8. The word
rendered "leviathan" occurs elsewhere in the book. What is a
leviathan? Does the crocodile of the Nile come up to the description in chapter
41? Is it possible that "leviathan" in 3:8 is used figuratively like
"the great dragon" in Revelation 12:7? In the phrase, "let them
that curse the day," is there a reference to enchanters or to the power
attributed to Balaam by Balack in Numbers 22:6-7? The Revised Version is in
keeping with the Hebrew in this passage. It is properly translated "who
are ready to rouse up leviathan." "Leviathan" literally means
crocodile, but in this passage it is used, I think, in a figurative sense,
meaning reptile, serpent, the devil.
QUESTIONS
1. What the names and lineal
descent of the human persons in the drama, showing their relationship and
accounting for their religious ideas?
2. What can you say of the
character of this book, negatively and positively?
3. What the place of the
book?
4. What the time in general
and in particular?
5. What the theme of the
poetical drama?
6. What three necessities
does this trial of Job reveal?
7. Give an outline of the
poetical drama and epilogue.
8. What in particular the
new problem of the drama?
9. What the various
interrogative forms of this new problem?
10. What the purpose of the
book as set forth in the discussion of these questions?
11. Give a summary of Job's
complaint.
12. What does he mean by
cursing the day of his birth?
13. What does he mean by
cursing the night of his conception?
14. How many days become
accursed or blessed in the popular mind? Give examples.
15. What can you say of the presumption
of cursing one three-hundred-and-sixty-fifth part of all future time because of
one calamity to one man and how does Job afterward regard it?
16. Why did Job not commit
suicide?
17. What was Job's idea of
the peace and restfulness of death, so far as its subjects can be touched by
the living?
18. What the meaning of
"shadow of death," in the book of Job, in the Psalms, and in the
Prophets?
19. What the difficulty in
the text, translation and meaning of Job 3:8. The word rendered "leviathan"
occurs elsewhere in the book. What is a leviathan? Does the crocodile of the
Nile come up to the description in chapter 41? Is it possible that
"leviathan" in 3:8 is used figuratively like "the great
dragon" in Rev. 12:7? In the phrase, "let them that curse the
day," is there a reference to enchanters or to the power attributed to
Balaam by Balack in Numbers 22:6-7?
THE FIRST ROUND OF SPEECHES
Job 4-14.
This debate extends from chapter 4 to chapter 31 inclusive. There are three
rounds of speeches by all the four except that Zophar drops out in the last
round. Each round constitutes a scene in Act II of the drama.
In this chapter we will discuss Scene I and commence with the first speech of
Eliphaz (4-5) the points of which are as follows:
Introduction (4:1-2). In his introduction he deprecates grieving one so
afflicted but must reprove Job,
1. For weakness and inconsistency. The one who had instructed, comforted, and
strengthened others in their troubles, faints when trouble comes to him
(4:3-5).
2. Because Job had neither the fear of God nor personal integrity, for the fear
of God gives confidence, and integrity gives hope, but Job's complaint implies that
he had neither confidence nor hope, therefore he must be devoid of the fear of
God and of integrity (4:6).
3. Because the observation of the general trend of current events argued Job's
guilt. The innocent do not perish; those who reap trouble are those who have
sowed trouble and plowed iniquity. Ravening lions, though strong and terrible,
meet the hunter at last (4:7-11).
4. Because revelation also convicts him. Eliphaz relates one of his own visions
(4:12-17), very impressively, which scouted the idea that mortal man could be
more just than God, or purer than his maker. But Job's complaint seemed to
embody the idea. Eliphaz argues from his vision that a pure and just God
crushes impure and unjust men and suggests the application that Job's being crushed
reproves his impurity and injustice (4:18-21).
5. Because Job's outcry against God was foolish and silly, and since no angels
would hear such complaint, or dare to avert its punishment (5:1-2) there can be
no appeal from the supreme to the creature.
6. Because observation of a particular case illustrates Job's guilt (5:3-5).
The circumstances of this case seen by Eliphaz, make it parallel with Job's
case; a certain foolish man took root and prospered for a while, but the curse
smote him suddenly and utterly; his children perished, his harvest was eaten by
the hungry, and all his substance was snatched away.
7. Because these results are not accidental, nor of earthly origin, but must be
attributed to God who punishes sin. Because man is a sinner he is born unto
trouble, as the sparks fly upward (5:6-7).
The remedy suggested to Job by Eliphaz is as follows:
1. Take your case to God confession of sin and repentance are suggested (5:8)
who will exalt the penitent (5:11) as certainly as he has frustrated their
craftiness (5:12-14) and so the poor may have hope after the mouth of their
iniquity is stopped (5:15-16).
2. Instead of murmuring, count yourself happy in receiving this punishment, and
after penitence expect restoration of prosperity (5:17-27).
On comparing this analysis with that given by Dr. Tanner (see his Syllabus on
the speech of Eliphaz) it will be noted that the author here differs widely
with Tanner in his analysis and interpretation of this speech. Tanner presents
Eliphaz as assuming the position that Job was a righteous man and that God
would deliver him. The author presents Eliphaz as taking the position that Job
had sinned, which was the cause of his suffering and that he should confess and
repent; that he should count himself happy in receiving this punishment, and
thus after penitence expect the restoration of prosperity. It will be recalled
here that the author, in commending the Syllabus of Dr. Tanner noted the
weakness of his analysis at this point.
There are several things notable in this first speech of Eliphaz, viz:
1. The recurrence in all his speeches of "I have seen," "I have
seen," "I saw," showing that the experience and observation of a
long life constituted the basis of his argument.
2. The good elements of his arguments are as follows: (1) He refers to the
natural law of sowing and reaping (Cf. Gal. 6:7); (2) the sinner's way to
happiness is through confession and repentance; (3) chastisement of an erring
man should be recognized as a blessing, since it looks to his profit (Cf. Prov.
3:11 and the use made of it as quoted in Heb. 12:5).
3. The bad elements in his speech are as follows: (1) His induction of facts
ignores many other facts, particularly that all suffering is not penal; (2) He
fails in the application of his facts, since the case before him does not come
in their classification; in other words, through ignorance he fails in his
diagnosis of the case, and hence his otherwise good remedies fall short of a
cure.
4. The exquisite simplicity and literary power of his description of his
vision, makes it a classic gem of Hebrew poetry.
The following points are noted in Job's reply (6-7) :
1. The rash words of my complaint are not evidence of previous sins, but the
result of immeasurable calamities from the hand of God. They cannot be weighed;
they are heavier than the sandy shores which confine the ocean; they are
poisoned arrows from the quiver of the Almighty which pierce my very soul and
rankle there; they are terrors marshalled in armies by the Almighty (6:1-4).
2. The braying of an ass and the lowing of an ox are to be attributed to lack
of food, not meanness. Let the favorable construction put upon the discordant
noise of hungry animals be applied to my braying and lowing (6:5), for in my case
also there is the hunger of starvation since the food set before me is
loathsome and without savor (6:6-7).
3. I repeat my prayer to God for instant death, because I have not the strength
to endure longer, nor the wisdom to understand (6:8-9, 11-13) but while
exulting in the pain that slays me, my consolation still is, that I have not
denied the words of the Holy One (6:10).
4. Instead of moralizing on the causes and rebuking suspected sins, friends
should extend kindness to one ready to faint, even though he forsake the fear
of God (or lest he forsake, 6:14). This is like the story of the drowning boy
who asked the moralizing man on the bank to help him out first and then inquire
into the causes of his mishap.
5. In your treatment of me, ye are like a deceitful brook, roaring with water
only while the snow on the mountains is melting, but being without springs,
directly you run dry. The caravans from the desert that come to it hoping, turn
aside from its dusty channels and perish. So you that seemed like a river when
I was not thirsty, put me to shame by your nothingness now that I thirst.
Compare "Wells without water . . . clouds without rain" in Jude
12-13.
6. Is it possible that you condemn me because you apprehend that otherwise I
might ask you for help? In your moralizing are you merely hedging against the
expectation of being called on to help a bankrupt sufferer, by furnishing a
reward or ransom for the return of my stolen flocks and herds? Do you try to
make me guilty that you may evade the cost of true friendship (6:21-23)? I have
asked for no financial help, but for instruction. How forcible are right words
!
7. But you, instead of explaining my calamities have been content to reprove
the words of my complaint, extorted by the anguish of my calamities, words that
under the circumstances should have been counted as wind, being only the
speeches of one that is desperate. 8. The meanness of such treatment in your
case would prompt in other cases to cast lots for the orphans of the dead and
make merchandise out of a stranded friend by selling him as a slave (6:27).
This is a terrible invective, but more logical than their argument, since
history abundantly shows that some believers in their creed have done these
very things, the argument being that thereby they are helping God to punish the
wicked.
9. He begs them to turn from such injustice, look on his face and behold his
sincerity, concede his ability to discern a thing which is wicked, and accept
his deliberate statement that he is innocent of the things which they suspect
(6:28-30).
10. He laments his case as hopeless (7:1-10). Here Job asks if there is not a
warfare to man and his days like the days of a hireling. His waiting for relief
was like a hireling waiting for his wages, during which time he is made to pass
months (moons) of misery. In this hopeless condition he longs for relief and
would gladly welcome death from which there is no return to the walks of this
life.
11. Job now lifts his voice in complaint to God (7:11-21). In the anguish of
his spirit he could not refrain from complaining that God had set a watch over
him and terrified him with dreams and visions. He was made to loathe his life
and again to wish for death. Then he closes this speech by raising the question
with the Almighty as to why he would not pardon him if he had sinned (as his
accusers had insinuated) and take away his iniquity. Here he addresses God as a
"watcher of men"; as one who had made him a target for his arrows.
Now we take up the first speech of Bildad, the Shuhite (8).
The substance of this speech is as follows:
1. He charges that Job seeks to make himself better than God, then he hints at
the sins of his children and insinuates that Job does not pray, for prayer of
the right sort brings relief (8:1-7).
2. He exhorts Job to learn the lesson from the past. The wisdom of the fathers
must be good. Therefore, learn the lesson of the ancients (8:8-10).
3. He contrasts the fate of the wicked and that of the righteous, reasoning
from cause to effect, thus insinuating that Job's condition was the result of a
cause, and since (to him) all suffering was the result of sin, the cause must
be in Job (8:11-22).
The substance of Job's reply is,
1. True enough a man cannot be righteous with God, since he is unable to
contend with him. He is too wise and powerful; he is invincible. Who can match
him (9:1-12)?
2. Praying does not touch the case. He is unjust and proves me perverse.
Individual righteousness does not avail to exempt in case of a scourge. He
mocks at the trial of the innocent and the wicked prosper. Then Job says,
"If it be not he, who then is it?" This is the climax of the moral
tragedy (9:1324).
3. There is no daysman betwixt us, and I am not able to meet him in myself for
Judgment (9:25-35).
4. I will say unto God, "Why? Thou knowest I am not wicked." Here it
will be noted that a revelation is needed in view of this affliction (10:1-7).
5. God is responsible for my condition; he framed and fashioned me as clay, yet
he deals with me as milk or cheese; it is just the same whether I am wicked or
righteous; changes and warfare are with me (10:8-17).
6. Why was I born? or why did I not die at birth? Then would I have escaped
this great suffering, but now I must abide the time until I go into the land of
midnight darkness (10:18-22).
The substance of Zophar's first speech is this:
1. What you have received is not as much as you deserve; you are full of talk
and boastful; you are self-righteous and need this rebuke from God (11:1-6).
2. You cannot find out God; he is far beyond man; he is all-powerful and
omniscient; man is as void of understanding as a wild ass's colt (11:7-12).
3. Put away your wickedness; you need to get right and then you will be
blessed; you should set your heart and house in order, then all will clear up;
then you will be protected from the wicked (11:13-20).
Job's reply to the first speech of Zophar embraces three chapters, as follows:
1. No doubt you are the people and wisdom will die with you; I am not inferior
to you; you mock and do not help; I, though upright, am a laughingstock and
you, who are at ease, have contempt for misfortune; God brought this about
(12:1-6).
2. Learn the lessons from nature; the beasts, the birds, the earth, and the
fishes can teach thee; everybody knows these things; the ear tries words and
the palate tastes food, and wisdom is learned by age (12:7-12).
3. God is the source of wisdom and power; he deals wisely with all men; he
debases and he exalts (12:13-25).
4. I understand it all as well as you; ye are forgers of lies; ye are
physicians of no value; your silence would be wisdom; you speak wickedly for
God, therefore your sayings are proverbs of ashes and your defenses are
defenses of clay (13:1-12)
5. Why should I take my life in my hand thus? I want to be vindicated before I
die; "Though he slay me, yet will I trust him"; I know that I am
righteous; therefore I have hope (13:13-19).
6. He pleads his cause with God; he asks two things of God, viz: (1) that he
would put an end to his bodily suffering and (2) that he would abstain from
terrifying him; then he challenges God to call him; then he interrogates God
relative to his sins, God's attitude toward him and his dealings with him; and
finally charges God with unjust dealings with him (13:20-28).
7. Man that is born of woman is frail and sinful; man's weakness should excite
pity with the Almighty; that which is born of an unclean thing is unclean and
since a man's days and months are numbered, why not turn from him as an hireling
and let him rest (14:1-6).
8. The hope of a tree, though it be cut down, is that it will sprout again but
man's destiny to lie down in death and rise no more till the heavens pass away
should be a cause for mercy from God (14:7-12).
9. In despair of recovery in this life Job again prays for death; that God
would hide him in the grave till his wrath be past; that he would appoint him a
day, in the hope that if he should die he would live again; his destiny is in
God's hands and therefore he is hopeless for this life (14:13-17).
10. Like the mountain falling, the rock being removed out of its place and
waters wearing away the stones, the hope of man for this life is destroyed by
the providences of God; man is driven by them into oblivion; his sufferings
become so great that only for himself his flesh has pain and only for himself
his soul mourns (14:18-22).
In this round of speeches the three friends have followed their philosophy of
cause and effect and thus reasoning that all suffering is the effect of sin,
they have, by insinuations, charged Job of sin, but they do not specify what it
is. Job denies the general charge and in a rather bad spirit refutes their
arguments and hits back at them some terriffic blows. He is driven to the
depths of despair at the climax of the moral tragedy where he attributes all
the malice, cunning, and injustice he had felt in the whole transaction to God
as his adversary. They exhort him to repent and seek God, but he denies that he
has sinned; he says that he cannot contend with the Almighty because he is too
high above him, too powerful, and that there is no umpire, or daysman, between
them. Here Job is made to feel the need of a revelation from God explaining all
the mysteries of his providence. In this trial of Job we have 'Satan's partial
victory over him -where he led Job to attribute the evils that had come upon
him to God. This is the downfall in Job's wrestle with Satan. He did not get on
top of Job but gave him a great deal of worry. We will see Job triumphing more
and more as he goes on in the contest.
QUESTIONS
1. What the points of Eliphaz's first speech?
2. What things are notable in this first speech of Eliphaz?
3. What the points of Job's reply (6-7)?
4. What the substance of Bildad's first speech?
5. What the substance of Job's reply?
6. What the substance of Zophar's first speech?
7. What Job's reply?
8. Give a summary of the proceedings and results of the first round.
THE SECOND ROUND OF SPEECHES
Job 15-21.
In this chapter we take up the second round of speeches, commencing with the
second speech of Eliphaz. This speech consists of two parts, a rejoinder to
Job's last speech and a continuation of the argument.
The main points of the rejoinder (15:1-16) are as follows:
1. A reflection on Job's wisdom (1-3). A wise man would not answer with vain
knowledge, windy words, nor reason with unprofitable words.
2. An accusation of impiety (4-6). Job is irreverent, binders devotion, uses a
serpent tongue of craftiness whose words are self-condemnatory. (Cf. what
Caiaphas said about Christ, Matthew 26:65.)
3. A cutting sarcasm (7-8). Wast thou before Adam, or before the creation of
the mountains, and a member of the Celestial Council considering the creation,
that thou limitest wisdom to thyself?
4. An invidious comparison (9-10). What knowest thou of which we are ignorant?
With us are the gray-headed, much older than thy father.
5. A bigoted rebuke (11-16). You count small the consolation of God we offered
you in gentle words [the reader may determine for himself how much
"comfort" they offered Job and note their conceit in calling this
"God's comfort," and judge whether it was offered in "gentle"
words]. Your passions run away with you. Here a quotation from Rosenmuller is
in point: Quo te tuus animus rapit? "Whither does thy soul hurry
thee?" Quid oculi qui tui vibrantes? "What means thy rolling
eyes?" It turns against God; this is presumptuous: A man born of woman,
depraved, against God in whose sight angels are imperfect and the heavens
unclean. How much more an abominable, filthy man drinking iniquity like water.
The points in the continuation of the argument are as follows:
1. Hear me while I instruct thee (17). I will tell you what I have seen.
2. It is the wisdom of the ancients handed down (18-19). Wise men have received
it from their fathers and have handed it down to us for our special good.
3. Concerning the doom of the wicked (20-30). This is a wonderful description
of the course of the wicked to their final destruction, but his statements, in
many instances, are not true. For instance, in his first statement about the
wicked (v. 20), he says, "The wicked man travaileth with pain all his
days," which is in accord with his theory, but does not harmonize with the
facts in the case. The wicked does not travail with pain "all his
days." They are not terrified "all the time" as Eliphaz here
pictures them. In this passage Eliphaz intimates that Job may be guilty of
pride (v. 25) and of fatness (v. 27).
4. The application (31-35). If what he said about the wicked was true, his
application here to Job is wrong. It will be seen that Eliphaz here intimates
that Job was guilty of vanity and self-deception; that he was, perhaps, guilty
of bribery and deceit, and therefore the calamity had come upon him.
The following is a summary of Job's reply (16-17) :
1. Your speech is commonplace. I have heard many such things. Ye are miserable
comforters (v. 2).
2. You persist when I have urged you to desist. It is unprovoked. Your words
are vain, just words of wind (v. 3). ½
3. If our places were changed, I could do as you do, but I would not. I would
helo and comfort vou (4-5).
4. You ask me to cease my complaint, but whether I speak or forbear, the result
is the same. I have not ensnared my feet, but God has lassoed me (v. 6).
5. He gives a fearful description of God's assault (7-14): (1) as a hunter with
hounds he has harried me; (2) he has abandoned me to the malice of mine
enemies; (3) as a wrestler he has taken me by the neck and shaken me to pieces;
(4) as an archer he has bound me to the stake and terrified and pierced me with
his arrows; (5) as a mighty conqueror he opened breach after breach in my
defenses with batteringrams; and (6) as a giant he rushes on me through the
breach in the assault.
6. As a result, I am clothed in sackcloth and my dignity lies prone in the
dust; my face is foul with weeping, my eyelids shadowed by approaching death,
although no injustice on my part provoked it and my prayer was pure (15-17).
7. I appeal to the earth to cover my blood and to the heavenly witness to vouch
for me. Friends may scorn my tears, but they are unto God. (See passages in
Revelation and Psalms.) Note here the messianic prayer, "that one might
plead for a man with God, as a son of man pleadeth for hi9 neighbor." But
my days are numbered and mockers are about me (16:18 to 17:2).
8. The plea for a divine surety (messianic) but God has made me a byword, who
had been a tabret. Future ages will be astonished at my case and my deplorable
condition (17: 3-16).
There are several things in this speech worthy of note, viz: 1. The messianic
desire which finds expression later as David and Isaiah adopt the words of Job
to fit their Messiah. 2. Job is right in recognizing a malicious adversary, but
wrong in thinking God his adversary; God only permitted these things to come to
Job, but Satan brought them.
There are two parts of Bildad's second speech (chap. 18), viz: a rejoinder (w.
1-4) and an argument (vv. 5-21). The main points of his rejoinder are:
1. Job hunts for words rather than speaks considerately.
2. Why are the friends accounted as beasts and unclean in your sight?
3. Job was just tearing himself with anger and altogether without reason.
4. A sarcasm: The earth will not be forsaken for thee nor will the rock be
moved out of its place for thee (1-4).
The argument (5-21) is fine and much of it is true, but it is wrong in its
application. The following are the points as applied to the wicked:
1. His light shall be put out.
2. The steps of his strength shall be straightened.
3. His own counsel shall be cast down.
4. There shall be snares everywhere for his feet.
5. Terrors of conscience shall smite him on every side.
6. He shall be destroyed root and branch and in memory.
There are also two parts to Job's great reply: His expostulation with his
friends (19:1-6) and his complaint against God (19:7-29). The points of his
expostulation are:
1. Ye reproach me often without shame and deal hardly with me.
2. If I have sinned, it is not against you but my error remains with myself.
3. The snares you refer to are not because of my fault but they are from God,
for he has subverted me and compassed me with his net.
The items of his complaint against God are as follows:
1. He will not hear me, though I am innocent; surely there is no justice.
2. He has walled me up and set darkness in my path.
3. He has stripped me of my glory and he has broken me down on every side.
4. He has plucked up my hope like a tree and his fiery wrath is against me.
5. He has counted me an adversary and I am besieged by armies round about.
6. He has put away from me my brethren, friends, kindred, family, servants, and
I am escaped with the skin of my teeth.
7. I appeal to you, O ye my friends, for pity instead of persecution.
8. Oh that my words were written in a book or were engraved with a pen of iron
in the rock forever, but I know that my redeemer liveth and will at last stand
upon the earth, and I shall behold him in my risen body, then to be vindicated
by him.
9. Now I warn you to beware of injustice to me lest the sword come upon you,
for there is a judgment ahead. Here it may be noted that verses 23-24 refer to
the ancient method of writing and that Job expresses in verses 25-27 a great
hope for the future. Compare the several English translations of 19:26 with
each other and the context and then answer:
1. Does Job intend to convey the idea that he will see God apart from his body)
i.e., when death separates soul and body?
2. Or does he mean that at the resurrection he will see God from the viewpoint
of his risen body?
3. If you hold the latter meaning, which version, after all, is the least
misleading, the King James, the Revised, the American Standard Version, or
Leeser's Jewish translation? The answer is, Job here means that he will see God
from the viewpoint of his risen body, as the King James Version conveys.
Zophar's second speech is harsher than his first, and consists of a rejoinder
(20:1-3) and an argument (20:4-29).
The points of his rejoinder are:
1. Haste is justified because of his thoughts;
2. The reproach of 19:28-29, "If ye say, How may we pursue him and that
the cause of the suffering is in me, then beware of the sword. My goel
[redeemer] will defend me," he answers thus: "Thus do my thoughts
answer me and by reason of this there is haste in me; I hear the reproof that
puts me to shame and the spirit of my understanding gives answer.
The points of his argument are:
1. Since creation the prosperity of the wicked has been short, his calamity
sure and utter, extending to his children.
2. The very sweetness of his sin becomes poison to him.
3. He shall not look on streams flowing with milk, butter, and honey.
4. He shall restore and shall not swallow it down, even according to all that
he has taken.
5. In the height of his enjoyment the sword smites him and the arrow pierces
him,
6. Darkness wraps him, terrors fright him, and heaven's supernatural fires burn
him.
7. Heaven reveals his iniquity and earth rises up against him. This is the
heritage appointed unto him by God. Certain other scriptures carry out the idea
of milk, butter, and honey, viz: Exodus 3:8; 13:5; 33:3; 2 Kings 18:32;
Deuteronomy 31:20; Isaiah 7:22; Joel 3:18, and several classic authors refer to
them, also, as Pindar, Virgil, Ovid, and Horace. It will be noted that Zophar
intimates that Job might be guilty of hypocrisy (v. 12), of oppressing the poor
(v. 19) and of greediness (v. 20).
Job's reply (chap. 21) is more collected than the former, and the points are as
follows:
1. Hear me and then mock. This is only fair and may afterward prove a
consolation to you.
2. Do I address myself to man for help? My address is to God and, because I am
unheard, therefore I am impatient?
3. Mark me and be astonished. What I say even terrifies me.
4. The prosperity of the wicked who defy God is a well known fact.
5. How seldom is their light put out. They are not destroyed as you say.
6. Ye say God visits it on his children. What is that to him?
7. Here are two cases, one prosperous to the end and the other never so. The
grave is sweet to both.
8. God's reserved judgment is for the wicked. Do you not know this?
9. In conclusion I must say that your answers are falsehoods.
In this second round of speeches we have observed that Job has quieted down to a
great extent and seems to have risen to higher heights of faith, while the
three friends have become bolder and more desperate. They have gone beyond
insinuations to intimations, thus suggesting certain sins of which Job might be
guilty. While Job has greatly improved in his spirit and has ascended a long
way from the depths to which he had gone in the moral tragedy, the climax of
the debate has not yet been reached. Tanner says, "While the conflict of
debate is sharper, Job's temper is more calm; and he is perceptibly nearer a
right attitude toward God. He is approaching a victory over his opponents, and
completing the more important one over himself."
QUESTIONS
1. Of what does the second
speech of Eliphaz consist?
2. What the main points of
the rejoinder (15:1-16)?
3. What the points in the
continuation of the argument?
4. What summary of Job's
reply (16-17)?
5. What things in this
speech are worthy of note?
6. What the two parts of
Bildad's second speech (18)?
7. What the main points of
his rejoinder?
8. What can you say of his
argument and what the points of it?
9. What the two parts to
Job's great reply?
10. What the points of his
expostulation?
11. What the items of his
complaint against God?
12. Explain verses 23-24,
13. What great hope does Job
express in verses 25-27?
14. Compare the several
English translations of 19:26 with each other and the context and then answer:
What great hope does Job express in 19:25-27?
15. How does Zophar's second
speech compare with the first and what the parts of this speech?
16. What the points of his
rejoinder?
17. What the points of his
argument?
18. What scriptures carry
out the idea of milk, butter, and honey, and what classic authors refer to
this?
19. What can you say of
Job's reply (21) and what his points?
20. What have we found in
the second round of speeches?
THE THIRD ROUND OF SPEECHES
Job 22-26.
Eliphaz's third speech consists of three parts: 22:1-4; 22: 5-20; and 22:21-30.
The subject of part one (vv. 1-4) is: God's dealings with men not for selfish
interests, And the main points are:
1. A man who is wise may be profitable to himself, but not to God.
2. Man's happiness cannot add to God's happiness, because that resides in
himself.
3. Man's piety does not provoke affliction from God, for he does not fear man
nor is he jealous of man. The subject of part two (vv. 5-20) and the status of
the case in general, are expressed thus:
Your wickedness is the cause of your suffering. For the first time Eliphaz now
leaves insinuations, intimations, and generalities, and, in response to Job's
repeated challenge comes to specifications, which he cannot know to be true and
cannot' prove. This is the difficult part of all prosecutions, viz: to specify
and to prove) as the Latin proverb expresses it: Hie labor, hoc opus est. The
breakdown of Eliphaz on this point prepares the way for Job's speedy triumph.
Bildad dares not follow on the same line; all the wind is taken out of his
sails; he relapses into vague generalities and with lame brevity repeats
himself. Zophar who has the closing speech of the prosecution, is so completely
whipped, that he makes no rejoinder. It is a tame windup of a great discussion,
confessing advertising defeat.
The specifications of Eliphaz's charges against Job are:
l. Thou hast taken pledges of thy brother for nought (6a). (For the heinousness
of this offense see later legislation, viz: Exodus 22:26; Deuteronomy 24:6, 17;
and the reference in Ezekiel 18:16.)
2. Thou hast stripped the naked of their clothing (6b).
3. Thou hast withheld water and bread from the famishing, and all this when
thou hadst the earth and wast honorable in it (7-8).
4. Thou hast refused the pleadings of necessitous widows and robbed helpless
orphans [See Job's final pathetic and eloquent reply in chapter 31, where he
sums up the case and closes the defense], therefore snares, fear, and darkness have
come upon thee like a flood of waters (9-11).
5. These were presumptuous and blasphemous sins because you argued that God
could not see you, denying his omniscience (12-14).
6. You have imitated the antediluvians who, ungrateful for divine mercies, bade
God depart and denied his power and who therefore were swallowed up by the
flood becoming an object lesson to future ages and a joy to the righteous
(15-20). (Cf. 2 Peter 2:4-15 and Jude 6-16.)
The passage, Job 22:21-30, consists of an exhortation and a promise. The items
of the exhortation, and the implication of each are as follows:
1. Acquaint thyself with God (v. 21), which implies Job's ignorance of him.
2. Accept his law and treasure it up in thy heart (v. 22), which implies Job's
enmity against God.
3. Repent and reform (v. 23), which implies wickedness in Job.
4. Cease worshiping gold and let God be the object of thy worship (v. 24),
implying that he was covetous.
The items of the promise are:
1. God, not gold, shall be thy treasure and delight and his worship thy joy
(vv. 25-26).
2. Thy prayers will be heard and thy vows accepted (v. 27).
3. Thy purposes will be accomplished and thy way illumined (v. 28).
4. Thou shall hope for uplifting when cast down and thy humility will secure
divine interposition (v. 29).
5. Thou shall even deliver guilty men through thy righteousness (v. 30). [Cf.
Genesis 18:25-32; ten righteous men would have saved Sodom; but compare Ezekiel
14:14, 20 and Jeremiah 15:1; see also Job's reply in chapter 31.] The items of
Job's reply as it applies to his particular case (23:1 to 24-12) are:
1. Even yet my complaint is accounted rebellion by men though my hand represses
my groaning (23:2).
2. "Oh that I could now get the case before God himself he would deliver
me forever, but I cannot find him, though he finds me" (3:10a).
3. When he has fully tried me, as gold is tested by fire, I shall be
vindicated, for my life has been righteous (10b-12). [This is nearly up to
Romans 8:28,]
4. But his mind, in continuing my present trouble though I am innocent, is
immutable by prayers and his purpose to accomplish in me what he desires is
inflexible (13-14).
5. This terrifies me, because I am in the dark and unheard (15-17).
6. Why are there not judgment days in time, so that those that know him may
meet him? (24:1).
7. Especially when there are wicked people who do all the things with which I
am falsely charged, whom he regards not
The items of broad generalization in this reply are as follows Here Job passes from
his particular case to a broad generalization of providential dealings and
finds the same inexplicable problems]:
1. There are men who remove land marks, i.e., land stealers (v. 2). (Cf.
Deuteronomy 19:14; 27:17; and Hosea 5:10; also Henry George vs. Land Ownership
in severally and limitations of severally ownership when it becomes a
monopoly), so that it shuts out the people from having a home. (See Isaiah
5:8.)
2. There are those who openly rob the widow and orphan and turn the poor away
so that they have to herd as wild asses and live on the gleanings from nature
(w. 3-8).
3. There are those who pluck the fatherless from the mother's breast for slaves
and exact the clothing of the poor for a pledge, so that though laboring in the
harvest they are hungry, and though treading the wine press they are thirsty
(vv.9-11).
4. In the city men groan, the wounded cry out in vain for help and God
regardeth not the folly (v. 12).
5. These are rebels against light, yet it is true that certain classes are punished:
(1) the murderer; (2) the thief; (3) the adulterer (13-17).
6. The grave gets all of them, though God spares the mighty for a while and if
it is not so, let some one prove me a liar and my speech worth nothing (18-25).
In Bildad's reply to Job (chap. 25) he ignores Job's facts; repeats a
platitude, How should man, impure and feeble, born of a woman, a mere worm, be
clean before the Almighty in whose sight the moon and stars fade?
Job's reply to Bildad is found in 26:1-4, thus:
1. Thou hast neither helped nor saved the weak.
2. Thou hast not counseled them that have no wisdom.
3. Thou hast not even done justice to what is known.
4. To whom have you spoken, and who inspired you?
Job excels Bildad in speaking of God's power (26:5-14), the items of which are:
1. The dead tremble beneath the waters and the inhabitants thereof before him.
2. Hell and destruction are naked to his sight. [Cf. "Lord of the
Dead," Matthew 22:32 and other like passages.]
3. The northern sky is over space and the suspended earth hangeth on nothing.
4. The clouds hold water and are not rent by it; his own throne is hidden by
the cloud spread upon it.
5. A boundary is fixed to the waters and a horizon to man's vision, even unto
the confines of darkness.
6. The mountains shake and the pillars tremble, yet he quells the raging storm.
7. These are but the outskirts and whispers of his ways and we understand his
whisper better than we understand his thunder.
Two things are worthy of note here, viz:
1. Job was a martyr, vicarious, he suffered for others.
2. Job's sufferings were a forecast of the suffering Messiah as Abraham was of
the suffering Father. So far, we have found:
1. That good men often suffer strange calamities while evil men often prosper.
2. That the sufferings of the righteous come from intelligence, power, and
malice, and so, too, the prosperity of the wicked comes from supernatural power
as well.
3. That man cannot solve the problem without a revelation, and the suffering
good man needs a daysman, and an advocate.
4. That before one can comprehend God, God must become a man, or be incarnated.
5. That there must be a future, since even and exact Justice is not meted out
here.
6. That there is a final judgment, at which all will be rewarded for what they
do.
7. That there must be a resurrection and there must be a kinsman redeemer.
Many things were not understood at that time, such as the following:
1. That Satan's power was only permitted, he being under the absolute control
of God.
2. That suffering was often disciplinary and, as such, was compensated.
3. That therefore the children of God should glory in them, as in the New
Testament light of revelation Paul understood all this and gloried in his
tribulation.
4. That the wicked were allowed rope for free development and that they were
spared for repentance. Peter in the New Testament gives us this light.
5. That there is a future retribution; that there are a heaven and a hell.
6. That this world is the Devil's sphere of operation as it relates to God's
people.
QUESTIONS
1. Of what does Eliphaz's
third speech consist?
2. What the subject of part
one (1-4) and its main points?
3. What the subject of part
two (5-20) & in general, what the status of case?
4. What the specifications
of Eliphaz's charge against Job?
5. Of what does 22:21-30
consist?
6. What the items of the
exhortation, and what the implication of each?
7. What the items of the
promise?
8. What the items of Job's
reply as it applies to his particular case (23:1-24)?
9. What the items of broad
generalization in this reply?
10. What was Bildad's reply
to Job (25)?
11. What Job's reply to
Bildad?
12. In what does Job excel
Bildad (5-14) and what the items?
13. What two things are worthy
of note here?
14. So far, what have we
found?
15. What was not understood
at that time?
JOB'S RESTATEMENT OF HIS CASE
Job 27-31.
INTRODUCTION: A PBELIMINARY INTERVIEW WITH THE HIGHER CRITICS
The radical wing of the higher critics say,
1. That all that part of this statement from 27:8 to the end of 28 is not the
words of Job, i.e., when you read to 27:7 you should skip to 29:1 where Job
resumes.
2. That 27:8 to 23 is the missing third speech of Zophar, here misplaced.
3. That chapter 28 is a choral interlude by the author of the book.
The reasons for these contentions, they say, are that 27:8 to 23 is wholly at
war with Job's previous and subsequent statements concerning the wicked and
that a third speech from Zophar is needed to complete the symmetry of the
debate. They further say that chapter 28 does not fit into Job's line of
thought nor into the arguments of the three friends, and that interludes by the
author recited by the choir are customary in dramas.
The mediating critics say that there is a real difficulty here in applying
27:8-23 to Job, but that it may be explained by assuming that in a calm
restatement of the case Job is led to see that he had, in the heat of the
discussion, gone somewhat too far in his statement concerning the wicked and
takes this opportunity of modifying former expressions. Dr. Sampey's
explanation in his syllabus is this: Chapters 27 and 28 are difficult to understand,
because Job seems to take issue with his own position concerning the fate of
the wicked. Possibly he began to see that, in the heat of argument, he had
placed too much stress on the prosperity of the wicked.
Dr. Tanner's statement is much better. He says:
There seems no ground to question the integrity of the book. The portions
refused by some part of Job's restatement and the whole of Elihu's discourse
are thoroughly homogeneous and essential to the unity of the book.
The author's reply to these contentions is as follows:
1. That Zophar made no third speech because he had nothing more to say. Even
Bildad in his third speech petered out with a repetition of a platitude. In a
word) the whole prosecution broke down when Eliphaz in his last speech left the
safety of generalities and came down to specifications and proofs of Job's
guilt.
2. There is not a particle of historical proof or probability that a copyist
left out the usual heading introducing a speaker and mixed up Zophar's speech
with Job's.
3. Fairly interpreted, the section (27:8-23) harmonizes completely with Job's
previous contentions, neither retracts nor modifies them, and is essential to the
completeness of his restatement of the case. He has denied that in this life
even and exact justice is meted out to the wicked; he has not denied the
ultimate justice of God in dealing with the wicked. The great emphasis in this
section, which really extends from verse 7 to the end of the chapter, is placed
on the outcome of the wicked, "When God taketh away his soul," as in
our Lord's parable of the rich fool. Then though he prospered in life (v. 9),
"He openeth his eyes and he is not," like our Lord's other parable,
the rich man who in hell lifted up his eyes, being in torment (Luke 16). Then,
"he would fain flee out of God's hand" (v. 22) and then the lost
spirits of men who preceded him "shall clap their hands and hiss" (v.
23) as the lost souls greeted the King of Babylon on his entrance into Sheol
(Isa. 14:9-10,15-16).
Chapter 28 also is an essential part of Job's restatement harmonizing perfectly
with all his other contentions, namely, that God's government of the universe
is beyond the comprehension of man. It is this very hiding of wisdom that
constituted his problem. He is willing enough to fear God and depart from evil,
but wants to understand why the undeserved afflictions of the righteous, and
the undeserved prosperity of the wicked in time.
The idea of chapter 28 being a choral interlude by the author of the book (see
Watson in "Expositor's Bible") is sheer fancy without a particle of
proof and wholly against all probability. While the book is a drama it is not a
drama for the stage. The author of the book nowhere allows even his shadow to
fall on a single page. In succeeding acts and scenes God, the devil, and man,
each speaks for himself, without the artificial mechanism and connections of
stage accessories.
Job takes an oath in restating his case which relates to his integrity
(27:1-6). The items of this oath are (1) the oath itself in due and ancient
form, (2) that his lips should speak righteousness, (3) that he would not
justify them (the three friends), (4) that he would hold his integrity till
death, (5) that he would hold to his righteousness and would maintain a clear
conscience as long as he lived. Then follows Job's imprecation, thus:
Let mine enemy be as the wicked, And let him that riseth up against me be as
the unrighteous. For what is the hope of the godless, though he get him gain,
When God taketh away his soul? Job 27:7-8.
Then comes his description of the portion of the wicked after death (27:9-23) :
God will not hear his cry when trouble comes and I tell you the whole truth
just as you ought to know it already. Now this is the portion of the wicked:
His children are for the sword, his silver and raiment are for the just and
innocent, his house shall not endure, his death shall be as other people and
his destiny will be eternally fixed.
In 28:1-11 he shows that man's reason is superior to the instincts of the lower
animals, since by skill and labor in mining and refining he can discover,
possess, and utilize the hidden ores and precious stones, the way to which no
fowl and no beast ever knew.
But there is a limitation placed on man for he can never discover nor purchase
the higher wisdom of comprehending God's plan and order of the universe, and of
his complex providence, because this wisdom resides not in any place to which
he has access, neither in the earth, sea, sky, nor Sheol, and he neither knows
how to price it nor has the means to purchase it (12-22). God alone has this
wisdom (23-27).
The highest wisdom attainable by man comes by God's revelation: And unto man he said,
Behold, the fear of the Lord, that is wisdom; And to depart from evil is
understanding. Job 28:28.
All this leaves Job's case without explanation, but in chapters 29-31 we have
it, thus:
Chapter 30 shows what his case was then, as he was derided was watched over by
God, when his children were about him, when his prosperity abounded, when he
was recognized and honored by all classes of men, when he was helping the needy
and when he was sought after for counsel by all men.
Chapter 30 shows what his case was then, as he was derided by the young whose
fathers were beneath the dogs, as he was a byword for the rabble who spat in
his face and added insult to injury, as his sufferings became so intense that
he could find no rest nor relief for his weary soul and body, as he was a
brother to jackals and a companion to ostriches, as his skin was black and his
bones burned with heat, as mourning and weeping were the only fitting
expressions of his forlorn condition.
Chapter 31 gives a fine view of his character and conduct. Job's protests in
this chapter are a complete knockout. "He protests that he is innocent of
impure thoughts (1-4) ; of false seeming (5-8); of adultery (9-12); of
injustice toward dependents (13-15); of hardness toward the poor and needy (16-23);
of covetousness (24-25); of idolatry (26-28); of malevolence (29-30); of want
of hospitality (31-32); of hiding his transgressions (33-34); and of injustice
as a land-lord (38-40)." Rawlinson in "Pulpit Commentary." It
will be observed:
1. That this chapter answers in detail every specification of Eliphaz in his
last speech (22:5-20).
2. That Job correctly recognized both the intelligence and malice and
irresistible power of the successive blows dealt against him and was not
deceived by the human and natural agencies employed. But failing to see that
since man fell this world is accursed and that the devil is its prince, he was
shut up to the conviction that the Almighty was his adversary. If Adam in
Paradise and before the fall had fallen upon Job's experience, the argument of
Job, applied to such a case, would be conclusive in fixing all the
responsibility on God. No human philosophy, leaving out the fall of man and the
kingdom of Satan, can explain the ills of life in harmony with divine justice,
goodness, and mercy.
Job's extraordinary experience leads him, step by step, to suggest all the
needs of future revelations and thus to reveal the real object of the book. His
affliction led him to feel:
1. The need of a revelation of a book which would clearly set forth God's law
and man's duties.
2. The need of a revelation of man's state after death.
3. The need of a revelation of man's resurrection.
4. The need of a revelation of a future and final judgment.
5. The need of a revelation of the Father in an incarnation, visible, palpable,
audible, approachable, and human.
6. The need of one to act as a daysman, mediator, umpire, between God and man.
7. The need of one to act as redeemer for man from the power of sin and Satan
and as an advocate with God in heaven.
8. The need of a revelation of an interpreter abiding on earth as man's
advocate.
This is the great object of this first book of the Bible) to show the need of
all its other books, until the Coming One should become "The Burning
Desire of All the Nations."
That object being granted, the chronological place of this book in the Bible is
that it is the first book of the Bible written.
QUESTIONS
1. What Bays the radical
wing of the higher critics about this section?
2. What say the mediating
critics of this section, and what the explanations by Sampey and Tanner,
respectively?
3. What the author's reply
to these contentions?
4. What was Job's oath in
restating his case?
5. What was Job's
imprecation?
6. What his description of
the portion of the wicked after death?
7. How does he show that
man's reason is superior to the instincts of the lower animals?
8. What limitation placed on
man, and what Job's philosophy of it?
9. With whom resides wisdom
and how is this fact set forth?
10. What the highest wisdom
attainable by man?
11. What is implied in all
this?
12. What was his case in the
past?
13. What was his case then?
14. What his character?
15. What does Jobs
extraordinary experience lead him to feel the need of?
16. That object being
granted, where is the chronological place of this book in the Bible.
ELIHU'S SPEECH, GOD'S INTERVENTION AND THE
EPILOGUE
Job 32-42
The author's introduction to Elihu's speech consists of the prose section
(32:1-5), the several items of which are as follows:
1. Why the three friends ceased argument, viz: "Because he was righteous
in his own eyes" (v. 1).
2. Elihu's wrath against Job, viz: "Because he justified himself rather
than God" (v. 2).
3. Elihu's wrath against Job's friends, viz: "Because they had found no
answer, and yet had condemned Job" (vv. 3, 5).
4. Why Elihu had waited to speak unto Job, viz: "Because they were older
than he" (v. 4).
Elihu's introduction (32:6-22) consists of two sections as follows:
1. Elihu's address to the three friends.
2. His soliloquy.
Now, an analysis of part one of this introduction consists of Elihu's address
to his three friends, with the following items:
1. He waited because he was young, and considered that days should speak and
that years should teach wisdom (32: 6-7).
2. Yet there is individual intelligence, a spirit in man and the breath of the Almighty
which gives understanding (32:8).
3. And greatness, and age are not always wise, therefore, I speak (32:9-10).
4. He had waited patiently and had listened for their reasonings while they
fumbled for words (32:11).
5. They had failed to answer Job's argument, and therefore had failed to
convince him (32:12).
6. Now beware; do not say that you have found wisdom, for God can attend to his
case, but not man (32:13).
7. I will not answer him with your speeches (32:14). Now let us analyze his
soliloquy which is found in 32:15-22 and consists of the following items:
1. They are amazed and silent; they have not a word to say (32:15).
2. Shall I wait? No; I will speak and show my opinion (32: 16-17).
3. I am full of words, and must speak or burst, therefore I will speak and be
relieved (32:18-20).
4. His method was not to respect persons nor give flattering titles, because he
did not know how to do so and was afraid of his Maker (32:21-22).
Elihu's address to Job in 33:1-7 is as follows:
1. Hear me for the integrity and sincerity of my speech, since I have already
begun and am speaking to you right out of my heart (33:1-3).
2. I also am a man, being made as a man and since we are on a common level,
answer me or stand aside (33:4-5).
3. I will be for God, and being a man, I will not terrify you, for I will not
bring great pressure upon you (33:6-7).
The point of issue now is a general charge that Job's heart attitude toward God
is not right in view of these afflictions (33:8-12). It will be seen that
Elihu's charge is different from that of the three friends, viz: That Job was
guilty of past sins.
Elihu charged first that Job had said that God giveth no account of any of his
matters (v. 13).. In his reply Elihu shows that this is untrue.
1. In that God reveals himself many times in dreams and visions in order to
turn man from his purpose and to save him from eternal destruction (33:14-18).
2. In that in afflictions God also talks to man as he often brings him down
into the very jaws of death (33:19-22). [Cf. Paul's thorn in the flesh as a
preventive.] None of the speakers before him brought out this thought. This is
very much like the New Testament teachings; in fact, this thought is nowhere
stated more clearly than here. It shows that afflictions are to the children of
God what the storm is to the tree of the forest, its roots run deeper by use of
the storm.
3. In that he sends an angel sometimes to interpret the things of God, to show
man what is right for him (33:23-28).
4. Therefore these things ought to be received graciously, since God's purpose
in it all is benevolent (33:29-33). Elihu charged, in the second place, that
Job had said that God had taken away his right and that it did not profit to be
a righteous man (34:5-9; 35:1-3).
His reply is as follows:
1. The nature of God disproves it; -he is not wicked and therefore will not
pervert justice (34:10-15).
2. Therefore Job's accusation is unbecoming, for he is by right possessor of
all things and governs the world on the principles of justice and benevolence
(34:21-30).
3. What Job should have said is altogether different from what he did say
because he spoke without knowledge and his words were not wise (34:31-37).
4. Whether Job was righteous or sinful did not affect God (35:4-8).
Elihu charged, in the third place, that Job had said that he could not get a
hearing because he could not see him (35:14). His reply was that this was
unbecoming and vanity in Job (35:15-16).
Elihu's fourth charge was that Job was angry at his chastisements (36:18). He
replied that such an attitude was sin; and therefore he defended God (36:1-16).
Elihu's fifth charge was that Job sought death (36:20). He replied that it was
iniquity to suggest to God when life should end (36:21-23).
Elihu discusses in chapter 37 the approaching storm. He introduces it in 36:24
and in verse 33 he gives Job a gentle rebuke, showing him how God even tells
the cows of the coming storm. Then he describes the approaching storm in
chapter 37, giving the lesson in verse 13, viz: It may be for correction, or it
may be for the benefit of the earth, but "stand still and see."
Elihu makes a distinct advance over the three friends toward the true meaning
of the mystery. They claim to know the cause; he, the purpose. They said that
the affliction was punitive; he, beneficent. His error is that he, too, makes
sin in Job the occasion at least of his sorrow. His implied counsel to Job
approaches the final climax of a practical solution. God's first arraignment of
Job is found in Job 38:1 to 40:2. Tanner's summary is as follows:
It is foolish presumption for the blind, dependent creature to challenge the
infinite in the realm of providence. The government of the universe, physical
and moral, is one; to question any point is to assume understanding of all.
Job, behold some of the lower realms of the divine government and realize the
absurdity of your complaint.
Job's reply follows in Job 40:3-5. Tanner's summary: "I see it; I
hush."
God's second arraignment of Job is recorded in Job 40:6 to 41:34. Tanner:
To criticize God's government of the universe is to claim the ability to do
better. Assuming the role of God, suppose Job, you try your hand on two of your
fellow creatures the hippopotamus and the crocodile.
Job's reply is found in Job 42:1-6, Tanner's summary of which is: This new view of the nature
of God reveals my wicked and disgusting folly in complaining; I repent. Gladly
do I embrace his dispensations in loving faith.
There are some strange silences in this arraignment and some people have been
disappointed that God did not bring out all the questions of the book at the
close, as:
1. He says nothing of the heaven scenes in the Prologue and of Satan.
2. He gives no theoretic solution of the problems of the book.
3. He says nothing directly about future revelation and the Messiah.
The explanation of this is easy, when we consider the following facts:
1. That it was necessary that Job should come to the right heart attitude
toward God without any explanation.
2. That to have answered concerning future revelation and the Messiah would
have violated God's plan of making revelation.
3. That bringing Job to an acceptance of God's providence of whatever form
without explanation, furnishes a better demonstration of disinterested
righteousness.
This is true of life and the master stroke of the production is that the
theoretical solution is withheld from the sufferer, while he is led to the
practical solution which is a religious attitude of heart rather than an understanding
of the head. A vital, personal, loving faith in God that welcomes from him all
things is the noblest exercise of the human soul. The moral triumph came by a
more just realization of the nature of God.
Job was right in some things and he was mistaken in other things. He was right
in the following points:
1. In the main point of difference between him and the three friends, viz: That
his suffering was not the result of justice meted out to him for his sins.
2. That even and exact justice is not meted out here on the earth.
3. In contending for the necessity of a revelation by which he could know what
to do.
4. In believing God would ultimately vindicate him in the future.
5. In detecting supernatural intelligence and malice in his affliction.
He was mistaken in the following particulars:
1. In considering his case hopeless and wishing for death.
2. In attributing the malice of these things to God instead of Satan.
3. In questioning the mercy and justice of God's providence and demanding that the
Almighty should give him an explanation.
The literary value of these chapters (38:1 to 42:6) is immense and matchless.
The reference in 38:3 to "The cluster of the Pleiades" is to the
"seven stars" which influence spring and represents youth.
"Orion" in the same passage, stood for winter and represents death.
The picture of the war horse in 39:19-25 has stood the challenge of the ages.
The lesson of this meeting of Job with God is tremendous. Job had said,
"Oh, that I could appear before him!" but his appearing here to Job
reveals to him his utter unworthiness. The man that claims sinlessness
advertises his guilty distance from God. Compare the cases of Isaiah, Peter,
and John. The Epilogue (42:7-17) consists of three parts, as follows:
1. The vindication of Job and the condemnation of his three friends.
2. Job as a priest makes atonement and intercession for his friends.
3. The blessed latter end of Job: "So Jehovah blessed the latter end of
Job more than his beginning."
The extent and value of the Almighty's vindication of Job and his condemnation
of the three friends are important. In extent it applies to the issues between
Job and the three friends and not to Job's heart attitude toward God. This he
had correct-ed in Job by his arraignment of him. In vindicating Job, God
justifies his contention that even and exact justice is not meted out on earth
and in lime, and condemned the converse which was held by his friends. Out of
this contention of Job grows his much felt need of a future judgment, a redeemer,
mediator, interpreter, and incarnation, and so forth. Or if this contention is
true, then man needs these things just mentioned. If the necessity of these is
established, then man needs a revelation explaining all these things.
Its value is seen in God's confirming these needs as felt by Job, which gives
to us, upon whom the end of the ages has come, implicit confidence in the
revelation he has given us, pointing out the fact that Job's need of a
redeemer, umpire, interpreter, and so forth has been supplied to the human race
with all the needed information upon the other philosophic discussions of the
book.
The signification of the Almighty's "turning the captivity of Job"
just at the point "when he prayed for his friends" is seen in the
fact that Job reached the point of right heart attitude toward God before the
victory came. This was the supreme test of Job's piety. One of the hardest
things for a man to do is to invoke the blessings of heaven on his enemies.
This demand that God made of Job is in line with New Testament teaching and
light. Jesus said, "Love your enemies and pray for them," and while
dying he himself prayed for his executioners. Paul who was conquered by the
prayer of dying Stephen often prayed for his persecutors. This shows that Job
was indeed in possession of God's grace, for without it a man is not able to
thus pray. The lesson to us is that we may not expect God to turn our captivity
and blessings if we are unable to do as Job did.
The more thoughtful student will see that God does not ex-plain the problem to
Job in his later addresses to him, nor in the Epilogue, because to give this
would anticipate, out of due time, the order of the development of revelation.
Job must be content with the revelation of his day and trust God, who through
good and ill will conduct both Job and the world to proper conclusions.
QUESTIONS
1. What the author's
introduction to Elihu's speech and what the several items of it?
2. What Elihu's introduction
(32:6-22) and what the two sections?
3. Give an analysis of part
one of this introduction.
4. Give an analysis of his
soliloquy?
5. Analyze Elihu's address
to Job in 33:1-7.
6. What the point al issue?
7. What did Elihu charge
that Job had said and what Elihu's reply?
8. What did Elihu charge, in
the second place, that Job had said and what Elihu's reply?
9. What did Elihu charge in
the third place, that Job had said, and what Elihu's answer to it?
10. What was Elihu's fourth charge
and what was Elihu's answer?
11. What Elihu's fifth
charge and what his reply?
12. What does Elihu discuss
in chapter 37?
13. What the distinct
advances made by Elihu and what his error?
14. What God's first
arraignment of Job?
15. What Job's reply?
16. What God's second
arraignment of Job?
17. What Job's reply?
18. What the strange
silences in this arraignment and what your explanation of them?
19. What the character of
the moral solution of the problem as attained by Job?
20. In what things was Job
right and in what things was he mistaken?
21. What can you say of the
literary value of these chapters (33:1 to 42:6)?
22. Explain the beauties of
38:31.
23. What of the picture of
the war horse in 39:19-25?
24. What the lesson of this
meeting of Job with God?
25. Give an analysis of the
epilogue.
26. What the extent and
value of the Almighty's vindication of Job and his condemnation of the three
friends?
27. What the signification
of the Almighty's "turning the captivity of Job" just at the point
"when he prayed for his friends"?
28. Does God give Job the
explanation of life's problem, and why?
THE BOOK OF JOB IN GENERAL
The difficulty of rightly interpreting this book lies in the fact that Eliphaz,
Bildad, and Zophar all said some good things. For example, the quotation in
Hebrews, yet they were condemned, and Job said some bad things, yet he was
commended. Now the difficulty lies in separating the good from the bad;
especially in selecting texts for preaching there is danger of treating as
God's word what God condemned.
There are several references showing the indebtedness of later Old Testament books
to this one, viz: Jeremiah 20:14-18 is derived from Job 3:3-12. Ezekiel 14:14,
20 shows that the book was well known in that prophet's time. Proverbs 8:1-10
and 30-31 are founded upon Job 28:12-28. Proverbs 3:11-12 equals Job 5:17-18,
and there are many passages in the Psalms and some in Isaiah which doubtless
are founded on Job.
There are also some New Testament references to and quotations from this book.
For instance, James 5:11 is a reference to the character, Job, and 1
Corinthians 3:19 is a quotation of Job 5:13; also Hebrews 12:5-6 is a quotation
of Job 5:17-18.
The teachings of the book concerning sin, original and personal, are clear and
definite. As to original sin, the book teaches that we are born in sin and
conceived in iniquity (Job 14:4). As to personal sin, the book teaches that we
are personal sinners. Job acknowledged his sins of youth (Job 13:26). The
teaching of the book concerning the atonement is set forth in the sacrifices of
the Prologue and the Epilogue. God being offended by pin could be approached
only by offerings. The sacrifices here mentioned are the same as found in
Genesis and Exodus showing that sin must be expiated by a sacrifice.
The teaching of the book concerning repentance is marked. Repentance was taught
by Job's three friends. They urged him to repent though their reason for it was
not applicable to him. When Job saw his error he said, "I abhor myself and
repent."
The teaching of the book concerning prayer) answered and unanswered, is as
follows:
1. As to answered prayers, Job's prayer to meet God was answered; his prayer
for his three friends was also answered; his prayer for a revelation, redeemer,
umpire, etc., though not answered in his day, has long since been answered.
2. As to unanswered prayers, Job's prayer for immediate death was not answered;
his prayer for a curse upon the day of his birth, etc., was not answered.
The teaching of the book concerning God is rather pronounced. His wisdom,
omnipotence, omnipresence, omniscience, mercy, and justice are in evidence
throughout the book and the fact that he is full of pity is also taught in the
book (see James 5:11).
The teaching of the book concerning providence is that God rules all things
both temporal and spiritual. His providence is both direct and permissive.
The teaching of the book concerning Satan is seen in the several statements in
the book about him. Satan appearing with the angels implies his angelic being
and hints at his origin. He is subject to God as 6ther angels are and must make
his report to God at stated times as the other angels do who have not fallen.
He can do only what God permits him. His incessant activity and unvaried
vigilance are implied. His cunning, wisdom, and malice are seen in his dealings
with Job.
The teaching of the book concerning the resurrection is that there will be a
resurrection of the body in which we shall see God. This is based on the
author's interpretation of Job 13:15.
The teaching of the book concerning the future life is that there is a future
life where all things will be evened up according to justice.
The teaching of the book concerning the final judgment is that there is a
necessity for a future and final judgment at which men will receive just
recompense for the deeds done in the body.
The teaching of the book concerning future revelations is that there is a
necessity for a revelation showing man's relation and duties to God and
answering the perplexing questions of life, such as are found in the book.
The teaching of the book concerning the Messiah is that there is a need for a
Messiah incarnate, to save from sin in this world, and in the world to come; to
act as mediator and intercessor between God and man.
According to the teaching of this book afflictions are not all penal. Some of
them are penal, while those supposed to be such are sometimes merely
consequential. They are never expiatory. We suffer as chastisement often, but
the penalty of sin is death, and no amount of suffering in this world could pay
the penalty of sin. It is often consequential, i.e., afflictions come according
to a law: "Whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap."
They are sometimes disciplinary. Suffering comes often as preparatory for
something to follow; for instance, the suffering of the Israelites in Egypt was
preparatory for the journey in the wilderness to Palestine and prepared them to
enjoy and properly appreciate the blessings of God upon them in after years.
Many of us have to go through a school of suffering before we are able to
appreciate the blessings of God.
They are often exemplary in showing patience and persistency. James says,
''Behold, we call them blessed that endured; ye have heard of the patience of
Job, and have seen the end of the Lord, how that the Lord is full of pity, and
merciful" (James 5:11).
They are sometimes designed to show the need of revelation before it is given.
We find that suffering caused Job to realize the need of a number of things
that he never could have realized without it, and that he could not understand
without a revelation. He was not able to solve the problem of his own suffering
without it.
They are often typical. Job's suffering was typical of the Messiah's suffering
in that it was brought upon him by the devil. As Job was in the hands of the
devil, so was our Lord in his great agony on the cross. The proof that Job's
sufferings were typically suggestive of the Messiah's sufferings is seen from
the fact that David (Psalm 22) and Isaiah (Isa. 53) used the words of Job in
describing the sufferings of Christ. Since this book has been treated as
history throughout, not parable, some have difficulty in reconciling with this
view.
1. The seeming artistic form of the numbers in the book, e.g., the round
numbers in 1:2-3; 42:12-13; the sacred character of the number "3" in
1:2-3, 17; 2:11; 42:13; the number "7" in 1:2-3; 2:13; 42:8, 13; the
number "10" in 1:2; 42:13; the exact doubling of Job's substance in
42:10, 12 and the exact restoration of the whole number of his sons and
daughters (see 1:2; 42:14); the exact doubling of his former term of life
detected in 42:16.
2. The poetic form of the speeches, i.e., did these men actually speak in
poetry or has the author cast their prose speeches into poetic form clothing
their ideas in his own words?
This difficulty may be solved by noting:
1. That there is nothing to prevent round or sacred numbers from being used
historically, as they are found so used in many parts of the sacred Scriptures
and by Oriental writers.
2. That we are not to understand by 42:10, 12 that God exactly doubled Job's
possessions, but grant it, and then it is Just as easy to conceive that God
doubled his substance as it is to think that he increased it at all.
3. That the restoration of the old number of sons and daughters is the thing
most natural to expect. Why expect fewer children or more?
4. That it is a gratuitous supposition of the critics that Job's age was twice
as long after as before his calamity. His age is nowhere told except his length
of life after his misfortune. So he may have been sixty, eighty, or one hundred
years old when his reverses came. But if it should be detected that his term of
life after his calamity was twice that of his age before, why should we be
disturbed? Nothing beyond the ordinary in that and it was as easy for God to
actually double his former term of life as it is for the critics to detect that
it was doubled.
5. It is possible that they spoke in prose and the author, either first as
author and later as editor, cast the thought of each speaker into poetic form,
using his own words, but evidence is rather against this view, since (1) it was
very common for men in that age to use just such rhythm in making a speech as
is found in these speeches here, (2) this is now common among the Arabians, (3)
each speaker has his own peculiar style and vocabulary and (4) the reader is
irresistibly impressed with the reality of the transactions and feelings
brought into play.
Job and Paul were both afflicted with great, varied, and long-continued but undeserved
sufferings. Compare them. How do you account for the widely different spirit
with which they were received and how does this bear upon the object of the
book of Job?
1. Satan is the instrument of the sufferings of each.
2. They were varied in each case: Job lost property, family, friends) and
health, being afflicted with a most loathsome and painful disease; Paul lost
friendship of kinsmen in the flesh, suffered much affliction at their hands,
untold hardships, and much bodily affliction.
3. They were both good men, blameless and upright in the sight of God and man.
4. Job curses the day of his birth and prays for immediate death, while Paul
glories in his tribulations and gladly endures them to the end; Job was in the
mere dawn of revelation while Paul was in the very splendor of it; Job did not
understand the purpose of the affliction, but Paul did.
5. It bears upon the chief object of the book in showing that we have that
which Job felt a need for, viz: a revelation complete.
I know of no more appropriate closing for the discussion of this great book
than the following poem:
THE TAPESTRY WEAVERS or THE WORLD'S A CARPET INSIDE OUT (A beautiful parable in two parts)
By Anson G. Chester
PART I
Let us take to our heart a lesson;
No lesson can braver be,
From the ways of the
tapestry weavers, On the other side of the sea.
Above their heads the
pattern hangs, They study it with care,
And while their fingers
deftly move, Their eyes are fastened there.
They tell this curious thing
besides Of the patient, plodding weaver:
He works on the wrong side
evermore, But works for the right side ever.
It is only when the weaver
stops, And the web is loosed and turned,
That he sees his real
handiwork, That his marvelous skill has learned.
Ah! the sight of its
delicate beauty, It pays for all its cost,
No rarer, daintier work than
his, Was ever done by the frost.
Then the master bringeth him
golden hire, And giveth him praise as well,
And how happy the heart of the
weaver is, No tongue but his own can tell.
PART II
The years of man are the
looms of God, Let down from the place of the sun,
Wherein we all are weaving,
Till the mystic web is done.
Weaving blindly, but weaving
surely, Each for himself his fate,
We may not see how the right
side looks, We can only weave and wait.
But looking above for the
pattern, No weaver hath need to fear,
Only let him look into
Heaven, The Perfect Pattern is there.
If he keeps the face of the
Savior Forever and always in sight,
His toll shall be sweeter
than honey, And his weaving sure to be right.
And when his task is ended,
And the web is turned and shown,
He shall hear the voice of
the Master, It will say to him, "Well done
I And the white-winged angels
of Heaven, To bear him thence shall come down;
And God shall give for his
hire Not golden coin, but a Crown.
QUESTIONS
1. What constitutes the
difficulty of rightly interpreting this book?
2. Cite some references
showing the indebtedness of later Old Testament books to this one.
3. Cite the New Testament
references and quotations from this book.
4. What the teachings of the
book concerning sin, original and personal?
5. What the teaching of the
book concerning the atonement?
6. What the teaching of the
book concerning repentance?
7. What the teaching of the
book concerning prayer, answered and unanswered?
8. What the teaching of the
book concerning God?
9. What the teaching of the
book concerning providence?
10. What the teaching of the
book concerning Satan?
11. What the teaching of the
book concerning the resurrection?
12. What the teaching of the
book concerning the future life?
13. What the teaching of the
book concerning the final judgment?
14. What the teaching of the
book concerning future revelations?
15. What the teaching of the
book concerning the Messiah?
16. According to the
teaching of this book are afflictions all penal?
17. Are any of them penal or
are those supposed to be such sometimes merely consequential?
18. Wherein are they
disciplinary?
19. Wherein are they often
exemplary?
20. Wherein are they
designed to show the need of revelation before it is given?
21. Wherein are they often
typical?
22. What the proof that
Job's sufferings were typically suggestive of the Messiah's sufferings?
23. What difficulty with
respect to certain artistic features of the book and what the author's solution
of it?
24. Compare Job and Paul and
account for the widely different spirit with which they received their
sufferings and its bearing on the object of the book of Job.
25. Have you read the poem,
"The Tapestry Weavers," or "The World's a Carpet Inside
Out"?
According to my usual custom, when taking up the study of a book of the Bible I
give at the beginning a list of books as helps to the study of that book. The following
books I heartily commend on the Psalms:
1. Sampey's Syllabus for Old Testament Study. This is especially
good on the grouping and outlining of some selected psalms. There are also some
valuable suggestions on other features of the book.
2. Kirkpatrick'g commentary, in "Cambridge Bible for Schools and
Colleges," is an excellent aid in the study of the Psalter.
3. Perowne's Book of Psalms is a good, scholarly treatise on the
Psalms. A special feature of this commentary is the author's "New Translation"
and his notes are very helpful.
4. Spurgeon's Treasury of David. This is just what the title
implies. It is a voluminous, devotional interpretation of the Psalms and
helpful to those who have the time for such extensive study of the Psalter.
5. Hengstenburg on the Psalms. This is a fine, scholarly work by one of the
greatest of the conservative German scholars.
6. Maclaren on the Psalms, in "The Expositor's Bible," is the work of
the world's safest, sanest, and best of all works that have ever been written
on the Psalms.
7. Thirtle on the Titles of the Psalms. This is the best on the
subject and well worth a careful study.
At this point some definitions are in order. The Hebrew word for psalm means
praise. The word in English comes from psalmos, a song of lyrical
character, or a song to be sung and accompanied with a lyre. The Psalter is a
collection of sacred and inspired songs, composed at different times and by
different authors.
The range of time in composition was more than 1,000 years, or from the time of
Moses to the time of Ezra. The collection in its present form was arranged
probably by Ezra in the fifth century, B.C.
The Jewish classification of Old Testament books was The Law, the Prophets, and
the Holy Writings. The Psalms was given the first place in the last group.
They had several names, or titles, of the Psalms. In Hebrew they are called
"The Book of Prayers," or "The Book of Praises." The Hebrew
word thus used means praises. The title of the first two books is found in
Psalm 72:20: "The prayers of David the son of Jesse are ended." The
title of the whole collection of Psalms in the Septuagint is Biblos Psalman
which means the "Book of Psalms." The title in the Alexandrian
Codex is Psalterion which is the name of a stringed instrument, and
means "The Psalter."
The derivation of our English words, "psalms," "psalter,"
and "psaltery," respectively, is as follows:
1. "Psalms" comes from the Greek word, psalmoi, which is also
from psallein, which means to play upon a stringed instrument. Therefore
the Psalms are songs played upon stringed instruments, and the word here is
used to apply to the whole collection.
2. "Psalter" is of the same origin and means the Book of Psalms and
refers also to the whole collection.
3. "Psaltery" is from the word psalterion, which means "a
harp," an instrument, supposed to be in the shape of a triangle or like
the delta of the Greek alphabet. See Psalms 33:2; 71: 22; 81:2; 144:9.
In our collection there are 150 psalms. In the Septuagint there is one extra.
It is regarded as being outside the sacred collection and not inspired. The
subject of this extra psalm is "David's victory over Goliath." The
following is a copy of it: I was small among my brethren, And youngest in my father's house, I
used to feed my father's sheep. My hands made a harp, My fingers fashioned a
Psaltery. And who will declare unto my Lord? He is Lord, he it is who heareth.
He it was who sent his angel And took me from my father's sheep, And anointed
me with the oil of his anointing. My brethren were goodly and tall, But the
Lord took no pleasure in them. I went forth to meet the Philistine. And he
cursed me by his idols But I drew the sword from beside him; I beheaded him and
removed reproach from the children of Israel.
It will be noted that this psalm does not have the earmarks of an inspired
production. There is not found in it the modesty so characteristic of David,
but there is here an evident spirit of boasting and self-praise which is
foreign to the Spirit of inspiration.
There is a difference in the numbering of the psalms in our version which
follows the Hebrew, and the numbering in the Septuagint. Omitting the extra one
in the Septuagint, there is no difference as to the total number. Both have 150
and the same subject matter, but they are not divided alike.
The following scheme shows the division according to our version and also the
Septuagint: Psalms 1-8 in the Hebrew equal 1-8 in the Septuagint; 9-10 in the
Hebrew combine into 9 in the Septuagint; 11-113 in the Hebrew equal 10-112 in
the Septuagint; 114-115 in the Hebrew combine into 113 in the Septuagint; 116
in the Hebrew divides into 114-115 in the Septuagint; 117-146 in the Hebrew
equal 116-145 in the Septuagint; 147 in the Hebrew divides into 146-147 in the
Septuagint; 148-150 in the Hebrew equal 148-150 in the Septuagint.
The arrangement in the Vulgate is the same as the Septuagint. Also some of the
older English versions have this arangement. Another difficulty in numbering
perplexes an inexperienced student in turning from one version to another, viz:
In the Hebrew often the title is verse I, and sometimes the title embraces
verses 1-2.
The book divisions of the Psalter are five books, as follows:
Book I, chapters 1-41 (41 chapters)
Book II, chapters 42-72 (31 chapters)
Book III, chapters 73-89 (17 chapters)
Book IV, chapters 90-106 (17 chapters)
Book V, chapters 107-150 (44 chapters)
They are marked by an introduction and a doxology. Psalm I forms an
introduction to the whole book; Psalm 150 is the doxology for the whole book.
The introduction and doxology of each book are the first and last psalms of
each division, respectively.
There were smaller collections before the final one, as follows:
Books I and II were by David; Book III, by Hezekiah, and Books IV and V, by
Ezra.
Certain principles determined the arrangement of the several psalms in the
present collection:
1. David is honored with first place, Book I and II, including Psalms I to 72.
2. They are grouped according to the use of the name of God:
(1) Psalms 1-41 are Jehovah psalms;
(2) Psalms 42-83 are Elohim-psalms;
(3) Psalms 84-150 are Jehovah psalms.
3. Book IV is introduced by the psalm of Moses, which is the first psalm
written.
4. Some are arranged as companion psalms, for instance, sometimes two,
sometimes three, and sometimes more. Examples: Psalms 2 and 3; 22, 23, and 24;
113-118.
5. They were arranged for liturgical purposes, which furnished the psalms for
special occasions, such as feasts, etc. We may be sure this arrangement was not
accidental. An intelligent study of each case is convincing that it was
determined upon rational grounds.
All the psalms have titles but thirty-three, as follows:
In Book I, Psalms 1; 2; 10; 33, (4 are without titles).
In Book II, Psalms 43; 71, (2 are without titles).
In Book IV, Psalms 91; 93; 94; 95; 96; 97; 104; 105; 106, (9 are without
titles).
In Book V, Psalms 107; III; 112; 113; 114; 115; 116; 117; 118; 119; 135; 136; 137;
146; 147; 148; 149; 150, (18 are without titles).
The Talmud calls these psalms that have no title, "Orphan Psalms."
The later Jews supply these titles by taking the nearest preceding author. The
lack of titles in Psalms I; 2; and 10 may be accounted for as follows: Psalm I
is a general introduction to the whole collection and Psalm 2 was, perhaps, a
part of Psalm 1. Psalms 9-10 were formerly combined into one, therefore Psalm
10 has the same title as Psalm 9.
QUESTIONS
1. What books commended on the
Psalms?
2. What is a psalm?
3. What is the Psalter?
4. What the range of time in
composition?
5. When and by whom was the
collection in its present form arranged?
6. What the Jewish
classification of Old Testament books, and what the position of the Psalter in
this classification?
7. What the Hebrew title of
the Psalms?
8. Find the title of the
first two books from the books themselves.
9. What the title of the
whole collection of psalms in the Septuagint?
10. What the title in the Alexandrian
Codex?
11. What the derivation of
our English word, "Psalms", "Psalter", and Psaltery,
respectively?
12. How many psalms in our
collection?
13. How many psalms in the
Septuagint?
14. What about the extra one
in. the Septuagint?
15. What the subject of this
extra psalm?
16. How does it compare with
the Canonical Psalms?
17. What the difference in
the numbering of the psalms in our version which follows the Hebrew, and the
numbering in the Septuagint?
18. What the arrangement in the
Vulgate?
19. What other difficulty in
numbering which perplexes an inexperienced student in turning from one version
to another?
20. What are the book
divisions of the Psalter and how are these divisions marked?
21. Were there smaller collections
before the final one? If so, what were they?
22. What principles
determined the arrangement of the several psalms in the present collection?
23. In what conclusion may
we rest concerning this arrangement?
24. How many of the psalms
have no titles?
25. What does the Talmud
call these psalms that have no titles?
26. How do later Jews supply
these titles?
27. How do you account for
the lack of titles in Psalms I; 2; and 10?
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE BOOK OF PSALMS
(CONTINUED)
The following is a list of the items of information gathered from the titles of
the psalms:
1. The author: "A Psalm of David" (Ps. 37).
2. The occasion: "When he fled from Absalom, his son" (Ps. 3).
3. The nature, or character, of the poem:
(1) Maschil, meaning "instruction," a didactic poem (Ps. 42).
(2) Michtam, meaning "gold," "A Golden Psalm"; this means
excellence or mystery (Ps. 16:56-60).
4. The occasion of its use: "A Psalm of David for the dedication of the
house" (Ps. 30).
5. Its purpose: "A Psalm of David to bring remembrance" (Pss. 38;
70).
6. Direction for its use: "A Psalm of David for the chief musician"
(Ps. 4).
7. The kind of musical instrument:
(1) Neginoth, meaning to strike a chord, as on stringed instruments (Ps. 4:61).
(2) Nehiloth, meaning to perforate, as a pipe or flute (Ps. 5).
(3) Shoshannim, Lilies, which refers probably to cymbals (Pss. 45; 69).
8. A special choir:
(1) Sheminith, the "eighth," or octave below, as a male choir (Pss.
6; 12).
(2) Alamoth, female choir (Ps. 46).
(3) Muth-labben, music with virgin voice, to be sung by a choir of boys in the
treble (Ps. 9).
9. The keynote, or tune:
(1) Aijeleth-sharar, "Hind of the morning," a song to the melody of
which this is sung (Ps. 22).
(2) Al-tashheth, "Destroy thou not," the beginning of a song the tune
of which is sung (Pss. 57; 58; 59; 75).
(3) Gittith, set to the tune of Gath, perhaps a tune which David brought from
Gath (Pss. 8; 81; 84).
(4) Jonath-elim-rehokim, "The dove of the distant terebinths," the
commencement of an ode to the air of which this song was to be sung (Ps. 56).
(5) Leannoth, the name of a tune (Ps. 88).
(6) Mahalath, an instrument (Ps. 53); Leonnoth-Mahaloth, to chant to a tune called
Mahaloth.
(7) Shiggaion, a song or a hymn.
(8) Shushan-Eduth, "Lily of testimony," a tune (Ps. 60). Note some
examples: (1) "America," "Shiloh," "Auld Lang
Syne." These are the names of songs such as we are familiar with; (2)
"Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing" and "There Is a Fountain
Filled with Blood," are examples of sacred hymns.
10. The liturgical use, those noted for the feasts, e.g., the Hallels and
Hallelujah Psalms (Pss. 146-150).
11. The destination, as "Song of Ascents" (Pss. 120-134)
12. The direction for the music, such as Selah, which means "Singers,
pause"; Higgaion-Selah, to strike a symphony with selah, which means an
instrumental interlude (Ps. 9:16).
The longest and fullest title to any of the psalms is the title to Psalm 60.
The items of information from this title are as follows: (1) the author; (2)
the chief musician; (3) the historical occasion; (4) the use, or design; (5)
the style of poetry; (6) the instrument or style of music.
The parts of these superscriptions which most concern us now are those
indicating author, occasion, and date. As to the historic value or
trustworthiness of these titles most modern scholars deny that they are a part
of the Hebrew text, but the oldest Hebrew text of which we know anything had all
of them. This is the text from which the Septuagint was translated. It is much
more probable that the author affixed them than later writers. There is no
internal evidence in any of the psalms that disproves the correctness of them,
but much to confirm. The critics disagree among themselves altogether as to
these titles. Hence their testimony cannot consistently be received. Nor can it
ever be received until they have at least agreed upon a common ground of
opposition.
David is the author of more than half the entire collection, the arrangement of
which is as follows:
1. Seventy-three are ascribed to him in the superscriptions.
2. Some of these are but continuations of the preceding ones of a pair, trio,
or larger group.
3. Some of the Korahite Psalms are manifestly Davidic.
4. Some not ascribed to him in the titles are attributed to him expressly by
New Testament writers.
5. It is not possible to account for some parts of the Psalter without David.
The history of his early life as found in Samuel, I and 2 Kings, and I and 2
Chronicles, not only shows his remarkable genius for patriotic and sacred songs
and music, but also shows his cultivation of that gift in the schools of the
prophets. Some of these psalms of the history appear in the Psalter itself. It
is plain to all who read these that they are founded on experience, and the
experience of no other Hebrew fits the case. These experiences are found in
Samuel, I and 2 Kings, and I and 2 Chronicles.
As to the attempt of the destructive critics to rob David of his glory in
relation to the Psalter by assigning the Maccabean era as the date of
composition, I have this to say:
1. This theory has no historical support whatever, and therefore is not to be
accepted at all.
2. It has no support in tradition, which weakens the contention of the critics
greatly.
3. It has no support from finding any one with the necessary experience for
their basis.
4. They can give no reasonable account as to how the titles ever got there.
5. It is psychologically impossible for anyone to have written these 150 psalms
in the Maccabean times.
6. Their position is expressly contrary to the testimony of Christ and the
apostles. Some of the psalms which they ascribe to the Maccabean Age are attributed
to David by Christ himself, who said that David wrote them in the Spirit.
The obvious aim of this criticism and the necessary result if it be Just, is a
positive denial of the inspiration of both Testaments.
Other authors are named in the titles, as follows: (1) Asaph, to whom twelve
psalms have been assigned: (2) Mosee, Psalm 90; (3) Solomon, Psalms 72; 127;
(4) Heman, Psalm 80; (5) Ethem, Psalm 89; (6) A number of the psalms are
ascribed to the sons of Korah.
Not all the psalms ascribed to Asaph were composed by one person. History
indicates that Asaph's family presided over the song service for several
generations. Some of them were composed by his descendants by the game name.
The five general outlines of the whole collection are as follows:
I. By books
1. Psalms 1-41 (41)
2. Psalms 42-72 (31)
3. Psalms 73-89 (17)
4. Psalms 90-106 (17)
5. Psalms 107-150 (44)
II. According to date and authorship
1. The psalm of Moses (Ps. 90)
2. Psalms of David:
(1) The shepherd boy (Pss. 8; 19; 29; 23).
(2) David when persecuted by Saul (59; 56; 34; 52; 54; 57; 142).
(3) David the King (101; 18; 24; 2; 110; 20; 20; 21; 60; 51; 32; 41; 55; 3, 4;
64; 62; 61; 27).
3. The Asaph Psalms (50; 73; 83).
4. The Korahite Psalms (42; 43; 84).
5. The psalms of Solomon (72; 127).
6. The psalms of the era of Hezekiah and Isaiah (46; 47; 48)
7. The psalms of the Exile (74; 79; 137; 102)
8. The psalms of the Restoration (85; 126; 118; 146-150)
III. By groups
1. The Jehovistic and Elohistic Psalms:
(1) Psalms 1-41 are Jehovistic;
(2) Psalms 42-83 are Elohistic Psalms;
(3) Psalms 84-150 are Jehovistic.
2. The Penitential Psalms (6; 32; 38; 51; 102; 130; 143)
3. The Pilgrim Psalms (120-134)
4. The Alphabetical Psalms (9; 10; 25; 34; 37; 111:112; 119; 145)
5. The Hallelujah Psalms (11-113; 115-117; 146-150; to which may be added 135)
Psalms 113-118 are called "the Egyptian Hallel"
IV. Doctrines of the psalms
1. The throne of grace and how to approach it by sacrifice, prayer, and praise.
2. The covenant, the basis of worship.
3. The paradoxical assertions of both innocence & guilt.
4. The pardon of sin and justification.
5. The Messiah.
6. The future life, pro and con.
7. The imprecations.
8. Other doctrines.
V. The New Testament use of the psalms
1. Direct references and quotations in the New Testament.
2. The allusions to the psalms in the New Testament. Certain experiences of
David's life made very deep impressions on his heart, such as: (1) his peaceful
early life; (2) his persecution by Saul; (3) his being crowned king of the
people; (4) the bringing up of the ark; (5) his first great sin; (6) Absalom's
rebellion; (7) his second great sin; (8) the great promise made to him in 2
Samuel 7; (9) the feelings of his old age.
We may classify the Davidic Psalms according to these experiences following the
order of time, thus:
1. His peaceful early life (8; 19; 29; 23)
2. His persecution by Saul (59; 56; 34; 7; 52; 120; 140; 54; 57; 142; 17; 18)
3. Making David King (27; 133; 101)
4. Bringing up the ark (68; 24; 132; 15; 78; 96)
5. His first great sin (51; 32)
6. Absalom's rebellion (41; 6; 55; 109; 38; 39; 3; 4; 63; 42; 43; 5; 62; 61;
27)
7. His second great sin (69:71; 102; 103)
8. The great promise made to him in 2 Samuel 7 (2:72)
9. Feelings of old age (37)
The great doctrines of the psalms may be noted as follows: (1) the being and
attributes of God; (3) sin, both original and individual; (3) both covenants;
(4) the doctrine of justification; (5) concerning the Messiah.
There is a striking analogy between the Pentateuch and the Psalms. The
Pentateuch contains five books of law; the Psalms contain five books of heart
responses to the law.
It is interesting to note the historic controversies concerning the singing of
psalms. These were controversies about singing uninspired songs, in the Middle
Ages. The church would not allow anything to be used but psalms.
The history in Samuel, I and 2 Kings, and I and 2 Chronicles, and in Ezra and
Nehemiah is very valuable toward a proper interpretation of the psalms. These
books furnish the historical setting for a great many of the psalms which is
very indispensable to their proper interpretation.
Professor James Robertson, in the Poetry and Religion of the Psalms constructs
a broad and strong argument in favor of the Davidic Psalms, as follows:
1. The age of David furnished promising soil for the growth of poetry.
2. David's qualifications for composing the psalms make it highly probable that
David is the author of the psalms ascribed to him.
3. The arguments against the possibility of ascribing to David any of the hymns
in the Hebrew Psalter rests upon assumptions that are thoroughly antibiblical.
The New Testament makes large use of the psalms and we learn much as to their
importance in teaching. There are seventy direct quotations in the New
Testament from this book, from which we learn that the Scriptures were used
extensively in accord with 2 Timothy 3:16-17. There are also eleven references
to the psalms in the New Testament from which we learn that the New Testament
writers were thoroughly imbued with the spirit and teaching of the psalms. Then
there are eight allusions 'to this book in the New Testament from which we
gather that the Psalms was one of the divisions of the Old Testament and that
they were used in the early church.
QUESTIONS
1. Give a list of the items
of information gathered from the titles of the psalms.
2. What is the longest title
to any of the psalms and what the items of this title?
3. What parts of these
superscriptions most concern us now?
4. What is the historic
value, or trustworthiness of these titles?
5. State the argument
showing David's relation to the psalms.
6. What have you to say of
the attempt of the destructive critics to rob David of his glory in relation to
the Psalter by assigning the Maccabean era as the date of composition?
7. What the obvious aim of
this criticism and the necessary result, if it be just?
8. What other authors are
named in the titles?
9. Were all the psalms
ascribed to Asaph composed by one person?
10. Give the five general
outlines of the whole collection, as follows: I. The outline by books II. The
outline according to date and authorship III. The outline by groups IV. The
outline of doctrines V. The outline by New Testament quotations or allusions.
11. What experiences of
David's life made very deep impressions on his heart?
12. Classify the Davidic Psalms
according to these experiences following the order of time.
13. What the great doctrines
of the psalms?
14. What analogy between the
Pentateuch and the Psalms?
15. What historic
controversies concerning the singing of psalms?
16. Of what value is the
history in Samuel, 1 Kings and 2 Chronicles, and in Ezra and Nehemiah toward a
proper interpretation of the psalms?
17. Give Professor James
Robertson's argument in favor of the Davidic authorship of the psalms.
18. What can you say of the
New Testament use of the psalms and what do we learn as to their importance in
teaching?
19. What can you say of the
New Testament references to the psalms, and from the New Testament references
what the impression on the New Testament writers?
20. What can you say of the
allusions to the psalms in the New Testament?
THE PSALM OF MOSES AND THE PSALMS OF
DAVID'S EARLY LIFE
Psalm 90; 8; 19; 29; 23.
The author of Psalm 90 is Moses. He wrote this psalm while he was in the
wilderness of Arabia. The internal evidence that Moses wrote it at this time is
that it bears the stamp of the wilderness period all the way through.
The subject of this psalm, as indicated by the American revisers, is
"God's Eternity and Man's Transitoriness." Dr. Sampey's outline of
this psalm is good, and we pass it on to you. It is as follows:
1. The eternity of God contrasted with the brevity of human life (1-6)
2. The ground for the brevity of man's life found in God's wrath because of sin
(7-11)
3. Prayer for divine forgiveness, and the Joy and stability that follow (12-17)
There are several parallels between this and Moses' Song and Blessing in Deuteronomy
32-33. For example, Psalm 90:1 equals Deuteronomy 33:27a: Lord, thou hast been our
dwelling-place In all generations (Pa. 90:1). The eternal God is thy
dwelling-place, And underneath are the everlasting arms (Deut. 33:27a). Psalm 90:12 equals Deuteronomy 32:29: So teach us to number our
days, That we may get us a heart of wisdom (Ps, 90:12.) Oh that they were wise,
that they understood this, That they would consider their latter end, (Deut.
32:29.)
There are also several parallels between this psalm and the book of Job. Psalm
90:2 equals Job 15:7f and 38:1-6; psalm 90:3 equals Job 34:15; Psalm 90:6
equals Job 14:2, all of which has a bearing on the Mosaic authorship of Job.
There are many striking figures of speech in this psalm. A thousand years in
God's sight are but as yesterday, and as a watch in the night. God's sweeping
destruction is likened unto a flood. Man's life is likened unto grass and ends
like a sigh.
The New Testament references or allusions to this psalm or its teachings are
found in 2 Peter 3:8, which is equivalent to Psalm 90:4 and in Matthew 6:30
which equals Psalm 90:6.
There is a teaching in this psalm not found elsewhere in the Bible. It is in
verse 10 and relates to the allotted time for man to live which is three score
and ten years with a probability for a strong man of fourscore. In 2 Samuel 19:
35 we have old Barzillai's statement of recognition that he had reached the
appointed limit of life and was then living on borrowed time.
A brief summary of the teaching and application of this psalm is as follows:
1. The teaching:
(1) The eternity of God and his transcendence
(2) God's attitude toward sin and sin's certain punishment
(3) The mercy of God available for sinners
2. The application:
(1) God a refuge
(2) Beware of sin
(3) The sinner's privilege of prayer
The author of Psalms 8; 19; 29; and 23 is David, who composed some of them
perhaps late, late in life. We call this group of psalms the psalms of the
Shepherd Boy, or the psalms of his peaceful early life. Dr. Sampey calls this
group of psalms "The Echoes of a Happy Youth."
The subject of Psalm 8 is God's strange exaltation of what is seemingly
insignificant. The items of information in the title are (1) direction for its
use; (2) the tune; (3) the author.
Spurgeon calls this psalm "A Psalm of the Astronomer." The time of
day taken as a viewpoint, is a clear night.
A good outline of this psalm is the following:
Opening doxology (v. 1)
1. Babes achieving great results (v. 2)
2. Man, though small, not forgotten, but exalted above all other creatures (w.
3-8)
Closing doxology (v. 9)
There are several interpretations of verse 2, viz:
1. That it means child-holiness, as in the case of Samuel and John the Baptist.
2. That it shows God's providence in behalf of babes.
3. That man in general is helpless.
4. That it refers to David in particular and indicates his weakness; that it
also refers to Christ in becoming a babe. The New Testament quotations from
this psalm and their application are found in Matthew 21:16; Hebrews 2:5-8; and
1 Corinthians 15:27; thus:
"And said unto him, Hearest thou what these are saying? And Jesus saith
unto them, Yea: did ye never read, Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings thou
hast perfected praise?" (Matt. 21:16). "For not unto angels did he subject the world
to come, whereof we speak. But one hath somewhere testified, saying, What is
man, that thou art mindful of him? Or the son of man, that thou visiteth him?
Thou madest him a little lower than the angels; Thou crownedst him with glory
and honor, And didst set him over the works of thy hands: Thou didst put all
things in subjection under his feet." Hebrews 2:5-8
"For, be put all things in subjection under his feet. But when he saith,
All things are put in subjection, it is evident that he is excepted who did
subject all things unto him." (1 Cor. 15:27).
Upon these quotations and their application we can determine the interpretation
of verse 2:
1. That it refers primarily to strength from the weak things (1 Cor. 1:27)
2. That it was applied to the children at the triumphal entrance into Jerusalem
(Matt. 21:16)
Then verses 4-8 are found to refer primarily to man (Gen. 1:26, 28) and then to
Christ as the ideal man (1 Cor. 15:27; Heb2:5-9).
Some say that the author of Psalm 19 was a pantheist, but he was not. He does
not identify God and nature. The two books of revelation according to this
psalm are Nature and the Scripture, but they are distinct revelations.
Dr. Sampey's outline of this psalm is,
1. The glory of God in the material universe (1-6)
2. The excellence of God's revealed word (7-11)
3. Plea for deliverance from every form of sin (12-14)
This outline shows the progress of the thought, thus: The work of God reveals
glory; the Word of God is excellent; prayer to God is the sinner's privilege
when he sees the glory of God in nature and also recognizes his imperfection as
he is measured by the perfect Word of God.
A New Testament quotation from this psalm is found in Romans 10:18, in that
great discussion of Paul on the Jewish problem of unbelief, showing that the
light of nature extended not only to the Jews, but to the whole inhabited
earth. Note carefully these words: But I say. Did they not hear? Yea, verily, Their
sound went out into all the earth, And their words unto the ends of the world.
There is also a New Testament reference to it in Romans 1:20: "For the
invisible things of him since the creation of the world are clearly seen, being
perceived through the things that are made, even his everlasting power and
divinity; that they may be without excuse."
There is a striking figure in this psalm found in verses 5-6, in which the
rising sun is likened unto a bridegroom coming out of his chamber and running
his course, thus: Which
is as a bridegroom coming out of his chamber, And rejoiceth as a strong man to
run his course. His going forth is from the end of the heavens, And his circuit
unto the ends of it; And there is nothing hid from the heat thereof.
Thus we see that the time of day taken as a viewpoint in this psalm is the
sunrise, the most exhilarating and invigorating point of the day.
Here we note six names of the Word of God with their attributes and divine
effects, noting progress in the effect, thus:
1. The law of Jehovah is perfect, restoring the soul. "Law" is the
name, "perfect" is the attribute and "restoring the soul"
is the effect.
2. The testimony of Jehovah is sure, making wise the simple.
"Testimony" is the name, "sure" is the attribute and
"making wise the simple" is the effect.
3. The precepts of Jehovah are right, rejoicing the heart. "Precepts"
is the name, "right" is the attribute and "rejoicing the
heart" is the effect.
4. The commandment of Jehovah is pure, enlightening the eyes.
"Commandment" is the name, "pure" is the attribute and
"enlightening the eyes" is the effect.
5. The fear of Jehovah is clean, enduring forever. "Fear" is the
name, "clean" is the attribute and "enduring forever" is
the effect.
6. The ordinances of Jehovah are true and righteous altogether.
"Ordinances" is the name, "true" is the attribute and
"righteous altogether" suggests a righteous fruitage from the whole
law.
Certain classes of sins are recognized in this psalm, viz:
1. The sin of ignorance, of which Paul is a fine example.
2. Secret sin, of which David is an example.
3. Presumptuous sin, of which Saul, son of Kish, is an example.
4. The sin of infirmity, of which Peter is one of the best examples.
QUESTIONS
1. Who is the author of
Psalm 90?
2. When written?
3. What the internal
evidence that Moses wrote it at this time?
4. What the subject of this psalm
as indicated by the American revisers?
5. What is Dr. Sampey's
outline of this psalm?
6. What the parallels
between this and Moses' Song and Blessing in Deuteronomy 32-33?
7. What the parallels
between this psalm and the book of Job?
8. What the figures of
speech in this psalm?
9. What the New Testament
references or allusions to this psalm or its teachings?
10. What the teaching in
this psalm not found elsewhere?
11. What is your favorite
verse in this psalm?
12. Give a brief summary of
its teaching and application.
13. Who the author of Psalms
8; 19; 29; 23; and when were they composed?
14. What does Dr. Carroll
call this group of psalms?
15. What does Dr. Sampey
call this group of psalms?
16. What does Dr. Sampey give
as the subject of the Psalm 8?
17. What the items of
information in the title?
18. What does Spurgeon call
this psalm?
19. What the time of day
taken as a viewpoint?
20. What is Dr. Sampey's
outline of this psalm?
21. Give several interpretations
of verse 2.
22. What New Testament
quotations from this psalm and what their application?
23. What then is the
interpretation of verse 2?
24. What the interpretation
of verses 4-8?
25. What is your favorite
verse of this psalm?
26. Is the author of Psalm
19 a pantheist and why?
27. What the two books of
revelation according to this psalm?
28. What is Dr. Sampey's
outline of this psalm?
29. State this outline so as
to show the progress of the thought.
30. What the New Testament
quotation from this psalm?
31. What New Testament
reference to it?
32. What the striking figure
in this psalm? 33, What time of day does this psalm take as a viewpoint?
34. Give six names of the
word of God with their attributes and divine effects, noting the progress in
the effect.
35. What classes of sins are
recognized in this psalm, and what an illustration of each?
36. What is your favorite
verse in. this psalm?
THE PSALMS OF DAVID'S EARLY LIFE
(CONTINUED) AND SEVERAL OTHER GROUPS
The subject of Psalm 29 is the "Voice of God in the Storm," and it
seems to be addressed to the angels, verses 1-2. The progress of the storm is
shown in verses 3-9, and the local idea in it is seen particularly in verses
5-8. The storm seems to rise on the Mediterranean, then visiting Lebanon and
Kadesh, it progresses on to the Temple, where everything says,
"Glory."
The application of this psalm is easily determined from verses 10 and 11, which
show that Jehovah, the mighty God of the storm as king will give strength to
his people) and like the blessings of the calm after the storm, the blessing of
peace follows the mighty demonstration of his power. So Jehovah is not only the
God of war, but is also the God of peace. There can be no doubt that the author
of the Psalm 23 is David; it was written perhaps late in life, but it reflects
his experiences in his early life. This psalm as literature is classed as a
pastoral, a song of the fields.
The position of this psalm in the Psalter is between the passion psalm and the
triumphant psalm. In other words, Psalm 22 is a psalm of the cross, Psalm 23 a
psalm of the crook) and Psalm 24 is a psalm of the crown. The parallel of this
psalm in the New Testament is John 10, Christ's discourse on the Good Shepherd.
The divisions of this psalm are as follows: Verses 1-4 present Jehovah as a
Shepherd; verses 5-6 present him as a host. In the light of the double imagery
of this psalm, its spiritual meaning, especially the meaning of the word
"valley" and the word "staff," is very significant. For a
discussion of this thought I refer the reader to my sermon on Psalm 23:4, found
in my Evangelistic Sermons.
I give here four general remarks on the psalms of the persecution by Saul, viz:
-Psalms 59; 56; 34; 52; 54; 57; and 142, as follows:
1. These psalms have their origin in the most trying experiences. One is here
reminded of the conflict of Nehemiah in which he constantly breathed a prayer
to God, or of Francis S. Key who, while the battle was raging, wrote "The
Star-Spangled Banner," or of Cardinal Newman who, while in the conflict
with doubt and gloom, wrote "Lead, Kindly Light," or of Stonewall
Jackson who constantly read his Bible and prayed before going into battle, or
of the singing army of Gustavus Adolphus before the decisive battle of Leipzig,
or of Cromwell and his conquering heroes at the famous battle of Dunbar.
2. These psalms contain the sublimest expression of faith and hope amidst -the
darkest hours of adversity. In them are some clear messianic references and
prophecies which prove David's intimate fellowship with the Spirit of God while
under the very fires of the enemy and vouchsafes to us their inspiration.
3. We find also in these psalms expressions of human weakness and despondency,
which, but for the supply of the grace and spirit of God, might have resulted
in David's defeat. But 'a man is never whipped externally until he is whipped
internally, and though David when smitten by calamity gave signs of human
weakness, yet he remains the example for the world of the purest type of faith,
the most enduring patience and the sublimest optimism.
4. In this group may be seen also not only the growth of faith in each
individual psalm, but from the collection as a whole may be noted the progress
of his conflict with the enemy. This progress is as marked as the march into a
tunnel in which is discerned the thickening darkness until the traveler is
overwhelmed in its gloom, but pressing on, the dawn breaks in upon him, and the
light seems clearer and brighter than ever before and he bursts forth into the
most jubilant praises and thanksgiving.
The psalms of the king prior to his great sin are Psalms 101; 18; 24; 2; 110;
20; 21; and 60. Psalm 101 gives us the royal program, Psalms 20-21 and 60 are
called war psalms. Psalm 2 celebrates the promise of Jehovah to David in 2
Samuel 7. Psalm 24 applied to Christ's ascension, and Psalm 110 is the psalm of
his universal reign.
We here give an exposition of Psalm 110. In verse I Jehovah is represented as
speaking to David's Lord, saying, "Sit thou on my right hand until I make
thine enemies thy footstool." We may be certain as to whom this scripture
refers by comparing Matthew 22:41-45 in which Jesus himself silences the
Pharisees by quoting this passage and applying it to the Christ who was to
come. So this is a psalm of his universal reign.
The following questions are suggested and answered in this psalm, to wit:
1. Who is first Lord? The speaker, or Jehovah?
2. Who is second Lord? The one addressed, who in New Testament light is
interpreted to be the Christ.
3. When did Jehovah say this to Christ? After his resurrection and ascension,
when he was seated at the right hand of God (Acts 2:34f.). This is to be
conceived as following the events of his humiliation described in Philippians
2:6-11.
4. How long is he to sit at God's right hand? "Until I make thine enemies
thy footstool." Thus we see he is to rule there till every enemy has been
conquered.
5. How then is he to manifest his reign and send out the rod of his strength?
Heaven is his throne and earth's center is Zion. His church here on earth is
the church militant, so this is a war song also.
6. But who constitute his army? His people here on earth, whose business it is
to go forth as he gives marching orders.
7. What is to be the character of the people who constitute that army? (1) They
are to be volunteers, or offer themselves willingly. Verse 3 properly
translated would read as follows: "The people shall be volunteers in the
day that thou leadest out thine army, going forth in the beauty of holiness,
and multitudinous as the drops of the dew in the dawn of the morning."
From this we not only see that they are to be volunteers, but (2) they shall be
holy, i.e., regenerated, made new creatures. Indeed, they shall be good people.
8. How many in that army? "They shall be multitudinous as the drops of the
dew in the dawn of the morning."
9. What is to be their weapon? The rod of his strength. But what is the rod of
his strength? The rod is his word, to which he gives strength or power. This
warfare and final victory is paralleled in Revelation 19:11, the white horse
representing the peace of the gospel.
10. How is this great army to be supported? By Jesus, the High Priest, after
the order of Melchizedek. It is necessary for him to live as long as the
necessity for the army lasts. So this great warfare is to continue until the
kingdoms of this world become the kingdom of our Lord and his Christ.
The psalms connected with David's great sin are Psalms 51; 32. The occasion of
each of these Psalms, respectively) was as follows:
1. The occasion of Psalm 51 was Nathan's rebuke to David for his sin.
2. The occasion of Psalm 32 was the joy of forgiveness that came to David upon
his repentance.
The relation of these two psalms to each other is that Psalm 51 expresses his
penitence and Psalm 32 the joy of his forgiveness.
Some important doctrines in Psalm 51 are prayer, confession, cleansing from
sin, depravity, restoration, evangelism, praise, penitence, and intercession.
The New Testament teachings clearly stated in Psalm 32 are forgiveness of sins,
atonement for sins and imputation of sins, all of which are quoted from this
psalm in Romans 4:78, thus: Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven, And whose sins are
covered. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord will not reckon sin.
The psalms of the period of Absalom's rebellion are 41; 55; 3; 4; 63; 62; 61;
27. The New Testament parallel to the psalms of this period, as a product of a
dark experience, is Paul's letters written during the Roman imprisonment.
QUESTIONS
1. What the subject of Psalm
29?
2. To whom addressed?
3. What the progress of the storm
as shown in verses 3-9, and what the local idea in it?
4. What the application of
this psalm?
5. Who the author of Psalm
23 and when was it written?
6. What classification of
this psalm as literature?
7. What the position of this
psalm in the Psalter?
8. What parallel of this
psalm in the New Testament?
9. What the divisions of
this psalm?
10. In the light of the
double imagery of the psalm, what its spiritual meaning, especially the meaning
of the word "valley," and the word, "staff"?
11. Give four general
remarks on the psalms of the persecution by Saul.
12. What the psalms of the
king prior to his great sin?
13. Which of these gives us
the royal program?
14. Which are called war
psalms?
15. Which celebrates the promise
of Jehovah to David in 2 Samuel 7?
16. Which one applies to
Christ's ascension?
17. Which is the psalm of
his universal reign?
18. Expound this psalm.
19. What the psalms
connected with David's great sin?
20. What the occasion of
each of these psalms, respectively?
21. What the relation of
these two psalms to each other?
22. What are some important
doctrines in Psalm 51?
23. What New Testament
teachings clearly stated in Psalm 32?
24. What New Testament parallel
to the psalms of the period of Absalom's rebellion, as a product of a dark
experience?
PSALM AFTER DAVID PRIOR TO THE BABYLONIAN
EXILE
The superscriptions ascribed to Asaph twelve palms (50; 73-83) Asaph, Heman,
and Jeduthun presided over the Levitical singers in the time of David. Their
sons also directed the various bands of musicians (I Chron. 25). It seems that
the family of Asaph for many generations continued to preside over the service
of song (Cf. Ezra 3:10).
The theme of Psalm 50 is "Obedience is better than sacrifice," or the
language of Samuel to Saul when he had committed the awful sin in respect to
the Amalekites. This teaching is paralleled in many Old Testament scriptures,
for instance, Psalm 51:16-17. For thou delightest not in sacrifice; else would I give it: Thou hast
no pleasure in burnt offering. The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: A
broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise.
The problem of Psalm 73 is the problem of why the wicked prosper (vv. 1-14),
and its solution is found in the attitude of God toward the wicked (vv. 15-28).
[For a fine exposition of the other psalms of this section see Kirkpatrick or
Maclaren on the Psalms.]
The psalms attributed to the sons of Korah are 42; 44; 45; 47; 48; 49; 84; 85;
87. The evidence that Psalms 42-43 were one poem is internal. There are three
stanzas, each closing with a refrain. The similarity of structure and thought
indicates that they were formerly one psalm. A parallel to these two psalms we
find in the escape of Christian from the Castle of Giant Despair in
Pilgrim's Progress.
Only two psalms were ascribed to Solomon, viz: 72 and 127. However, the author
believes that there is good reason to attribute Psalm 72 to David. If he wrote
it, then only one was written by Solomon.
The theme of Psalm 72 is the reign of the righteous king, and the outline
according to DeWitt, which shows the kingdom as desired and foretold, is as
follows: (1) righteous (1-4) ; (2) perpetual (5-7); (3) universal (8-11); (4)
benign (12-14); (5) prosperous (15-17).
Psalm 127 was written when Solomon built the Temple. It is the central psalm of
the psalms of the Ascents, which refer to the Temple. It seems fitting that
this psalm should occupy the central position in the group, because of the
occasion which inspired it and its relation to the other psalms of the group. A
brief interpretation of it is as follows: The house here means household. It is
a brief lyric, setting forth the lessons of faith and trust. This together with
Psalm 128 is justly called "A Song of Home." Once in speaking to
Baylor Female College I used this psalm, illustrating the function of a school as
a parent sending forth her children into the world as mighty arrows. Again I
used this psalm in one of my addresses in our own Seminary in which I made the
household to refer to the Seminary sending forth the preachers as her children.
The psalms assigned to the era of Hezekiah and Isaiah are Psalms 46; 47; 48.
The historical setting is found in the history of the reign of Hezekiel. Their
application to Judah at this time is found in the historical connection, in
which we have God's great deliverances from the foreign powers, especially the
deliverance from Sennacherib. We find in poetry a description of the
destruction and desolation of Jerusalem in the Lamentations of Jeremiah and in
Psalms 74; 79.
The radical critics ascribe Psalms 74; 79 to the Maccabean period, and their
argument is based upon the use of the word "synagogues," in Psalm
74:8. The answer to their contention is found in the marginal rendering which
gives "places of assembly" instead of "synagogues." The
word "synagogue" is a Greek word translated from the Hebrew, which
has several meanings, and in this place means the "place of assembly"
where God met his people.
The silence of the exile period is shown in Psalm 137, in which they respond
that they cannot sing a song of Zion in a strange land. Their brightening of
hope is seen in Psalm 102. In this we have the brightening of their hope on the
eve of their return. In Psalm 85:10 we have a great text:
Mercy and truth
are met together;
Righteousness and peace have kissed each other.
The truth here is God's law demanding justice; mercy is God's grace meeting
justice. This was gloriously fulfilled in Christ on the cross. He met the
demands of the law and offers mercy and grace to all who accept them on the
terms of repentance and faith.
Three characteristics of Psalm 119 are, first, it is an alphabetical psalm;
second, it is the longest chapter in the Bible, and third, it is an expansion
of the latter part of Psalm 19. Psalms 146-150 were used for worship in the
second temple. The expressions of innocence in the psalms do not refer to
original sin, but to a course of conduct in contrast with wicked lives. The
psalmists do not claim absolute, but relative sinlessness.
The imprecations in the psalms are real prayers, and are directed against real
men who were enemies of David and the Jewish nation, but they are not
expressions of personal resentment. They are vigorous expressions of righteous
indignation against incorrigible enemies of God and his people and are to be
interpreted in the light of progressive revelation. The New Testament contains
many exultant expressions of the overthrow of the wicked. (Cf. 1 Cor. 16:22; 2
Tim. 4:14; Gal. 5: 12; Rev. 6:19-20; 16:5-6; 18:20.) These imprecations do not
teach that we, even in the worst circumstances, should bear personal malice,
nor take vengeance on the enemies of righteousness, but that we should live so
close to God that we may acquiesce in the destruction of the wicked and leave
the matter of vengeance in the hands of a just God, to whom vengeance belongs
(Rom. 12:19-21).
The clearest teachings on the future life as found in the psalms, both pro and
con, are found in these passages, as follows: Psalms 16:10-11; 17:15; 23:6;
49:15; 73:23-26. The passages that are construed to the contrary are found in
Psalms 6:5; 30:9; 39:13; 88:10-12; 115:17. The student will compare these
passages and note carefully their teachings. The first group speaks of the
triumph over Sheol (the resurrection) ; about awaking in the likeness of God;
about dwelling in the house of the Lord forever; about redemption from the
power of Sheol; and God's guiding counsel and final reception into glory, all
of which is very clear and unmistakable teaching as to the future life.
The second group speaks of DO remembrance in death; about no profit to the one
when he goes down to the pit; of going hence and being no more; about the dead
not being able to praise God and about the grave as being the land of
forgetfulness ; and about the dead not praising Jehovah, all of which are spoken
from the standpoint of the grave and temporal death.
There is positively no contradiction nor discrepancy in the teaching of these
scriptures. One group takes the spirit of man as the viewpoint and teaches the
continuity of life, the immortality of the soul; the other group takes the
physical being of man as the viewpoint and teaches the dissolution of the body
and its absolute unconsciousness in the grave.
QUESTIONS
1. How many and what psalms
were ascribed to Asaph?
2. Who presided over the Levitical
singers in the time of David?
3. What the theme of Psalm
50, and where do we find the same teaching in the Old Testament?
4. What the problem of Psalm
73, and what its solution?
5. What psalms are
attributed to the sons of Korah?
6. What evidence that Psalms
42-43 were one poem and what the characteristic of these two taken together?
7. What parallel to these
two psalms do we find in modern literature?
8. What psalms were ascribed
to Solomon?
9. What the theme of Psalm
72?
10. What the outline
according to DeWitt, which shows the kingdom as desired and foretold?
11. When was Psalm 127
written and what the application as a part of the Pilgrim group?
12. Give a brief
interpretation of it and the uses made of it by the author on two different
occasions.
13. What psalms are assigned
to the era of Hezekiah and Isaiah, and what their historical setting?
14. What their application
to Judah at this time?
15. Where may we find in
poetry a description of the destruction and desolation of Jerusalem?
16. To what period do
radical critics ascribe Psalms 74-79; what their argument, and what your
answer?
17. Which psalm shows the
silence of the exile period and why?
18. Which one shows their
brightening of hope?
19. Explain Psalm 85:10.
20. Give three
characteristics of Psalm 119.
21. What use was made of
Psalms 146-150?
22. Explain the expression
of innocence in the psalms in harmony with their teaching of sin.
23. Explain the imprecations
in the psalms and show their harmony with New Testament teachings.
24. Cite the clearest
teachings on the future life as found in the psalms, both pro and con.
THE MESSIANIC PSALMS AND OTHERS
We commence this chapter by giving a classified list of the Messianic Psalms,
as follows:
The Royal Psalms are:
Psalms 110; 2; 72; 45; 89;
The Passion Psalms are:
Psalms 22; 41; 69;
The Psalms of the Ideal Man are Psalms 8; 16; 40;
The Missionary Psalms are:
Psalms 47; 65; 68; 96; 100; 117.
The predictions before David of the coming Messiah are, (1) the seed of the
woman; (2) the seed of Abraham; (3) the seed of Judah; (4) the seed of David.
The prophecies of history concerning the Messiah are, (1) a prophet like unto
Moses; (2) a priest after the order of Melchizedek; (3) a sacrifice which
embraces all the sacrificial offerings of the Old Testament; (4) direct
references to him as King, as in 2 Samuel 7:8ff.
The messianic offices as taught in the psalms are four, viz: (1) The Messiah is
presented as Prophet, or Teacher (40:8II); (2) as Sacrifice, or an Offering for
sin (40:6ff.; Heb. 10:5ff.) ; (3) he is presented as Priest (110:4); (4) he is
presented as King (45).
The psalms most clearly presenting the Messiah in his various phases and
functions are as follows: (1) as the ideal man, or Second Adam (8); (2) as
Prophet (40); (3) as Sacrifice (22) ; (4) as King (45) ; (5) as Priest (110) ;
(6) in his universal reign (72).
It will be noted that other psalms teach these facts also, but these most
clearly set forth the offices as they relate to the Messiah.
The Messiah as a sacrifice is presented in general in Psalm 40:6. His
sufferings as such are given in a specific and general way in Psalms 22; 41;
and 69. The events of his sufferings in particular are described, beginning
with the betrayal of Judas, as follows:
1. Judas betrayed him (Matt. 26:14) in fulfilment of Psalm 41:9.
2. At the Supper (Matt. 26:24) Christ said, "The Son of man goeth as it is
written of him," referring to Psalm 22.
3. They sang after the Supper in fulfilment of Psalm 22:22.
4. Piercing his hands and feet, Psalm 22:16.
5. They cast lots for his vesture in fulfilment of Psalm 22: 18.
6. Just before the ninth hour the chief priests reviled him (Matt. 27:43) in
fulfilment of Psalm 22:8.
7. At the ninth hour (Matt. 27:46) he quoted Psalm 22:1.
8. Near his death (John 19:28) he said, in fulfilment of Psalm 69:21, "I
thirst."
9. At that time they gave him vinegar (Matt. 27:48) in fulfilment of Psalm
69:21.
10. When he was found dead they did not break his bones (John 19:36) in
fulfilment of Psalm 34:20.
11. He is represented as dead, buried, and raised in Psalm 16:10.
12. His suffering as a substitute is described in Psalm 69:9.
13. The result of his crucifixion to them who crucified him is given in Psalm
69:22-23. Compare Romans 11:9-10.
The Penitential Psalms are .6; 32; 38; 51; 102; 130; 143. The occasion of Psalm
6 was the grief and penitence of David over Absalom; of Psalm 32 was the
blessedness of forgiveness after his sin with Bathsheba, the wife of Uriah;
Psalm 38, David's reference to his sin with Bathsheba; Psalm 51, David's
penitence and prayer for forgiveness for this sin; Psalm 102, the penitence of
the children of Israel on the eve of their return from captivity; Psalm 130, a
general penitential psalm; Psalm 143, David's penitence and prayer when pursued
by Absalom.
The Pilgrim Psalms are Psalms 120-134. This section of the psalter is called
the "Little Psalter." These Psalms were collected in the days of Ezra
and Nehemiah, in troublous times. The author of the central psalm of this
collection is Solomon, and he wrote it when he built his Temple. The Davidic
Psalms in this collection are Psalms 120; 122; 124; 131; 132; 133. The others
were written during the building of the second Temple. They are called in the
Septuagint "Songs of the Steps."
There are four theories as to the meaning of the titles, "Songs of the
Steps," "Songs of Degrees," or "Songs of Ascents,"
viz:
1. The first theory is that the "Songs of the Steps" means the songs
of the fifteen steps from the court of the women to the court of Israel, there
being a song for each step.
2. The second theory is that advanced by Luther, which says that they were
songs of a higher choir, elevated above, or in an elevated voice.
3. The third theory is that the thought in these psalms advances by degrees.
4. The fourth theory is that they are Pilgrim Psalms, or the songs that they
sang while going up to the great feasts.
Certain scriptures give the true idea of these titles, viz: Exodus 23:14-17;
34:23-24; 1 Samuel 1:3; 1 Kings 12:27-28: Psalm 122:1-4; and the proof of their
singing as they went is found in Psalms 42:4; 100; and Isaiah 30:29. They went,
singing these psalms, to the Feasts of the Passover, Pentecost, and
Tabernacles. Psalm 121 was sung when just in sight of Jerusalem and Psalm 122
was sung at the gate. Psalm 128 is the description of a good man's home and a
parallel to this psalm in modern literature is Burns's "Cotter's Saturday
Night." The pious home makes the nation great.
Psalm 133 is a psalm of fellowship. It is one of the finest expressions of the
blessings that issue when God's people dwell together in unity. The reference
here is to the anointing of Aaron as high priest and the fragrance of the
anointing oil which was used in these anointings. The dew of Hermon represents
the blessing of God upon his people when they dwell together in such unity.
Now let us look at the Alphabetical Psalms. An alphabetical psalm is one in
which the letters of the Hebrew alphabet are used alphabetically to commence
each division. In Psalms 111-112, each clause so begins; in 25; 34; 145; each
verse so begins; in 37 each stanza of two verses so begins; in 119 each stanza
of eight verses so begins, and each of the eight lines begins with the same
letter. In 25; 34 and 37 the order is not so strict; in 9 and 10 there are some
traces of this alphabetical order.
David originated these alphabetical psalms and the most complete specimen is
Psalm 119, which is an expansion of the latter part of Psalm 19.
A certain group of psalms is called the Hallelujah Psalms. They are so called
because the word "Hallelujah" is used at the beginning, or at the
ending, and sometimes at both the beginning and the ending. The Hallelujah
Psalms are 111-113; 115-117; 146-150. Psalm 117 is a doxology; and Psalms
146150 were used as anthems. Psalm 148 calls on all creation to praise God. Francis
of Assisi wrote a hymn based on this psalm in which he called the sun his
honorable brother and the cricket his sister. Psalm 150 calls for all varieties
of instruments. Psalms 113-118 are called the Egyptian Hallel. They were used
at the Passover (113-114), before the Supper and 115-118 were sung after the
Supper. According to this, Jesus and his disciples sang Psalms 115-118 at the
last Passover Supper. These psalms were sung also at the Feasts of Pentecost,
Tabernacles, Dedication, and New Moon.
The name of God is delayed long in Psalm 114. Addison said, "That the
surprise might be complete." Then there are some special characteristics
of Psalm 115, viz: (1) It was written against idols. Cf. Is. 44:9-20; (2) It is
antiphonal, the congregation singing verses 1-8, the choir 9-12, the priests
13-15 and the congregation again 16-18. The theme of Psalm 116 is love, based
on gratitude for a great deliverance, expressed in service. It is appropriate
to read at the celebration of the Lord's Supper and verse 15 is especially
appropriate for funeral services.
On some special historical occasions certain psalms were sung. Psalm 46 was
sung by the army of Gustavus Adolphus before the decisive battle of Leipzig, on
September 17, 1631. Psalm 68 was sung by Cromwell's army on the occasion of the
battle of Dunbar in Scotland.
Certain passages in the Psalms show that the psalm writers approved the
offering of Mosaic animal sacrifices. For instance, Psalms 118:27; 141:2 seem
to teach very clearly that they approved the Mosaic sacrifice. But other
passages show that these inspired writers estimated spiritual sacrifices as
more important and foresaw the abolition of the animal sacrifices. Such
passages are Psalms 50:7-15; 4:5; 27:6; 40:6; 51:16-17. These scriptures show
conclusively that the writers estimated spiritual sacrifices as more important
than the Mosaic sacrifices.
QUESTIONS
1. What are the Royal
Psalms?
2. What the Passion Psalms?
3. What the Psalms of the
Ideal Man?
4. What the Missionary
Psalms?
5. What the predictions
before David of the coming Messiah?
6. What the prophecies of
history concerning the Messiah?
7. Give a regular order of
thought concerning the messianic offices as taught in the psalms.
8. Which psalms most clearly
present the Messiah as (1) the ideal man, or Second Adam, (2) which as Prophet,
or Teacher, (3) which as the Sacrifice, (4) which as King, (5) which as Priest,
(6) which his universal reign?
9. Concerning the suffering
Messiah, or the Messiah as a sacrifice, state the words or facts, verified in
the New Testament as fulfilment of prophecy in the psalms. Let the order of the
citations follow the order of facts in Christ's life.
10. Name the Penitential
Psalms and show their occasion.
11. What are the Pilgrim
Psalms?
12. What is this section of
the Psalter called?
13. When and under what
conditions were these psalms collected?
14. Who the author of the
central psalm of this collection?
15. What Davidic Psalms in
this collection?
16. When were the others
written?
17. What are they called in
the Septuagint?
18. What four theories as to
the meaning of the titles, "Songs of the Steps," "Songs of
Degrees," or "Songs of Ascents"?
19. What scriptures give the
true idea of these titles?
20. Give proof of their
singing as they went.
21. To what feasts did they
go singing these Psalms?
22. What the special use
made of Psalms 121 and 122?
23. Which of these psalms is
the description of a good man's home and what parallel in modern literature?
24. Expound Psalm 133.
25. What is an alphabetical
psalm, and what are the several kinds?
26. Who originated these
Alphabetical Psalms?
27. What the most complete
specimen?
28. Of what is it an
expansion?
29. Why is a certain group
of psalms called the Hallelujah Psalms?
30. What are the Hallelujah
Psalms?
31. Which of the Hallelujah
Psalms was a doxology?
32. Which of these were used
as anthems?
33. Which psalm calls on all
creation to praise God?
34. Who wrote a hymn based on
Psalm 148 in which he called the sun his honorable brother and the cricket his
sister?
35. Which of these psalms
calls for all varieties of instruments?
36. What is the Egyptian
Hallel?
37. What their special use
and how were they sung?
38. Then what hymns did
Jesus and his disciples sing?
39. At what other feasts was
this sung?
40. Why was the name of God
delayed so long in Psalm 114?
41. What the characteristics
of Psalm 115?
42. What the theme and
special use of Psalm 116?
43. State some special
historical occasions on which certain psalms were sung. Give the psalm for each
occasion.
44. Cite passages in the
psalms showing that the psalm writers approved the offering of Mosaic animal
sacrifices.
45. Cite other passages showing
that these inspired writers estimated spiritual sacrifices as more important
than the Mosaic sacrifices.
THE MESSIAH IN THE PSALMS
A fine text for this chapter is as follows: "All things must be fulfilled
which were written in the Psalms concerning me," Luke 24:44. I know of no
better way to close my brief treatise on the Psalms than to discuss the subject
of the Messiah as revealed in this book.
Attention has been called to the threefold division of the Old Testament cited
by our Lord, namely, the Law, the Prophets, and the Psalms (Luke 24:44), in all
of which were the prophecies relating to himself that "must be
fulfilled." It has been shown just what Old Testament books belong to each
of these several divisions. The division called the Psalms included many books,
styled Holy Writings, and because the Psalms proper was the first book of the
division it gave the name to the whole division.
The object of this discussion is to sketch the psalmist's outline of the
Messiah, or rather, to show how nearly a complete picture of our Lord is
foredrawn in this one book. Let us understand however with Paul, that all
prophecy is but in part (1 Cor. 13:9), and that when we fill in on one canvas
all the prophecies concerning the Messiah of all the Old Testament divisions,
we are far from having a perfect portrait of our Lord. The present purpose is
limited to three things:
1. What the book of the Psalms teaches concerning the Messiah.
2. That the New Testament shall authoritatively specify and expound this
teaching.
3. That the many messianic predictions scattered over the book and the
specifications thereof over the New Testament may be grouped into an orderly
analysis, so that by the adjustment of the scattered parts we may have before
us a picture of our Lord as foreseen by the psalmists.
In allowing the New Testament to authoritatively specify and expound the
predictive features of the book, I am not unmindful of what the so-called
"higher critics" urge against the New Testament quotations from the
Old Testament and the use made of them. In this discussion, however, these
objections are not considered, for sufficient reasons. There is not space for
it. Even at the risk of being misjudged I must just now summarily pass all
these objections, dismissing them with a single statement upon which the reader
may place his own estimate of value. That statement is that in the days of my
own infidelity, before this old method of criticism had its new name, I was
quite familiar with the most and certainly the strongest of the objections now
classified as higher criticism, and have since patiently re-examined them in
their widely conflicting restatements under their modern name, and find my
faith in the New Testament method of dealing with the Old Testament in no way
shattered, but in every way confirmed. God is his own interpreter. The Old
Testament as we now have it was in the hands of our Lord. I understand his
apostle to declare, substantially, that "every one of these sacred
scriptures is God-inspired and is profitable for teaching us what is right to
believe and to do, for convincing us what is wrong in faith or practice, for
rectifying the wrong when done, that we may be ready at every point, furnished
completely, to do every good work, at the right time, in the right manner, and
from the proper motive" (2. Tim. 3:16-17).
This New Testament declares that David was a prophet (Acts 2:30), that he spake
by the Holy Spirit (Acts 1:16), that when the book speaks the Holy Spirit
speaks (Heb. 3:7), and that all its predictive utterances, as sacred Scripture,
"must be fulfilled" (John 13:18; Acts 1:16). It is not claimed that
David wrote all the psalms, but that all are inspired, and that as he was the
chief author, the book goes by his name.
It would be a fine thing to make out two lists, as follows:
1. All of the 150 psalms in order from which the New Testament quotes with
messianic application.
2. The New Testament quotations, book by book, i.e., Matthew so many, and then
the other books in their order.
We would find in neither of these any order as to time, that is, Psalm I which
forecasts an incident in the coming Messiah's life does not forecast the first
incident of his life. And even the New Testament citations are not in exact
order as to time and incident of his life. To get the messianic picture before
us, therefore, we must put the scattered parts together in their due relation
and order, and so construct our own analysis. That is the prime object of this
discussion. It is not claimed that the analysis now presented is perfect. It is
too much the result of hasty, offhand work by an exceedingly busy man. It will
serve, however, as a temporary working model, which any one may subsequently
improve. We come at once to the psalmist's outline of the Messiah.
1. The necessity for a Saviour. This foreseen necessity is a background of the
psalmists' portrait of .the Messiah. The necessity consists in (1) man's
sinfulness; (2) his sin; (3) his inability of wisdom and power to recover
himself; (4) the insufficiency of legal, typical sacrifices in securing
atonement.
The predicate of Paul's great argument on justification by faith is the
universal depravity and guilt of man. He is everywhere corrupt in nature;
everywhere an actual transgressor; everywhere under condemnation. But the
scriptural proofs of this depravity and sin the apostle draws mainly from the
book of the Psalms. In one paragraph of the letter to the Romans (3:4-18), he
cites and groups six passages from six divisions of the Psalms (5:9; 10:7;
14:1-3; 36:1; 51:4-6; 140:3). These passages abundantly prove man's sinfulness,
or natural depravity, and his universal practice of sin.
The predicate also of the same apostle's great argument for revelation and
salvation by a Redeemer is man's inability of wisdom and power to re-establish
communion with God. In one of his letters to the Corinthians he thus commences
his argument: "For it is written, I will destroy the wisdom of the wise,
and will bring to nothing the understanding of the prudent. Where is the wise?
Where is the scribe? Where is the disputer of this world? Hath not God made
foolish the wisdom of this world? -For after that in the wisdom of God, the
world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of preach-ing
to save them that believe." He closes this discussion with the broad
proposition: "The wisdom of this world is foolishness with God," and
proves it by a citation from Psalm 94: 11: "The Lord knoweth the thoughts
of the wise, that they are vain."
In like manner our Lord himself pours scorn on human wisdom and strength by
twice citing Psalm 8: "At that time Jesus answered and said, I thank thee,
O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these things from the
wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto babes. Even so, Father: for so it
seemed good in thy sight" (Matt. 11:25-26). "And when the chief
priests and scribes saw the wonderful things that he did, and the children that
were crying in the temple and saying, Hosanna to the Son of David; they were
sore displeased, and said unto him, Hearest thou what these say? And Jesus
saith unto them, Yea; have ye never read, Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings
thou hast perfected praise?" (Matt. 21.ς15-16).
But the necessity for a Saviour as foreseen by the psalmist did not stop at
man's depravity, sin, and helplessness. The Jews were trusting in the
sacrifices of their law offered on the smoking altar. The inherent weakness of
these offerings, their lack of intrinsic merit, their ultimate abolition, their
complete fulfilment and supercession by a glorious antitype were foreseen and
foreshown in this wonderful prophetic book: I will not reprove thee for thy sacrifices; And thy
burnt offerings are continually before me. I will take no bullock out of thy
house, Nor he-goat out of thy folds. For every beast of the forest is mine, And
the cattle upon a thousand hills. I know all of the birds of the mountains; And
the wild beasts of the field are mine. If I were hungry, I would not tell thee;
For the world is mine, and the fulness thereof. Will I eat the flesh of bulls,
Or drink the blood of goats? Psalm 50:8-13.
Yet again it speaks in that more striking
passage cited in the letter to the Hebrews: "For the law having a shadow
of good things to come, not the very image of the things, can never with the
same sacrifices year by year, which they offer continually, make the comers
thereunto perfect. For then would they not have ceased to be offered? because
that the worshipers, once purged should have no more consciousness of sins. But
in those sacrifices there is a remembrance made of sins year by year. For it is
impossible that the blood of bulls and goats should take away sins. Wherefore
when he cometh into the world, he saith, Sacrifice and offering thou wouldst not, But a body
didst thou prepare for me; In whole burnt offerings and sacrifices for sin thou
hadst no pleasure: Then said I, Lo, I am come (In the roll of the book it is
written of me) To do thy will, O God. Saying above, Sacrifice and offering and
whole burnt offerings and sacrifices for sin thou wouldst not, neither hadst
pleasure therein, (the which are offered according to the law), then hath he said,
Lo, I am come to do thy will, O God. He taketh away the first, that he may
establish the second" (Heb. 10:1-9).
This keen foresight of the temporary character and intrinsic worthlessness of
animal sacrifices anticipated similar utterances by the later prophets (Isa.
1:10-17; Jer. 6:20; 7:21-23; Hos. 6:6; Amos 5:21; Mic. 6:6-8). Indeed, I may as
well state in passing that when the apostle declares, "It is impossible
that the blood of bulls and of goats should take away sins," he lays down
a broad principle, just as applicable to baptism and the Lord's Supper. With
reverence I state the principle: Not even God himself by mere appointment can
vest in any ordinance, itself lacking intrinsic merit, the power to take away
sin. There can be, therefore, in the nature of the case, no sacramental
salvation. This would destroy the justice of God in order to exalt his mercy.
Clearly the psalmist foresaw that "truth and mercy must meet
together" before "righteousness and peace could kiss each other"
(85:10). Thus we find as the dark background of the psalmists' luminous
portrait of the Messiah, the necessity for a Saviour.
2. The nature, extent, and blessedness of the salvation to be wrought by the
coming Messiah. In no other prophetic book are the nature, fullness, and
blessedness of salvation so clearly seen and so vividly portrayed. Besides
others not now enumerated, certainly the psalmists clearly forecast four great
elements of salvation:
(1) An atoning sacrifice of intrinsic merit offered once for all (Ps. 40:6-8;
Heb. 10:4-10).
(2) Regeneration itself consisting of cleansing, renewal, and justification. We
hear his impassioned statement of the necessity of regeneration: "Behold,
I was shapen in iniquity and in sin did my mother conceive me. Behold, thou
desirest truth in the inward parts," followed by his earnest prayer:
"Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within
me," and his equally fervent petition: "Wash me thoroughly from mine
iniquity and cleanse me from my sin. Purge me with hyssop and I shall be clean;
wash me and I shall be whiter than snow" (Ps. 51). And we hear him again
as Paul describes the blessedness of the man, unto whom God imputes
righteousness without
works, saying, Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven, And whose sins
are covered. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord will not reckon sin Psalm
32:1; Romans 4:6-8.
(3) Introduction into the heavenly rest (Ps. 95:7-11; Heb. 3:7-19; 4:1-11).
Here is the antitypical Joshua leading spiritual Israel across the Jordan of
death into the heavenly Canaan, the eternal rest that remaineth for the people
of God. Here we find creation's original sabbath eclipsed by redemption's
greater sabbath when the Redeemer "entered his rest, ceasing from his own
works as God did from his."
(4) The recovery of all the universal dominion lost by the first Adam and the
securement of all possible dominion which the first Adam never attained (Pa.
8:5-6; Eph. 1:20-22; Heb. 2:7-9; 1 Cor. 15:24-28).
What vast extent then and what blessedness in the salvation foreseen by the
psalmists, and to be wrought by the Messiah. Atoning sacrifice of intrinsic
merit; regeneration by the Holy Spirit; heavenly rest as an eternal
inheritance; and universal dominion shared with Christ!
3. The wondrous person of the Messiah in his dual nature, divine and human.
(1) His divinity,
(a) as God: "Thy throne, O God, is forever and
ever" (Ps. 45:6 and Heb. 1:8) ;
(b) as creator of the heavens and earth, immutable and
eternal: Of old
didst thou lay the foundation of the earth; And the heavens are the work of thy
hands. They shall perish, but thou shalt endure; Yea, all of them shall wax old
like a garment; As a vesture shalt thou change them, and they shall be changed.
But thou art the same, And thy years shall have no end Psalm 102:25-27 quoted with slight changes in Hebrews
1:10-12.
(c) As owner of the earth: The earth is the Lord's and the fulness thereof; The world, and they
that dwell therein, Psalm 24:1 quoted in 1 Corinthians 10:26.
(d) As the Son of God: "Thou art my Son; This day have I begotten
thee" Psalm 2:7; Hebrews 1:5.
(e) As David's Lord: The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit thou at my right hand, Until I make
thine enemies thy footstool, Psalm 110:1; Matthew 22:41-46.
(f) As the object of angelic worship: "And let all the angels of God
worship him" Psalm 97:7; Hebrews 1:6.
(g) As the Bread of life: And he rained down manna upon them to eat, And gave them food from
heaven Psalm 78:24; interpreted in John. 6:31-58. These are but samples which ascribe deity to the
Messiah of the psalmists.
(2) His humanity, (a) As the Son of man, or Son of Adam: Psalm 8:4-6, cited in
1 Corinthians 15:24-28; Ephesians 1:2022; Hebrews 2:7-9. Compare Luke's
genealogy, 3:23-38. This is the ideal man, or Second Adam, who regains Paradise
Lost, who recovers race dominion, in whose image all his spiritual lineage is
begotten. 1 Corinthians 15:45-49. (b) As the Son of David: Psalms 18:50; 89:4,
29, 36; 132:11, cited in Luke 1:32; Acts 13:22-23; Romans 1:3; 2 Timothy 2:8.
Perhaps a better statement of the psalmists' vision of the wonderful person of
the Messiah would be: He saw the uncreated Son, the second person of the
trinity, in counsel and compact with the Father, arranging in eternity for the
salvation of men: Psalm 40:6-8; Hebrews 10:5-7. Then he saw this Holy One stoop
to be the Son of man: Psalm 8:4-6; Hebrews 2:7-9. Then he was the son of David,
and then he saw him rise again to be the Son of God: Psalm 2:7; Romans 1:3-4.
4. His offices.
(1) As the one atoning sacrifice (Ps. 40:6-8; Heb. 10:5-7).
(2) As the great Prophet, or Preacher (Pss. 40:9-10; 22:22; Hebrews 2:12). Even
the method of his teaching by parable was foreseen (Ps. 78:2; Matt. 13:35).
Equally also the grace, wisdom, and power of his teaching. When the psalmist
declares that "Grace is poured into thy lips" (Ps. 45:2), we need not
be startled when we read that all the doctors in the Temple who heard him when
only a boy "were astonished at his understanding and answers" (Luke
2:47); nor that his home people at Nazareth "all bear him witness, and
wondered at the gracious words which proceeded out of his mouth" (Luke 4:
22); nor that those of his own country were astonished, and said, "Whence
hath this man this wisdom?" (Matt. 13:54); nor that the Jews in the Temple
marveled, saying, "How knoweth this man letters, having never
learned?" (John 7:15) ; nor that the stern officers of the law found their
justification in failure to arrest him in the declaration, "Never man
spake like this man" (John 7:46).
(3) As the king (Pss. 2:6; 24:7-10; 45:1-18; 110:1; Matt. 22:42-46; Acts
2:33-36; 1 Cor. 15:25; Eph. 1:20; Heb. 1:13).
(4) As the priest (Ps. 110:4; Heb. 5:5-10; 7:1-21; 10:12-14).
(5) As the final judge. The very sentence of expulsion pronounced upon the
finally impenitent by the great judge (Matt. 25:41) is borrowed from the
psalmist's prophetic words (Ps. 6:8).
5. Incidents of life. The psalmists not only foresaw the necessity for a
Saviour; the nature, extent, and blessedness of the salvation; the wonderful
human-divine person of the Saviour; the offices to be filled by him in the work
of salvation, but also many thrilling details of his work in life, death,
resurrection, and exaltation. It is not assumed to cite all these details, but
some of the most important are enumerated in order, thus:
(1) The visit, adoration, and gifts of the Magi recorded in Matthew 2 are but
partial fulfilment of Psalm 72:9-10.
(2) The scripture employed by Satan in the temptation of our Lord (Luke
4:10-11) was cited from Psalm 91:11-12 and its pertinency not denied.
(3) In accounting for his intense earnestness and the apparently extreme
measures adopted by our Lord in his first purification of the Temple (John
2:17), he cites the messianic zeal predicted in Psalm 69:9.
(4) Alienation from his own family was one of the saddest trials of our Lord's
earthly life. They are slow to understand his mission and to enter into
sympathy with him. His self-abnegation and exhaustive toil were regarded by
them as evidences of mental aberration, and it seems at one time they were
ready to resort to forcible restraint of his freedom) virtually what in our
time would be called arrest under a writ of lunacy. While at the last his
half-brothers became distinguished preachers of his gospel, for a long while
they do not believe on him. And the evidence forces us to the conclusion that
his own mother shared with her other sons, in kind though not in degree, the
misunderstanding of the supremacy of his mission over family relations. The New
Testament record speaks for itself:
Son, why hast thou thus dealt with us? behold, thy father and I sought thee
sorrowing. And he said unto them. How is it that ye sought me? Knew ye not that
I must be in my Father's house? And they understood not the saying which he
spake unto them Luke 2:48-51 (R.V.).
And when the wine failed, the mother of Jesus saith unto him, They have no
wine. And Jesus saith unto her, Woman, what have I to do with thee? Mine hour
is not yet come. John 2:3-5 (R.V.).
And there come his mother and his brethren; and standing without; they sent
unto him, calling him. And a multitude was sitting about him; and they say unto
him. Behold, thy mother and thy brethren without seek for thee. And he
answereth them, and saith, Who is my mother and my brethren? And looking round
on them that sat round about him, he saith, Behold, my mother and my brethren)
For whosoever shall do the will of God, the same is my brother, and sister, and
mother Mark 3:31-35 (R.V.).
Now the feast of the Jews, the feast of tabernacles, was at hand. His brethren
therefore said unto him, Depart hence, and go into Judea, that thy disciples
also may behold thy works which thou doest. For no man doeth anything in
secret, and himself seeketh to be known openly. If thou doest these things,
manifest thyself to the world. For even his brethren did not believe on him.
Jesus therefore saith unto them, My time is not yet come; but your time is
always ready. The world cannot hate you; but me it hateth, because I testify of
it, that its works are evil. Go ye up unto the feast: I go not up yet unto this
feast; because my time is not fulfilled. John 7:2-9 (R.V.).
These citations from the Revised Version tell their own story. But all that sad
story is foreshown in the prophetic psalms. For example: I am become a stranger unto
my brethren, And an alien unto my mother's children. Psalm 69:8.
(5) The triumphal entry into Jerusalem was welcomed by a joyous people shouting
a benediction from Psalm 118: "Blessed is he that cometh in the name of
the Lord" (Matt. 21:9); and the Lord's lamentation over Jerusalem predicts
continued desolation and banishment from his sight until the Jews are ready to
repeat that benediction (Matt. 23:39).
(6) The children's hosanna in the Temple after its second purgation is declared
by our Lord to be a fulfilment of that perfect praise forecast in Psalm 8:2.
(7) The final rejection of our Lord by his own people was also clear in the
psalmist's vision (Ps. 118:22; Matt. 21:42-44).
(8) Gethsemane's baptism of suffering, with its strong crying and tears and
prayers was as clear to the psalmist's prophetic vision as to the evangelist
and apostle after it became history (Ps. 69:1-4, 13-20; and Matt. 26:36-44;
Heb. 5:7).
(9) In life-size also before the psalmist was the betrayer of Christ and his
doom (Pss. 41:9; 69:25; 109:6-8; John 13: 18; Acts 1:20).
(10) The rage of the people, Jew and Gentile, and the conspiracy of Pilate and
Herod are clearly outlined (Ps. 2:1-3; Acts 4:25-27).
(11) All the farce of his trial the false accusation, his own marvelous
silence; and the inhuman maltreatment to which he was subjected, is foreshown
in the prophecy as dramatically as in the history (Matt. 26:57-68; 27:26-31;
Pss. 27:12; 35: 15-16; 38:3:69:19).
The circumstances of his death, many and clear, are distinctly foreseen. He
died in the prime of life (Pss. 89:45; 102:23-24). He died by crucifixion (Ps.
22:14-17; Luke 23; 33; John 19:23-37; 20:27). But yet not a bone of his body was
broken (Ps. 34:20; John 19:36).
The persecution, hatred without a cause, the mockery and insults, are all
vividly and dramatically foretold (Pss. 22:6-13; 35:7, 12, 15, 21; 109:25).
The parting of his garments and the gambling for his vesture (Ps. 22:18; Matt.
27:35).
His intense thirst and the gall and vinegar offered for his drink (Ps. 69:21;
Matt. 27:34).
In the psalms, too, we hear his prayers for his enemies so remarkably fulfilled
in fact (Ps. 109:4; Luke 23:34).
His spiritual death was also before the eye of the psalmist, and the very words
which expressed it the psalmist heard. Separation from the Father is spiritual
death. The sinner's substitute must die the sinner's death, death physical,
i.e., separation of soul from body; death spiritual, i.e., separation of the
soul from God. The latter is the real death and must precede the former. This
death the substitute died when he cried out: "My God, My God, why hast
thou forsaken me." (Ps. 22:1; Matt. 27:46).
Emerging from the darkness of that death, which was the hour of the prince of
darkness, the psalmist heard him commend his spirit to the Father (Ps. 31:35;
Luke 23:46) showing that while he died the spiritual death, his soul was not
permanently abandoned unto hell (Ps. 16:8-10; Acts 2:25) so that while he
"tasted death" for every man it was not permanent death (Heb. 2:9).
With equal clearness the psalmist foresaw his resurrection, his triumph over
death and hell, his glorious ascension into heaven, and his exaltation at the
right hand of God as King of kings and Lord of lords, as a high Driest forever,
as invested with universal sovereignty (Ps. 16:8-11; 24:7-10; 68:18; 2:6;
111:l-4; 8:4-6; Acts 2:25-36; Eph. 1:19-23; 4:8-10).
We see, therefore, brethren, when the scattered parts are put together and
adjusted, how nearly complete a portrait of our Lord is put upon the prophetic
canvas by this inspired limner, the sweet singer of Israel.
QUESTIONS
1. What a good text for this
chapter?
2. What the threefold division
of the Old Testament as cited by our Lord?
3. What is the last division
called and why?
4. What is the object of the
discussion in this chapter?
5. To what three things is
the purpose limited?
6. What especially qualifies
the author to meet the objections of the higher critics to allowing the New
Testament usage of the Old Testament to determine its meaning and application?
7. What the author's
conviction relative to the Scriptures?
8. What the New Testament
testimony on the question of inspiration?
9. What the author's
suggested plan of approach to the study of the Messiah in the Psalms?
10. What the background of
the Psalmist's portrait of the Messiah and of what does it consist?
11. Give the substance of
Paul's discussion of man's sinfulness.
12. What the teaching of
Jesus on this point?
13. What the teaching
relative to sacrifices?
14. What the nature, extent,
and blessedness of the salvation to be wrought by the coming Messiah and what the
four great elements of it as forecast by the psalmist?
15. What the teaching of the
psalms relative to the wondrous person of the Messiah? Discuss.
16. What the offices of the
Messiah according to psalms? Discuss each.
17. Cite the more important
events of the Messiah's life according to the vision of the psalmist.
18. What the circumstances
of the Messiah's death and resurrection as foreseen by the psalmist?
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE BOOK OF PROVERBS
The following works are commended as special helps on the book:
1. Conant, in American Bible Union Revision, which is the best.
2. Perowne, in "Cambridge Bible" which is very good.
3. Berry, in "American Commentary," which is good only in part.
4. Lyman Abbott, The Proverbs of Solomon, which is very valuable.
The authors of the book of Proverbs may be learned from the book itself, as
follows:
1. In 1:1 it says, "The Proverbs of Solomon the Son of David, king of
Israel."
2. In 10:1 it says, "The Proverbs of Solomon."
3. In 22:17 it says, "Incline thine ear, and hear the words of the
wise."
4. In 24:23 it says, "These also are sayings of the wise."
5. In 25:1 it says, "These also are proverbs of Solomon, which the men of
Hezekiah king of Judah copied out."
6. In 30:1 it says, "The words of Agur the son of Jakeh; the oracle."
7. In 31:1 it says, "The words of King Lemuel; the oracle which his mother
taught him."
8. In 31:10 it says nothing about the author, and this part of the book
(31:10-31) is, therefore, anonymous.
The book of Proverbs in its present form was completed in the eighth century,
B.C. : "These also are proverbs of Solomon, which the men of Hezekiah King
of Judah copied out," (Prov. 25:1). By determining the date of Hezekiah's
reign we determine the time of the completion of this book except the three
appendices.
The following is an outline of the book, stating the five main sections and
giving chapter and verse for each section:
Introduction: Design of the author (1:1-6)
1. Wisdom and Folly contrasted (1:7 to 9:18)
2. A collection of 376 brief proverbs (10:1 to 22:16)
3. "The Words of the Wise" (22:17 to 24:22)
4. Another collection of the "The Words of the Wise" (24: 23-34)
5. Another group of Solomon's proverbs, copied by the scribes of Hezekiah
(chaps. 25 to 29)
Three Appendices (chaps. 30-31)
Some critics wish to limit the authorship of Solomon to only a comparatively small
number of detached proverbs in Sections 2 and 5. This is in keeping with the
attempt to rob David of his glory as the most gifted and prolific hymn writer
of Old Testament times. It is true that Sections 3-4 and the Appendices of the
book are not ascribed to Solomon, but about five-sixths of the book is ascribed
to him, and there is no good reason to discredit these ascriptions to the man
who was most of all qualified to write proverbs.
The scriptural statement and reference showing extent of Solomon's epigrammatic
wisdom are as follows: "He spake three thousand proverbs; and his songs
were a thousand and five" (1 Kings 4:32) (See 1 Kings 10:1, 24; Matthew
12:42).
His gift of wisdom finds expression in wise and witty apothegms that show his
intellectual capacity and his moral sagacity, his habits of close observation
and scientific thought, his common sense and uncommon knowledge of human
nature. It should be borne in mind that the circumstances of Solomon's times,
at all events in the earlier and happier years of his reign, were peculiarly
favorable to the study and cultivation of wisdom, or philosophy. If the
eventful periods of a nation's history give scope and stimulus to the genius of
the poet, the calmer atmosphere of national peace and prosperity is more
congenial to the temper of the philosopher. The relations, both of recognition
and of intercourse, which Solomon established and maintained for himself and
his kingdom and other nations of the world, conduced largely to that
interchange of thought and intellectual rivalry which give the highest impulse
to the pursuit of wisdom.
The word rendered "proverb" means parable, or authoritative saying,
and suggests that moral truths are taught by comparison or contrast. The
English word "proverb" means a brief saying instead of many words
(proverbs), and implies "pithiness in parallelism." Proverbs have
always been the mottoes that mold life and history. The power of a proverb lies
partly in its form; it is short, sharp, concisive, and impressive. It assumes
truth, attracts attention, and imprints itself on the memory. The Hebrew
proverbs, "like forceps," hold truth firmly between the opposing
points of antithesis. A proverb may be easily expanded into a parable,
especially is it true in the case of the parabolic proverb. Indeed, as
Archbishop Trench remarks, "The proverb is often a concentrated parable;
as, for instance, 'If the blind lead the blind, both shall fall into the
ditch'; which might evidently be extended with ease into a parable." It
would be no less true to say that a proverb is often an epitome of a parable.
Of the expansion of the proverb into the parable, or allegory, we have only a
single example in this book, viz: that of "The Sluggard's Vineyard,"
(Prov. 24:30-34).
I here give several of the most common proverbs of our English-speaking people,
thus: Actions
speak louder than words. It is too late to shut the stable door when the horse
is stolen. A stitch in time saves nine. Fools' names like fools' faces, Are
often seen in public places. Never cry over spilt milk. Trust in the Lord and
tie your camel. Trust in the Lord and keep your powder dry. A hint to the wise
is sufficient.
Let us now state, define, and illustrate by full quotations the six leading
varieties of Hebrew parallelisms found in this book:
1. Synonymous, a parallelism in which the members are alike in meaning.
Example: The
liberal soul shall be made fat; And he that watereth shall be watered also
himself. Proverbs 11 :25
2. Antithetic, a parallelism in which the members are contrasted. Example: The labor of the righteous
tendeth to life; The increase of the wicked, to sin. Proverbs 10:16
3. Synthetic, a parallelism in which the members contain different truths, but
have a common connecting link. Example: The fear of the wicked, it shall come upon him; And
the desire of the righteous shall be granted. Proverbs 10:24.
4. Integral, or progressive (climactic), & parallelism in which the last
member completes the thought or another gradation expressed by the first.
Example: The
law of the wise is a fountain of life, That one may depart from the snares of
death. Proverbs 13:14.
5. Introverted, a parallelism in which the first line corresponds with the
fourth, and the second with the third. Example : My son, if thy heart be wise, My heart will
be glad, even mine: Yea, my heart will rejoice, When thy lips speak right
things. Proverbs 23:15-16.
6. Parabolic (emblematic), a parallelism in which a lesson is drawn from
natural objects. Example: As vinegar to the teeth and as smoke to the eyes, So is the sluggard to
them that send him. Proverbs 10:26.
According to Spurgeon, these three things go to the making of a proverb:
shortness, sense, and salt.
The key word of this book is "Wisdom," and the key verse is, The fear of Jehovah is the
beginning of wisdom; And the knowledge of the Holy One is understanding.
Proverbs 9:10.
Wisdom, as used in Proverbs, is very comprehensive in its meaning and
application. It is contrasted with folly, simplicity, and scorning. It is used synonymously
with understanding, instruction, learning, knowledge, discernment, subtlety,
counsel, discretion, prudence, and the fear of Jehovah. It covers the practical
and moral world as thoroughly as it does the intellectual. True wisdom develops
manhood; leads to morality and, in its highest reach, to piety; it demands
obedience to both tables of the Law. It makes the understanding clear, the
heart clean, the conscience pure, and the will firm. Wisdom, as here
personified, corresponds to the Word, or Logos, of John: "In the beginning
was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God" (John 1:1).
Of "Wisdom and her ways," Hooker says, "Whatsoever, either men
on earth or the angels of heaven do know, it is as a drop of that unemptiable
foundation of Wisdom; which Wisdom hath diversely imparted her treasures into
the world. As her ways are of sundry kinds, so her manner of teaching is not
merely one and the same. Some things she openeth by the Sacred Books of
Scripture; some things, by the glorious works of Nature; with some things she
inspireth them from above by spiritual influence; in some things she leadeth
and traineth them only by worldly experience and practice. We may not so, in
any one special kind, admire her, that we disgrace her in any other; but let
all her ways be according unto their place and degree adored."
A French proverb on wisdom is, "The strongest symptom of wisdom in man is
his being sensible of his own follies." A Latin proverb on wisdom is,
"He is by no means to be considered wise who is not wise toward
himself." Grymestone says this of wisdom: "Wisdom is the olive that
springeth from the Heart, bloometh on the Tongue and beareth fruit in the
Actions."
Colton, of the wise man and the fool, has this to say: "The wise man has
his follies no less than the fool; but it has been said that herein lies the
difference, the follies of the fool are known to the world, but are hidden from
himself; the follies of the wise are known to himself, but hidden from the
world. A harmless hilarity, and a buoyant cheerfulness are not unfrequent
concomitants of genius; and we are never more deceived than when we mistake
gravity for greatness, solemnity for science, and pomposity for
erudition."
Other Jewish wisdom literature has come down to us, viz: Job, Ecclesiastes, and
the apocryphal books of "The Wisdom of Solomon" and "The Wisdom
of Jesus the Son of Sirach," or "Ecclesiasticus."
There is evidence in the Old Testament that there was a class, or school, of
persons who devoted themselves to the study and promotion of wisdom. This is
found in the expression) "The Wise," occurring in several places. For
example: Proverbs 1:6; 22:17; 24:23; Job 15:18. The Jewish conception of wisdom
differs from the ideas and methods of Western philosophers. The difference is
wide and fundamental. "The Hebrew wise man does not propose to himself the
abstract question, What is truth? and then pursue his independent search for an
answer through all accessible regions of human thought and mind. His starting point
is not a question, but a creed, or an axiom. Given, that there is a Supreme
Being, Creator, Sustainer, Ruler, Judge of All, then wisdom is to understand so
far as it is permitted to man's finite intelligence the manifold adaptation and
harmony, the beauty and utility, of his words and ways, and to turn our
knowledge of them to practical account. Wisdom is, in all the complex relations
of human life and conduct, to know and to do his will."
Then the Jewish idea of a perfectly wise man is, that the perfectly wise man is
the one who, in his whole being, lives .and thinks and acts in right
relationship to the all-wise God. His wisdom commences emotionally in the fear
of God; is manifested intellectually in his acquaintance with the
manifestations of the divine nature in word and work; is active volitionally in
obedience to the Will of God, as revealed in word and work.
Lange, of this Hebrew wisdom, says, "The essential character of the Hebrew
Philosopher is far more practical than speculative; it is as little inclined to
pursue or to prompt genuine speculation, as it is to identify itself with
secular philosophy in general, and with unaided human reason to investigate the
final causes of things. It is essentially a divine philosophy, planting its
feet upon the basis of divine revelation, and staying itself upon the eternal
principles of the divine law; and it is this determinate and positive character
of its method of conceiving and teaching that chiefly distinguishes it from the
philosophy of other nations and of other times." Such wisdom, to be
obtained, must be diligently sought (Prov. 2:4-6). In one respect the range of
Hebrew wisdom is practically unbounded. It knows no distinction of race or country.
It is not national, but human. Cradled in the stronghold of exclusiveness, it
overlaps the barriers that would restrain it, and reaches forth to the whole
family of man. It knows no "middle wall of partition," no "outer
court of the Gentiles," in the temple of truth which it rears.
The relation of this wisdom to Christian faith and Christian science is vital.
Such wisdom, while it is in the highest degree religious, consecrating man and
all creation to God, is also in the truest sense free, claiming for man's
intelligence and advantage all that proceeds from God. "The cedar tree
that is in Lebanon and the hyssop that springeth out of the walls" are
alike within its cognizance; "Beast and fowl and creeping thing and
fishes," are not beneath its notice, for they are all the works of God.
And thus it is akin to and the precursor of that wisdom which Christ both is
and teaches, and wisdom which gathers up all things through himself in God, and
which by himself gives all things back again to man from God, the wisdom that
is at once the offspring of Christian faith and the parent of Christian
science.
The essential teachings of the book of Proverbs are moral and religious:
1. The moral element is essentially prophetic.
2. It bears a close relation to the teaching of Christ himself by the fact that
a considerable number of directly religious proverbs and instructions are given
in the book and religion itself is the basis of their teaching.
3. The prophecy of the book is by ideals. Horton, in his "The Book of
Proverbs," calling attention to the historical accounts, different and to
all appearance irreconcilable, of the Hebrew Monarchy, its origin on the one
hand in the divine appointment, and its consequent ideal of perfection, and its
institution on the other hand as a rebellion against the sovereignty of the
Lord, says, "The contrast just pointed out in the historic books appears
with equal distinctness in this book of wisdom; the proverbial sayings about
the king exhibit the twofold thought; and the reconciliation is only found when
we have realized the kingship of Christ and can bring that idea to explain the
ancient forecast. Thus the study of the things concerning the king is to the
thoughtful reader of the proverbs a study of the things concerning Christ. The
ideal elements speak of him; the actual shortcomings cry out for him."
The direct quotations of the book of Proverbs in the New Testament are only
four: Compare (1) Proverbs 3:11-12 with Hebrews 12:5-6; (2) Proverbs 3:34 with
James 4:6; (3) Proverbs 11:31 with 1 Peter 4:18; (4) Proverbs 25:21-22 with
Romans 12:20. These quotations are regarded as proof of the canonicity of the
book.
It has been said that the morality inculcated in the book of Proverbs is of no
very lofty type; that the motives for right conduct are mainly prudential, that
is, "Be good and you will prosper; be wicked and you will suffer." It
goes without saying that prudential considerations must influence our moral
conduct. This is forcefully illustrated by Coleridge's familiar description of
the three steps, "The Prudential," "The Moral." and
"The Spiritual," by which the whole ascent to godliness is made. So
we may say, that true morality is hostile to that prudence only which precludes
true morality. A thoughtful study, therefore, of the moral teaching of this
book leads us with reverent admiration to conclude that here, too, "wisdom
is justified by her works."
QUESTIONS
1. What special helps on
this book?
2. Who the authors of the
book of Proverbs?
3. Give the time limits for
the completion of the book of Proverbs in its present form and quote the
scripture to prove the statement.
4. Outline the book, stating
the five main sections and give chapter and verse for each section.
5. To what portions of the
book: of Proverbs do some critics wish to limit the authorship of Solomon?
6. With what other evil
tendency in Old Testament authorship is this in harmony ?
7. What sections of the book
are not ascribed to Solomon?
8. Give scriptural statement
and reference showing extent of Solomon's epigramatic wisdom.
9. What especially fitted
Solomon for writing proverbs?
10. What the origin, nature,
meaning, and force of "Proverbs"?
11. What the relation of
proverb and parable?
12. Give several of the most
common proverbs of our English speaking people.
13. State, define and
illustrate by full quotations the six leading varieties of Hebrew parallelisms
found in this book.
14. What things, according
to Spurgeon, go to make a proverb?
15. What is the key word and
what the key verse of this book?
16. Describe
"Wisdom" as used in the book of Proverbs, stating with what it is
contrasted, with what it is synonymous, and what sphere it covers.
17. What says Hooker of
"Wisdom and her ways"?
18. What the French proverb
on wisdom?
19. What a Latin proverb on
wisdom?
20. What says Grymestone of
wisdom?
21. What says Colton of the
wise man. and the fool?
22. What other Jewish wisdom
literature has come down to us?
23. What evidence in the Old
Testament that there was a class, or school, of persons who devoted themselves
to the study and promotion of wisdom?
24. How does the Jewish
conception of wisdom differ from the ideaa and methods of Western philosophers?
25. What the Jewish idea of
a perfectly wise man?
26. What says Lange of this
Hebrew wisdom?
27. How is such wisdom to be
obtained?
28. In what one respect is
the range of Hebrew wisdom practically unbounded?
29. What the relation of this
wisdom to Christian faith and Christian science?
30. What the essential
teachings of the book of Proverbs?
31. What are the direct
quotations of the book of Proverbs in the New Testament and what the value of
this fact?
32. What can. you say of the
type of morality inculcated in the book of Proverbs?
THE INSTRUCTION OF WISDOM
Proverbs 1:1 to 3:35.
We learn, in general, from the salutation, Proverbs 1:1-6:
1. The general author of the book, especially that Solomon was the father of
this kind of literature;
2. The manifold use of proverbs, or the manifold purpose of the book.
The manifold purpose of the book, as set forth in the salutation, is: to know
wisdom; to discern words; to receive instruction; to give prudence, knowledge,
and discretion; and to understand a proverb.
The author's text for this division (1-9) is Proverbs 1:7: The fear of Jehovah is the
beginning of knowledge; But the foolish despise wisdom and instruction,
"Fear" here means childlike reverence and "instruction"
means discipline, or correction.
The foundation maxims of wisdom are parental reverence and obedience: My son, hear the instruction
of thy father, And forsake not the law of thy mother: For they shall be a
chaplet of grace unto thy head, And chains about thy neck. Proverbs 1:8-9.
There is a warning in 1:10-19 against robbery caused by greed of gain. The
times reflected here are the different times in the history of Israel from the
Judges to the time of Christ. Thompson's The Land and The Book. gives
a fine description of the conditions here referred to. There are two striking
figures of speech in verses 12 and 17, one describing the greediness of sinners
and the other representing the craftiness of the trapper, meaning the wiles of
the devil.
In 1:20-33 we have personified wisdom's appeal and the folly of rejecting it.
And analysis of this paragraph is as follows:
1. Wisdom's method (20:20ff.): she cries aloud. She is not esoteric but
exoteric. She teaches not in secret but openly. She does not carry on through a
secret society but, like Jesus and Paul, she teaches "publicly, and from
house to house."
2. Wisdom's appeal (22-23): she gives reproof and exhorts the simple ones, the
scoffers and fools to turn and heed. In verse 23 we have a promise of the
spirit's illumination which is later given and enlarged upon by Isaiah (32:15)
and Joel (2:28).
3. Wisdom's rejection and the result (24-32) ; she had called and stretched out
her hand, but they did not regard, therefore she will turn the deaf ear to all
their signals of distress when their storm of calamity comes like a whirlwind.
4. Wisdom's encouragement (33); she gives a ray of hope to those who heed her
call and offers them a quiet, peaceful, and secure dwelling place.
The meaning of "simple ones," "scoffers," and
"fools" (v. 22), is as follows: "simple" here means unwary;
"scoffers" refers to a class of defiant and cynical freethinkers in
contrast with the "wise" referred to so often in the Wisdom
Literature; "fools" signifies heavy, dull, gross fellows. This
enumeration covers the field: the "simple," from whom recruits are
too easily drawn to the army of evil; "scoffers," the proud leaders
of the host; "fools," the rank and file of the host. Verse 23 of this
passage is, undoubtedly, the germ of Isaiah 44:3 and Joel 2:28, and the
fulfilment of which is John 7:37 and Acts 2:33.
Verse 31 reminds us of Galatians 6:7: "Be not deceived, God is not mocked:
for whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap."
The teaching of chapter 2 is that wisdom must be sought as one would seek
silver or hid treasures, expressed in synonymous parallelism mainly. The
characteristics of the seeker of wisdom are a willingness and desire to know,
accompanied by devotion, to which may be added diligence and persistency (vv.
1-4).
The results of finding such wisdom are expressed in verses 5-20, which are the
understanding of the fear of Jehovah, the finding of the knowledge of God who
gives wisdom to the upright, who also is a shield and guard to his saints, then
the understanding of righteousness and justice, the pleasure of knowledge, the
deliverance from evil ways and perverse men who forsake right paths to walk in
darkness, and deliverance from the strange and wicked woman who has forsaken
her friends, forgotten her God, and whose house leads to death from which there
is no recovery.
There is a great and encouraging prophecy given in 2:21-22. It is the final
triumph of the righteous over the wicked. The righteous who possess the divine
wisdom here described may walk in the ways of good men and dwell safely in the
land, but the wicked are doomed to defeat and final banishment.
The subject of chapter 3 is the cultivation of wisdom as the best thing to
adjust all our relations toward God and man. A brief outline of this chapter
is:
1. Our duty to God (1-12).
2. The happy state of them that have wisdom (13-26).
3. Man's duty to his fellow man (27-35).
According to verses 1-12, our duties to God are to remember his law and keep
his commandments; to walk in the ways of kindness and truth; to trust in
Jehovah implicitly and acknowledge him always; to be not conceited but fear
Jehovah; to honor Jehovah with our substance, and not to despise the chastening
of Jehovah nor be weary of his correction, since it all comes as an expression
of his love for us as his children.
It is interesting to note here the New Testament use made of verses 11-12. Paul
quotes these verses in Hebrews 12:5-6 to enforce his argument on the chastening
of the Lord being a proof of his love for his people. Here the author of
Hebrews calls this passage in Proverbs an "exhortation, which reasoneth
with you as with sons" and then shows the superiority of God's chastening
over the chastening of our earthly parents who chasten us as it seemed good to
them, but God chastens his children for their good. This shows the unmistakable
meaning and application of Proverbs 3:11-12.
According to the second division of this analysis, we find that the value of
wisdom is beyond all comparison with earthly attainments or things, and
produces a happiness far more enduring than the most valuable things of time;
she is better than silver, more precious than rubies and beyond comparison with
anything that the human heart can desire, since she holds in her hand lengths
of days, riches and honor; her ways are pleasant and her paths are peace; she
is a tree of life and a perpetual source of happiness; by her Jehovah wrought
his mighty works and she is to be kept as a source of life and grace; she helps
to walk straight, takes away fear and gives sweet sleep; she takes away sudden
fear of the desolation of the wicked since her possessors are believers in
Jehovah and their feet are being kept by him.
According to the last section of this chapter, our duties to our fellow man and
God's attitude toward the wicked and the righteous are set forth. The righteous
are commanded to pay what they owe when it is possible for them to do it and
not to put off their neighbors one day when they can attend to it at once. Then
they are commanded to plan no evil against their neighbor and to avoid all
responsibility for strife and envy, since the wicked are abominable to Jehovah
and his curse rests upon them, while his blessing and grace are with the
righteous. The last verse contrasts the wise and the foolish. One is reminded
here of our Lord's parable of the ten virgins. Verse 34 is quoted by James
(4:6) and Peter (1 Peter 5:5) to show God's attitude toward both the proud and
the humble. They both say, "God resisteth the proud, but giveth grace to
the humble."
QUESTIONS
1. What do we learn, in
general, from the salutation, Proverbs 1:1-6?
2. What the manifold purpose
of the book as set forth in the salutation?
3. What the author's text
for this division (chaps. 1-9) and what the meaning of "fear," and
"instruction"?
4. What the foundation
maxims of wisdom?
5. What the warning in
1:10-19, what time does this passage reflect and what striking figures of
speech used here?
6. What the warning in
1:20-33, and what is a brief analysis of this section?
7. What the meaning of
"simple ones," "scoffers," and "fools," verse 22?
8. Of what scripture is 1:23
the germ and what scriptures show their fulfilment?
9. Of what New Testament
scripture does verse 31 remind us?
10. What is the teaching of
chapter 2 and what kind of parallelism most prominent in this chapter?
11. What must be the
characteristics of the seeker of wisdom?
12. Give a summary of the
results of finding such wisdom.
13. What great and
encouraging prophecy given in 2:21-22?
14. What the subject of
chapter 3?
15. Give a brief outline of
this chapter.
16. According to verses 1-12
what our duties to God and what New Testament use of verses 11-12?
17. According to the second
division of this analysis, what the value of wisdom and what does she offer to
those who seek her?
18. According to the last
section of this chapter, what our duties to our fellow man and what God's
attitude toward the wicked and the righteous, and what New Testament use of
verse 34?
THE INSTRUCTION OF WISDOM (CONTINUED)
Proverbs 4:l to 7:27.
The addresses found in Proverbs 4:1 to 9:18 are fatherly admonitions. The main
thought, or theme, of 4:1-9 is, "Wisdom the principal thing." There
is an interesting bid of autobiography in this section. Solomon gives here the
relation he sustained to his father and mother, and also the parental source of
his instruction. It is the picture of parents with the children gathered about
them for instruction. On this Wordsworth has beautifully said, "Wisdom
doth live with children round her knees."
"Sons" in verse I, means the pupils of the teacher who commends
wisdom to them as his children, by the example of his own early education.
Verse 3 suggests that Solomon was a true son, i.e., he was true in filial
reverence and obedience; that he stood alone in the choice of God for the
messianic line, and therefore he was first in the estimation of his father.
Compare 1 Chronicles 29:1 and note the bearing of this statement on the
authorship of this part of the book. The things here promised to those who
possess wisdom are found in verses 6, 8, and 9 and are preservation, promotion,
and honor. The parallelism in these verses is synonymous, the second line in
each repeating in different words the meaning of the first. The theme of
4:10-19 is, "The ways of wisdom and folly," or the ways of
righteousness and wickedness contrasted. Verse 12 refers to the widening of the
steps, an Oriental figure, for the bold and free movements of one in
prosperity, versus the straightening of one in adversity, the straightening of
them which represents the strained and timid actions of one in adversity.
Compare Proverbs 4:12 and Psalm 18:36. Verse 17, taken literally, means that
evil men procure their bread and wine by wickedness and violence or, taken
figuratively, means that wickedness and violence are to them as meat and drink.
Compare Job 15:16; 34:7; John 4:34.
There is a special contrast in verses 18-19 between the way of the righteous
and the way of the wicked; one is light and the other is darkness. The
parallelism here is integral, or progressive.
The theme of 4:20-27 is, "Keeping the heart and the life and looking
straight ahead." The key verse of this passage is verse 23: Keep thy heart with all
diligence; For out of it are the issues of life; which reminds us of Matthew 15:19: "For out of the heart cometh
evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witnesses,
railings."
"Thou shalt not commit adultery" or the seventh commandment, would be
a good title for chapter 5, and there are two parts of this chapter, viz: The
unholy passion to be shunned (1-14) in contrast with the holy love to be
cherished (15-23). There are some most striking figures of speech in verses 34,
and 15-21 of this chapter. In verses 3-4, we have pictured the seductions of
the harlot and the bitter end of those who are caught by her wiles; in verses
15-21 we have pictured the folly of free love over against the love for the one
woman, with a fatherly exhortation to faithfulness in the marriage relation.
The picture of the latter end of an unfaithful life is seen in verses 9-14;
22-23. Then come regrets, heartaches, slavery to sin, and final destruction.
The various evils against which there is found warning in Proverbs 6 are as
follows: (1) surety (1-5); (2) the sluggard (6-11); (3) the worthless man
(12-19); (4) the evil woman (20-35).
On verses 1-5 Perowne says,
The frequent mention of suretyship in this book, and the strong terms of
warning and reprobation in which it is invariably spoken of, accord well with
what we should suppose to be the condition of society in the reign of Solomon.
In earlier and simpler times it was enough for the Law to forbid usury of
interest for a loan of money to be exacted by one Israelite from another; and
raiment given as a pledge or security for a debt was to be returned before
night-fall to be the owner's covering in his sleep (Ex. 22:25-27; Lev. 25
3538).. With the development, however, of commerce and the growth of luxury
under Solomon, money-lending transactions, whether for speculation in trade, or
for personal gratification, had come to be among the grave dangers that beset
the path of youth. Accordingly, though the writer of Ecclessiasticus contents
himself with laying down restrictions to the exercise of suretyship, and even
goes the length of telling us that "An honest man is surety for his
neighbor" (Eccles. 8:13; 29:14-20), our writer here, with a truer insight,
has no quarter for it, but condemns it unsparingly on every mention of it
(vii:l-5; xi:15; xvii:18; xxii:26-27; xxvii:13). Even the generous impulse of
youth to incur risk at the call of friendship must yield to the dictates, cold
and calculating though they seem, of bitter experience.
There is a warning here, as elsewhere in this book, against all kinds of
suretyship. (Compare 11:15; 17:18; 20:16; 22: 26-27; 27:13). The method of
escape here seems to be that the surety is to use all diligence to get a
release from his obligation before it comes due, otherwise there would be no
mercy for him. He would have to pay it.
There are advice and warning to the sluggard in 6-11. He is advised to go to
the ant and learn of her ways so he might take the wise course. He is warned of
his coming poverty if he gives over to the sluggard's habits of sleeping when
he should be at his work early and late. This reminds us of another well-known
proverb: Early
to bed and early to rise, Makes one healthy, wealthy, and wise.
In verses 12-19 we have a description of the worthless man, his end and what
God abominates in him. He is here described as having a perverse mouth, winking
with his eyes, speaking (or shuffling) with his feet, making signs with his
fingers, devising evil, and sowing discord. His end is sudden destruction and
that without remedy. There are seven things which God abominates in him, verses
16-19, as follows: There are six things which Jehovah hateth; Yea, seven which are an
abomination unto him: Haughty eyes, a lying tongue, And hands that shed
innocent blood; A heart that deviseth wicked purposes, Feet that are swift in
running to mischief, A false witness that uttereth lies, And he that soweth
discord among brethren.
The section on the evil woman (20-35) is introduced by an appeal to the holy
memories and sanctions of the family in order to give weight to an earnest
warning against the sin which destroys the purity and saps the foundations of
family life. There is a reference here, most likely, to the passage found in
Deuteronomy 6:4-9, which was construed literally by the Jews and therefore gave
rise to the formal exhibition of the law in their phylacteries (see
"phylactery" in Bible dictionary). Of course, the meaning here, just
as in the Deuteronomy passage, is that they should use all diligence in
teaching and keeping the law.
The tricks of the evil woman are described in this section (24-35), the effect
of her life upon her dupes is given, the sin of adultery is compared with
stealing and the wound upon the husband is also described. Her tricks are
flattery, artificial beauty and, like Jezebel trying to captivate Jehu, she
paints her eyelids (2 Kings 9:30). The effect of her life upon her dupes is
want in temporal life and loss of manhood, which is here called "precious
life." Like a man with fire in his bosom or coals of fire under his feet,
the man who commits adultery shall not be unpunished. Stealing to satisfy
hunger is regarded as a light offense, compared to this awful sin which always
inflicts an incurable wound upon the husband. This they now call "The
Eternal Triangle," but it seems more correct to call it "The Infemal
Triangle." No greater offense can be committed against God and the home
than the sin dealt with in this paragraph.
The subject of chapter 7 is the same as that of the preceding section,
"The Evil Woman," and is introduced by an earnest call to obedient
attention which is followed by a graphic description of the tempter and her
victims, as a drama enacted before the eyes.
The description of this woman here fits modern instances, and there are the
most solemn warnings here against this sin. This description of her wiles and
the final results of such a course are so clear that there is hardly any need
for comment. A simple, attentive reading of this chapter is sufficient on each
point suggested.
QUESTIONS
1. What the style and tone
of the addresses found in Proverbs 4:1 to 9:18?
2. What the main thought, or
theme, of 4:1-9?
3. What interesting bit of
autobiography in this section, and what the words of Wordsworth in point?
4. What the meaning of
"eons" in verse I, what the meaning of verse 3, and what does wisdom
here promise to them that possess her?
5. What the theme of
4:10-19?
6. What the force of the
figure in verse 12, what the interpretation of verse 17, and what the special
contrast of verses 18-19?
7. What the theme of
4:20-27, and what the key verse of this passage?
8. What commandment might be
the title of chapter 5, and what the two sections of this chapter with their
respective themes?
9. What are some of the most
striking figures of speech in this chapter, and what the picture here given of
old age when such an evil course of life is pursued?
10. What the various evils
against which there is found warning in Proverbs 6?
11. What biblical times does
the passage, 1-5, portray, what the warning here against security debts, and,
according to this passage, when once involved, how escape?
12. What advice and warning
to the sluggard in 6-11?
13. What the description of
the worthless man, what his end and what does God abominate in him?
14. How is the section on
the evil woman (20-35) introduced and what the reference in 20-22?
15. What the tricks of the
evil woman described in this section (24-35), what the effect of her life upon her
dupes, how does the sin of adultery compare with stealing and how is the wound
upon the husband here described?
16. What is the subject of
chapter 7 and how is it introduced?
17. How does the description
of this woman here fit modern instances and what are the most solemn warnings
of this chapter against this sins? (Proverbs 8:1 to 9-18).
THE INSTRUCTION OF WISDOM (CONTINUED)
Proverbs 8:1 to 9:18.
The subject of Proverbs 8-9, wisdom personified and contrasted with chapter 7,
is aptly stated by Perowne, thus:
The personification of Wisdom in this chapter is highly suggestive. Already in
the opening verses of the Book (1:20-33) Wisdom has been personified, has
"uttered her voice," as here she utters it, "in the street"
and "in the chief places of concourse," and has pleaded, as here she
pleads, with the sons of men. But here the fair impersonation, following
closely upon the vivid picture of the immediately foregoing section, presents
itself to us in striking and designed contrast to the dark form that passed
before us there. Not lurking furtively at the corners of the streets, in the
deepening twilight; not leading astray with swift and stealthy footsteps and
beguiling with whispered subtleties, but with free and open grace, "in the
top of high places by the way," in the sight of men, and with voice clear
and melodious as a clarion-call does she utter forth her appeal (vv, 1-3). She
speaks (vv. 4-36). While she addresses herself to every child of man, the
"simple" and "fools" are specially invited to profit by her
instruction (w. 4, 5). All her speech is plain and open, and needs only an
intelligent ear to understand it (vv. 6-9). The treasures she offers are above
all price, and such as even kings may covet (w. 10, II). Telling us who she is
and what she has to offer us (vv. 12-21), she goes on to affirm that her claim
to attention is no less than that she is the eternal Possession and Fellow of
Jehovah Himself, His joy and Counsellor in the creation and ordering of the
universe, and that from the beginning her "delights were with the sons of
men." (vv. 22-31). Therefore, on premises such as these, she pleads with
us yet again, as her children, that we refuse not the blessedness which she
offers (vv. 32-36).
Why, we ask ourselves, does not the wise Teacher, having in mind to draw away
his sons from the seduction of vice by subjecting them to the mightier
attractions of virtue, set over against the abandoned woman of his first
picture the pure and faithful wife, with her charm of holy love, as the subject
of his second picture. Why does he not counsel his scholars, as indeed he does
elsewhere (vv. 15-19), to find in God's holy ordinance the true remedy for the
pleasures of sin which the temptress offers them? Because, in the first place,
he would lead them. higher, and commend to them a yet worthier object of
supreme affection, an object which at once includes and surpasses all pure and
lawful objects of human devotion. . . . And then also because through the
Spirit of God which was his in him, the ideal of comprehensive Wisdom which his
mind formed took personal shape, and stood before him as the embodiment of all
human virtue and perfection, a prophecy and a promise, such as had been
vouchsafed to the bodily senses of others, a "preluding of the
Incarnation".
In chapter 8 we hear wisdom calling on top of the high places, at the
crossroads and at the entrances of the city (1-3) ; she calls men, simple, and foolish,
as well as the wise (4-5) ; her claim as to plainness of speech is that her
sayings are excellent, righteous, and plain to him that understands (6-9); the
treasures which she offers are instruction and knowledge which are more
valuable than silver, gold, or rubies (10-11); what wisdom is and what she
gives is found in verses 12-21; her august claims are that she was in the
beginning with Jehovah and was his great delight (22-31); her consequent
appeal, then, was to heed her call, be wise and live (32-36).
Chapter 9, with which the Introduction to the book of Proverbs concludes,
consists of two parts, in which wisdom personified (w. 1-12) and folly (vv.
13-18) represented by a vicious woman are set once more in vivid contrast to
each other, con-tending for the adherence of the children of men. Each has her
house to receive them (w. 1, 14), each her feast spread for them (vv. 2, 17),
each her invitation, couched, in part, at least, in identical terms (w. 4, 16),
which she utters forth in the high places of the city (vv. 3, 14). The balance
and symmetry of these two parts are not, however, artistically preserved. Moral
earnestness overpowers literary skill. The picture of wisdom (w. 1-5) is
followed by her prolonged address (vv. 7-12), for which the companion picture
(vv. 13-17) has to wait, the section being closed by a single note of warning
from the teacher himself (v. 18).
The picture of wisdom in verses 1-5 is the picture of a hostess, building her
house, preparing her feast, sending out her invitations, and urging all classes
to come and dine with her. This reminds us of the parable of the gospel feast
as given by our Lord.
The meaning of the "seven pillars" of verse I is significant.
"Pillars form an important feature in Oriental Architecture, partly
perhaps as a reminiscence of the tent with its supporting poles and partly also
from the use of flat roofs, in consequence of which the chambers were either
narrower, or divided into portions by columns." Smith's Dictionary
of the Bible, Art. "Pillar." Here, however, it is better to
suppose that the great banquet hall is open all along the front, so as it were
to invite entrance, the proof being supported by a row ("seven" is
the usual symbol of completeness) of stately pillars. The magnificent hall in
which the lords of the Philistines sat and watch-ed Samson make sport in the
courtyard outside, while on its flat roof no fewer than 3,000 people were
assembled, was construct-ed on this principle; the two central pillars of the
colonnade forming a chief support of the roof (Judges 16:25-30).
To paraphrase verse 6, it would read somewhat as follows: "Come to a
decision; your present neutral position is not tenable. Your choice lies
between wisdom and the scorner. Therefore, break altogether with the scorner
and the wicked man, and become the guest of wisdom." Compare 2 Corinthians
6: 17; 7:1.
The thought expressed in verses 7-9 is equal to that of Matthew 7:6, which
gives the same thought exactly, thus: "Give not that which is holy to the
dogs, neither cast your pearls before the swine, lest haply they trample them
under their feet, and turn and rend you."
There is a principle enunciated in 9:10, a promise in 9:11 and a warning in 9:12,
viz: the principle of getting wisdom and understanding, the promise of long
life and the warning against scorning lest he bear the penalty alone.
The description of the foolish woman is found in 9:13. She is here described as
clamorous, simple, and a know-nothing. Her methods and inducement are given in
9:14-17. She sits at the door (or stands at the window) of her house and calls
them that pass by, but only the simple heed her call, to whom she says her
proverb: Stolen
waters are sweet, And bread eaten in secret is pleasant.
The final warning as to the results of yielding to her is given in verse 18.
The poor, ignorant dupes do not know that under her house are the bodies of
dead men whose spirits have been hurled into hell. We are here reminded of those
hell holes in Paris, France, where many disappeared by means of the trapdoor,
never to be seen again, of the case of one Mrs. Gunness who buried her scores,
or the case of many roadhouses in modern times which are veritable traps of
hell.
QUESTIONS
1. What the subject of
chapters 8-9, and what the contrast here with chapter 7?
2. What the deeper
significance of this passage?
3. Where does wisdom call?
4. Whom does she call?
5. What her claim as to
plainness of speech?
6. What the treasures which
she offers?
7. What is wisdom and what
does she give?
8. What her august claims?
9. What, then, her
consequent appeal?
10. Of what does chapter 9
consist and what the parallels between its parts?
11. What the picture of
wisdom here?
12. What the meaning of the
"seven pillars" of verse I?
13. What the meaning of
verse 6?
14. What the thought
expressed in verses 7-9?
15. What principle
enunciated in 9:10, what promise in 9:11 and what warning in 9:12?
16. What the description of
the foolish woman?
17. What her methods and
what inducement does she offer?
18. What the final warning
as to the results of yielding to her?
MISCELLANEOUS PROVERBS
Proverbs 10:1 to 22:16.
Solomon is the author of Proverbs 10:1 to 22:16, and the character of this
section is noticeable in the change from the direct and continuous appeal of
the opening chapters of the book to the short and, for the most part,
disconnected maxims, each of them contained, as a rule, in a couplet, or
district, formed strictly on the model of Hebrew parallelism.
The one exception to the rule of the couplet is found in 19:7 were there is a
tristich, or stanza of three lines) which is explained by assuming that the
last clause of this verse properly belongs to another proverb, of which one
member has fallen out of our present text. This conclusion is in some measure
confirmed by the appearance in the Septuagint of two complete distichs, though
it does not help toward the restoration of the original Hebrew text.
Maurer calls this section, "Golden saying not unworthy of Solomon, fitted
to form and fashion the whole life." There are 376 proverbs in this
collection and the parallelism is generally antithetic. A profitable study it
would be to take this great section and classify each proverb in it as to the
Hebrew parallelism found in it, and then paraphrase it so as to show its
application to modern life, but such a plan would require more space than can
be given to this discussion. An example of such paraphrase is found in W. J.
Bryan's paraphrase of Proverbs 22:3, thus: A wise man sees the danger and gets out of the way,
But the fool rushes on and gets it in the neck.
I give here several proverbs selected from those made by members of the
author's class in the Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, as
illustrations of the various kinds of parallelism found in the book of
proverbs. Many of them are antithetic, like most of the proverbs found in the
great section discussed so briefly in this chapter. The kind of parallelism
found in each proverb is indicated by the word following it.
A wise man is as springtime
to his neighbor, But the foolish are as the death of winter. Antithetic
A son that honors his father
shall be honored in old age, But he that dishonors his parents shall suffer at
the last. Antithetic
A wise man chooses his path,
But they who Jack wisdom stumble on through life. Antithetic
In the house of the wicked
strife prevails, But in the chambers of the righteous peace dwells. Antithetic
Christ is the foundation of
religion, And religion is the foundation of the world. Synthetic
Heaven is a place of
happiness But hell is a place of torment. Antithetic
What you were will not avail,
It's what you are that counts. Synthetic
Every proverb has encased a
jewel, And wisdom is the key to unlock it. Climactic
Teachers impart knowledge,
But pupils straightway forget it. Antithetic
Any fool can find fault, But
the wise in heart will bridle the tongue. Antithetic
If people would be loved,
They must first love others. Progressive
Love getteth to itself
friends; While hatred maketh enemies. Antithetic
Duty calls ever and anon,
Happy the man who heeds her call. Climactic
If you pay as you go, Your
going will be good. Progressive
The bold eat the sweet
morsel of victory, But the fearful are put to shame. Antithetic
The rebuke of a friend Is
better than the compliment of an enemy. Progressive
As the rudder is to the ship,
So is character to the life. Parabolic
A little schooling is a
fooling with the looks, But true learning is a discerning of the books.
Antithetic
The wicked rejoiceth in
health, But calleth on the Lord in distress. Antithetic
The man who has an axe to
grind Meets you with a smiling face. Progressive
Tis only noble thoughts Can
make a noble man. Progressive
The wheels of time move
slowly But they move surely. Climactic
The wicked purpose evil and
are brought low, But the righteous purpose good and are exalted. Antithetic
The man who seeks to know
the right shall find light. But he who seeks the lusts of the flesh shall find
darkness. Antithetic
The going of the wicked is
exceedingly crooked, But the path of the righteous is in the straight and
narrow way. Antithetic
As a roaring lion in chains
by the way, So is the adversary to the heavenly pilgrim. Parabolic
They who take part in
others' troubles Are apt to get into trouble, too. Progressive
QUESTIONS
1. Who the author of Proverbs
10:1 to 22:16 and what the character of this section?
2. What exception to the
rule that these Proverbs are expressed in couplets and how may this exception
be explained?
3. What says Maurer of this
section?
4. How many proverbs in this
section and what kind of parallelism is most common?
5. What suggestion by the
author for a profitable study of this section?
6. Select ten of the most
striking ones in this section and paraphrase them so as to show the application
of them.
7. Now try your hand at
making proverbs of every kind of Hebrew parallelism and indicate the kind of
parallelism in each.
THE PROVERBS OF THE WISE
Proverbs 22:17 to 24:84.
There are two collections of proverbs in this passage, as follows: (1) 22:17 to
24:22; (2) 24:23-34. The preface, or introduction, to the first collection
consists of 22:17-21.
This short paragraph is at once a conclusion and an introduction, a pause in the
continuous teaching of the same Teacher, in which he sums up what has gone
before, and opens the way for further instruction. In our present Hebrew text
there is no break between the 16th and 17th verses of this chapter, but there
is a slight break, to which however, no special importance can be attached,
between the 21st and 22nd verses. The Revised Version is so printed as to
indicate the commencement of a new section at verse 17 and of a fresh paragraph
at verse 22. Perowne.
The proverbs of this collection are contained sometimes in one, sometimes in
two or three verses, sometimes they lapse into a continuous discourse, after
the manner of the first nine chapters. In verses 22-27 there are three
tetrastichs. The first consists of verses 22 and 23; the second, of verses 24
and 25; the third, of verses 26 and 27.
There is a warning relative to the poor here, one relative to an angry man, and
one relative to sureties. The warning relative to the poor is not to rob the
poor because Jehovah will plead their cause; the one concerning an angry man is
to make no friendship with him lest he become a snare; the one concerning
sureties is a positive prohibition against becoming surety at all.
There is also here a warning concerning land titles in Proverbs 22:28; 23:10-11
and a black-reference to Deuteronomy 19:14. The ancient landmark must be kept
intact. Land grabbing was not permitted even in that early day. A great law is
set forth in 22:29, thus: Seest thou a man diligent in his business? He shall stand before kings;
He shall not stand before mean men. Labor
yields her rewards: "Labor conquers all things." Compare 1 Kings
10:8. Faithfulness in service is the basis of promotion.
In 23:1-3 is a warning to watch the appetite, because the favor of the ruler,
an Oriental despot, and the luxury that surrounds one under such circumstances,
is a dangerous thing.
In 23:4-5 we have another warning, viz: that the desire to become rich may not
weary us since riches are very uncertain, as they may take wings and fly away
like the eagle. This passage is in line with Paul's advice to Timothy to charge
the rich relative to the uncertainty of riches and what should be the attitude
of the rich toward God's cause. He says to Timothy, "Charge them that are
rich in this present world, that they be not highminded, nor have their hope
set on the uncertainty of riches, but on God, who giveth us richly all things
to enjoy; that they do good, that they be rich in good works, that they be
ready to distribute, willing to communicate; laying up in store for themselves
a good foundation against the time to come, that they may lay hold on the life
which is life indeed" (I Tim. 6:17-19).
There is a parental admonition in 23:13-14 relative to the chastisement of the
child, commending the use of corporal punishment, meaning that this punishment
will not necessarily result in death, or that he will not die as a result of
his sin if thus corrected. The latter is the more preferable. There is a
principle here enunciated, that life issues from obedience to law and one who
has never learned the principle of obedience to the authorities, whether
parent, government, or God, is not likely to yield himself to the lordship of
Jesus Christ without which he can never escape hell.
There are two striking pictures in the section (22:15-21). The first picture is
that of a father pleading with his son showing the parental interest in the boy
and the happy result of a life in the fear of God. The second picture is that
of a man brought to rags by gluttony and drunkenness, which reminds us of the
prodigal son.
The admonition given in verse 22 is a very solemn one and suggests the many
observations of the author on filial relationships. How beautiful is the
reverence for parents when they are old, and how abhorring the disrespect for
them often seen in modern times! This is a very wholesome piece of advice.
The characteristics of the drunkard are pictured in 23:2935. Here we see him as
a man of. woe, a man of sorrows, a man of contention, a man of complaint, a man
of wounds, a man with redness of eyes, a man with blurred vision, a man of
perverse heart, a man tossed about like a vessel at sea, a man with deadened
senses, and with all this, a man still drinking whenever he can get it.
In 24:1-22 are many fine proverbs, the teachings in which cover a large range
of human experience. It would be a profitable exercise to mark off the stanzas
of this wonderful passage and then note the principal teachings found in it. It
may be read with great interest.
The section, 24:23-34 is a small collection of the proverbs of the wise and
forms a kind of appendix to the preceding collection. There are two distinct
parts of it, verses 23-29 and 3034. The most remarkable teaching found in
verses 23-29 is righteous judgment based on wisdom.
The picture in verses 30-34 is that of a field of the slothful. There are
several points of this description, viz: the owner is designated a sluggard,
his field is grown up with thorns and nettles, the wall is down and the lesson
of it all is the poverty and want of its owner. The last four lines constitute
a striking parabolic proverb.
QUESTIONS
1. How many and what
collections of proverbs in these chapters, 22:17 to 24:34?
2. What the preface, or
introduction, to the first collection, and what its double function?
3. What the characteristics
of this section?
4. What kind of stanzas in
verses 22-27?
5. What the warning relative
to the poor here, what one relative to an angry man, and what one relative to
sureties?
6. What warning concerning
land titles in Proverbs 22:28; 23:10-11?
7. What great law is set
forth in 22:29?
8. What warning given in
23:1-3 and why this warning?
9. What warning in 23:4-5 and
how does this teaching compare with the New Testament teaching on the same
subject?
10. What parental admonition
in 23:13-14 and how does parental chastisement deliver the child's soul from
hell?
11. What the two pictures in
the section, 22:15-21?
12. What do you think of the
admonition given in verse 22?
13. What the characteristics
of the drunkard as pictured in 23:29-35?
14. Mark the stanzas in
24:1-22, select three of the best proverbs in this group and note the essential
teachings in this section.
15. What can you say of the
section, 24:23-34?
16. What, to you, is the
most remarkable teaching found in verses 23-29?
17. What the picture in
verses 30-34 and what the last four lines of this section?
OTHER PROVERBS OF SOLOMON AND THE
APPENDICES
Proverbs 25:1 to 31:31.
The title of the section, 25:1 to 29:27, is found in Proverbs 25:1: "These
also are proverbs of Solomon, which the men of Hezekiah king of Judah copied
out." Perowne says,
This title is interesting as affording a proof that revival of literary
activity accompanied the revival of religion and of national prosperity which
marked the reign of Hezekiah. Hezekiah himself was a poet of no mean order
(Isa. 38:9-12); and "the men of Hezekiah" were doubtless a body of
scribes engaged under the direction of the king in literary labors. But beside
this, this brief title is one of those "fragments of history," which,
as Professor Sayce has shown, "have been illuminated by the progress of
oriental research," and "the importance and true significance of
which can now be realized for the first time." This title points, he
thinks, to the existence of a royal library in Jerusalem, into which these
proverbs, never before edited, were now gathered and "copied out" and
similar to the libraries which are now known to have existed in the cities of
Babylonia and Assyria. The vassalage of Judah to the king of Assyria in the
reign of Ahaz had necessarily led to the introduction of Assyrian culture into
Jerusalem. Ahaz himself had led the way. In the court of the palace he had
erected a sundial, a copy of the gnomons which had been used for centuries in
the civilized kingdoms of the Euphrates and the Tigris. But the erection of the
sundial was not the only sign of Assyrian influence. The most striking feature
of Assyrian and Babylonian culture was the libraries, where scribes were kept
constantly employed, not only in writing and compiling new books, but in
copying and re-editing older ones. The "men of Hezekiah" who
"copied out" the proverbs of Solomon performed duties exactly similar
to the royal scribes in Nineveh.
It would be a profitable exercise to note all the varieties of stanza, and to
select a number of the most beautiful proverbs found in this section, and then
compare Proverbs 25:7 with Luke 14:8-10 as an example of the New Testament
elaboration of a proverb, but these matters must be left to the Bible student
to be worked out for himself. The author recommends an earnest reading and
careful study of this wonderful section of the proverbs of Solomon.
The collection of proverbs in chapter 30 is ascribed to a philosopher, or
teacher, named Agur, the son of Jakeh, and is addressed by him to Ithiel and
Ucal, presumably his scholars or disciples. The name Ithiel occurs again as
that of a Benjamite in Nehemiah 11:7. Ucal as a proper name is not found
elsewhere in the Old Testament. Horton says, Whoever Agur was, he had a certain marked
individuality; he combined meditation on lofty questions of theology with a
sound theory of practical life. He was able to give valuable admonitions about
conduct. But his characteristic delight was to group together in quatrains
visible illustrations of selected qualities or ideas.
The following is a brief analysis of chapter 30:
The chapter, which is highly interesting and in some respects unique, on which
account it may have been selected out of other similar literature for
publication as an Appendix to this book, consists of a Title, or note of authorship
(v. 1), followed by a prologue, in which in a spirit of deep abasement, which
is the .spirit of true wisdom, the author confesses his own utter ignorance in
view of the great questions which offer themselves for solution. The study of
nature makes it clear that there is a God; but who can tell Who and What He is
(vv. 2-4)? Only by revelation can He be known; and in that revelation, held
sacred from all admixture, man finds Him and is safe (vv. 5, 6). To the God
thus found and trusted the writer turns with a two-fold prayer that he may be
in himself a real and true man; a prayer that in his earthly lot he may have
the happy mean, removed from the temptations which belong to the extremes of
poverty and riches (vv. 7-9). Then, after an isolated proverb of the familiar
type (v. 10), another peculiarity of this Collection, which may have been a
further reason for its being appended to the Book of Proverbs, is introduced. A
series of five "numerical proverbs," or "quatrains," as
they have been called, groups of "four things," with a single proverb
inserted between the second and third groups (v. 17), brings the Collection to
a close with the exception of one final proverb at the end of the chapter (vv.
32, 33). CAMBRIDGE BIBLE
It is very interesting to note in this chapter Agur's prayer (7-9), the four
insatiable things (15-16), the four inscrutable things (18-20), the four
intolerable things (21-23), the four wise little things (24-28) and the four
stately things (29-31), all of which have their lessons for us. There are
several fine isolated proverbs here (10-11, 14, 17, 32-33), each with its own
lessons.
Proverbs 31:1-9 has King Lemuel for its author. This is just another name for
Solomon. Taking the chapter as a whole, the following is a good, brief analysis:
1. Salutation (v. 1)
2. Maternal admonitions (w. 2-9).
3. Characteristics of a worthy woman (vv. 10-31).
From the salutation we learn that King Lemuel was the author of verses 1-9
which is the oracle taught him by his mother. This is a fine example of
maternal influence. There can be no finer compliment to a good mother than the
effect of her life and teaching finding expression in the conduct and writings
of her children.
The maternal admonitions in verses 2-9 are expressions of the desire of a true
mother's heart for her children. The warning here concerning strong drink with
its results in the lives of kings and princes might be good advice for kings,
princes, governors, and others in high positions today. It will be noted that
the admonition here relative to strong drink is immediately connected with the
admonition concerning women and it does not require an extensive observation
now to see the pertinency of these warnings. These are twin evils and wherever
you find one of them you find the other also. It is not to be understood that
there is sanction here of strong drink as a beverage, but rather the medicinal
use of it as in the case of Paul's advice to Timothy to take a little wine for
the stomach's sake. It may also be noted here that righteous judgment is
unjoined and this, too, is always in danger at the hands of those who indulge
in strong drink.
The passage, 10-31, is an acrostic, or alphabetical poem, and a gem of
literature. This passage is the picture of a worthy woman. In the Cambridge
Bible we have this fine comment:
The picture here drawn of woman in her proper sphere of home, as a wife and a
mother and the mistress of a household, stands out in bright relief against the
dark sketches of woman degraded by impurity, or marred, by imperfections, which
are to be found in earlier chapters of this Book (ii. 16-20; v. 1-23; vii;
xxii. 14; xxiii. 27, 28, and xi. 22; six. 13; xxi. 19). Corruptio optimi
pessima. We have here woman occupying and adorning her rightful place,
elevated by anticipation to the high estate to which the Gospel of Christ has
restored her. It is an expansion of the earlier proverbs: "Whoso findeth a
wife findeth a good thing, and obtaineth favor of the Lord" (xviii. 22).
The ideal here set forth for the woman is fine and represents her at her best
and most influential business, viz: that of making a home.
QUESTIONS
1. What the title of the
section. Proverbs 25:1 to 29:28, and of what is it a proof?
2. What varieties of stanza
found in this section?
3. What kinds of parallelism
are found in this passage?
4. Give ten of the most
beautiful proverbs found in this section, showing their application.
5. What proverbs in this
section is elaborated in a New Testament parable?
6. Who were Agur, Ithiel,
and Ucal and what may be remarked especially of Agur?
7. Give a brief analysis of
chapter 30.
8. What Agur's prayer?
9. What the four insatiable
things according to Agur?
10. What the four
inscrutable things?
11. What the four
intolerable things?
12. What the four wise
little things?
13. What the four stately
things?
14. Who was King Lemuel?
15. Give a brief analysis of
chapter 31.
16. What do we learn from
the salutation?
17. What the maternal admonitions
in verses 2-9 and what do you think of them?
18. What can you say of the
passage, 10-31?
19. According to this
passage what the picture here of a worthy woman?
20. What do you think of the
ideal here set forth for the woman?
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE BOOK OF
ECCLESIASTES
"Ecclesiastes" is derived from the Septuagint version which
translates the Hebrew word, Koheleth, "Ekklesiastes." Koheleth means
"master of assemblies," or one who addresses an assembly;
"Ekklesiastes" means the preacher. So this book was named from this
characteristic of its author, viz: master of assemblies, or the preacher.
The book of Ecclesiastes was undoubtedly written by Solomon and the proof that Solomon
wrote it is that all Jewish and Christian tradition says that Solomon was the
author. This was first disputed in the time of Luther. Since that time some
critics have claimed that someone wrote it much later and attributed it to
Solomon for the effect. But Solomon wrote it, which is shown by the following
considerations:
1. The book purports to be the product of Solomon.
2. History compared with the book itself proves it. 1 Kings 3:12; 4:29-34
speaks of Solomon's wisdom. The author claims to have the wisdom he has spoken
of (Eccles. 1:16). 1 Kings 4: 20-28; and 10:23-27 tell of Solomon's riches.
Compare Ecclesiastes 2:1-11.
3. Whoever reads this book and the Song of Solomon can see clearly that the
author of one of these books is the author of the other also.
4. There is no historical evidence of any Jew living in the time assigned by
the radical critics that fills the place.
5. There is nothing in the style to contradict the authorship of Solomon.
The objections to the commonly accepted date and authorship urged by the
radical critics are:
1. The tense of the verb in 1:12 is past and therefore could not refer to
Solomon because he reigned in Jerusalem until his death. The reply to this
objection is that it is in the past tense because he is now about to give his
past experience during his long reign as king in Jerusalem.
2. In the same verse is a reference to Jerusalem which indicates a divided
kingdom and therefore must be later than Solomon's time. The reply to this is
that Jerusalem is here specified, as opposed to David who reigned both in
Hebron and Jerusalem. "King of Israel in Jerusalem" implies that he
reigned over Israel and Judah combined; whereas David, at Hebron, reigned only
over Judah and not until he was settled in Jerusalem, over both Israel and
Judah.
3. The words used in the book belong to a later date than the time of Solomon.
The reply to this is that the roots of these words have all been found in
Genesis and other Hebrew writings before the time of Solomon.
4. The condition of the people was incompatible with the time of Solomon, the
reply to which is, "Not so."
5. The difference in the style in this book and Proverbs and the Song of
Solomon. But the difference in subject matter justifies the difference in
style. Also it must be remembered that Proverbs and the Song were written while
Solomon was young, and this book when he was old and wearied with life (2:17).
So Solomon wrote this book when he was an old man, from the viewpoint of
experience, old age, and penitence; it is a formal discourse, or sermon, the
text of which is "Vanity of vanities, all is vanity" (1:2) and the
object of it was to search out what good thing the sons of men should do all
the days of their life (2:3). The whole book is given to this one thought.
Some of the various ideas of the author of this book are as follows: Some say
that he was an Epicurean; others that he was a dyspeptic; yet others, that he
was a skeptic, a Stoic, or an atheist; but to the closer student the plan of
the book becomes plain.
The book, as a philosophical treatise, contains a discussion of every
perplexing question of today. This book fairly represents the struggles of
every schoolboy who thinks. Its teaching is that in this life there is but one
true philosophy and shows that we are living in a world which is under a curse.
Compare Romans 8:20ff.
There is one caution as to its interpretation, viz: Withhold your verdict till
the evidence is all in, because in it all theories are tried and the conclusion
explains these results. In connection with this book, the book of Job and Psalm
73 should be studied. The author adopts wisdom as the means to try out all the
theories of life.
A complete outline of the book is as follows:
The Title (1:1)
The Prologue (1:2-11)
(1) His text (1:2)
(2) His introductory interrogatory (1:3)
(3) The passing of the generations (1:4)
(4) The material world (1:5-7)
(5) The monotony of it all (1:8)
(6) There is nothing new (1:9-10)
(7) There is no remembrance (1:11)
I. The Pursuit of Wisdom (1:12-18)
II. The Pursuit of Pleasure (2:1-3)
III. The Pursuit of Great Works (2:4-25)
1. Great works enumerated (2:4-11)
2. A comparison between wisdom and folly, or pleasure (2:12-17)
3. He hated his labor because he had to die and leave it to another (2:18-23)
therefore conclusion No. I (2:24a) but the God thought knocks it over (2:24b,
25f)
IV. Elements that limit (3:1-5:9)
1. Divine elements:
(1) Law of opportunes (3:1-8)
(2) Eternity in our hearts (3:9-lla)
(3) Finiteness of man's nature limits him (3:llb) then conclusion No. 2 (3:12)
but the God thought knocks it over (3:13)
(4) The laws of God are infrangible (3:14f)
2. Human elements:
(1) Iniquity in the place of justice (3:16) but modified by a divine element
(3:17) and the divine purpose, since man dies like beasts (3:18-21) therefore,
conclusion No. 3 (3:22)
(2) Oppression of the poor (4:1) therefore the dead or unborn are better off
(4:2-3)
(3) Labor and skill actuated only by rivalry with his neighbor (4:4) therefore
the fool folds his hands (4:5f) and then two examples (4:7-12; and 4:13-16)
(4) Elements of weakness in human worship (5:1-7)
(5) Some further observations (5:8-9) V. Riches tried (5:10 to 6:12) and found
insufficient, because,
1. They cannot satisfy (5:10)
2. Consumers of wealth increase with wealth (5:11a)
3. The owner can only, look at it (5:11b)
4. He cannot sleep as a laborer (5:12)
5. Riches may hurt the owner (5:13)
6. They may perish in an unlucky venture (5:14a)
7. The owner begets a son when he is bankrupt (5:14b)
8. In any event, he is stripped of all at death (5' 15)
9. He leads a worried life (5:16f) therefore, conclusion No. 4, (5:18-20)
10. The care of a rich man who could not enjoy it (6:1-12) because,
(1) He cannot eat it (6:1-6)
(2) All his labor is for his mouth (6:7-9)
(3) The greatest is but a man and cannot contend against God (6:10-12)
VI. The golden mean tried (7:1 to 8:15)
1. Value of a good name (7:1) 2. House of mourning better than the house of
feasting (7:2-4)
3. Listen to the reproof of the wise, rather than the laughter of fools (7:5-7)
4. Do not yield to anger (7:8f)
5. Do not talk of the good old days as better than these (7:10)
6. Consider the advantage of wisdom over wealth (7:llf)
7. Don't try to straighten all the crooked things (7:13)
8. If prosperous, be content (7:14a)
9. In adversity remember it, too, comes from God (7:14b)
10. Since it sometimes happens that the righteous die while the wicked live, be
not righteous over much, nor too wise, nor too wicked, nor too foolish; hold
somewhat to both (7:15-18) this golden mean plan is great because there is not
a righteous man in the earth that sinneth not (7:19f)
11. Don't try to find out all that people say about you (7:21f)
12. The result is unsatisfactory (7:23 to 8: 15) it fails because,
(1) Things are too deep for the human mind (7:23-25)
(2) Woman is more bitter than death (7:26-28)
(3) Man one of a thousand though fallen (7:29)
(4) When applied to public affairs that say,
(a) Do not rebel (8:1-2)
(b) Do not resent oppression (8:3f)
(c) Leave the case to God's restitution (8:5-7)
(d) The evil ruler will die; there is no furlough in that war (8:8)
(5) There are rulers who rule over men to their hurt (8:9f).
(6) The mills of the gods grind too slow for the correction of this evil
(8:11-13)
(7) Though ultimately it is well with the righteous and evil with the wicked, yet
here and now we do see wicked men get the crown of the righteous and vice versa
(8:14) therefore, conclusion No. 5, (8:15)
VII. The means used to solve the problem
condemned (8:16 to 10:20) because,
1. It is too wearisome (8:16)
2. Finite wisdom cannot fathom it (8:17 to 9:1)
3. Death comes alike to all (9:2-6) therefore, conclusion No. 6, (9:7-10)
4. The race is not to the swift (9:11-12) illustrated (9:13-15)
5. One fool can destroy much good (9:16 to 10:4)
6. Passive resistance to the ruler tends to promote fools (10:5-15)
7. The king may be a child (10:16-20)
VIII. If the means of solution be discarded, what then? (11:1 to12:14)
1. Cast thy bread upon the waters (11:1)
2. Give a portion to all (11:2)
3. Don't watch the wind and the cloud (11:3-5)
4. Work all. seasons (11:6-8)
5. Let the young in their joys remember the judgment (11:9-10)
6. Remember God in youth (12:1)
7. Lest death itself come (12:2-8)
8. The real good thing to do (12:9-13)
9. Why? The judgment is before us (12:14)
QUESTIONS
1. What the meaning of the
title of the book of Ecclesiastes?
2. Who wrote the book?
3. What the proof that
Solomon wrote it?
4. What objections to the
commonly accepted date and authorship urged by the radical critics and what the
reply to each, seriatim?
5. When did Solomon write
this book?
6. From what point of view?
7. What is the character of
the book?
8. What was his text?
9. What was his object?
10. What are some of the
various ideas of the author of this book?
11. What can you say of the
book as a philosophical treatise?
12. What caution as to its
interpretation?
13. What scriptures should
be studied in connection with this book?
14. What means did the
author adopt?
15. Give a complete outline
of the book?
THE PROLOGUE AND THREE METHODS APPLIED
Ecclesiastes 1:2 to 5:9
"Vanity of vanities" (v.2) is a Hebraism and means the most utter
vanity. Compare "Holy of holies" and "Servant of servants" (Gen.
9:25). This does not mean that all things are vanity in themselves, but that
they are all vanity when put in the place of God, or made the chief end of life
instead of a means to an end.
The meaning and purpose of the question in 1:3 is to inquire as to the profit
of all labor and worry which we see about us as touching the chief good, but
does not mean that labor is not profitable in its proper place. (Cf. Gen. 2:15;
3:19; Prov. 14:23).
There is a beautiful parallel to 1:4 in modern literature, viz: "The
Brook" by Tennyson. The stanza that sounds so much like this is as
follows: And
out again I curve and flow To join the brimming river, For men may come and men
may go, But I go on forever.
The sun, wind, and rivers in their endless courses (1:5-7) are illustrations of
the meaning of the text from the material world. The monotony of all this is
expressed in verse 8, thus: "All things are full of weariness; man cannot
utter it; the eye is not satisfied with seeing, nor the ear filled with hearing."
The meaning of verses 9-10 is that there is no new source of happiness (the
subject in question) which can be devised, the same round of pleasures, cares,
business, and study being repeated over and over again; that in the nature of
things, there is no new thing which might give us hope of attaining that
satisfaction that hitherto things have not afforded.
Verse 11 is an explanation of verses 9-10 and means that some things are
thought to be new which are not really so because of the imperfect records of
the past. This seems to hedge against the objection that there are many
inventions and discoveries unknown to former ages by showing that the records
do not preserve all these inventions for the present generation and therefore
they are only thought to be new. The methods applied in this search for the
chief good are wisdom, pleasure, great works, riches, and a golden mean. The
author claims for himself in 1:12-17 that he was king over Israel in Jerusalem
and that he had applied himself in search of all that was done under heaven, to
find that it was a sore travail which God had permitted the sons of men to be
exercised with; that he had seen all the works done under the sun and found
them all vanity and a striving after wind; that he had found many crooked things
and many things wanting; that he had attained to greater wisdom than all others
before him in Jerusalem and had applied it to know madness and folly, to find
this, too, to be a striving after wind. The final result of it all is given in
verse 18, thus: "For in much wisdom is much grief; and he that increaseth
knowledge increaseth sorrow."
The experiment described in 2:1-3 is the test of worldly pleasure, with the
result that it, too, was vanity. Then in 2:4-11 he gives his experience in the
pursuit of great works; he built houses, planted vineyards) made gardens and
parks, planted trees, made pools of water, bought servants of all kinds,
gathered silver and gold, provided a great orchestra for his entertainment, in
fact, had everything his eyes desired and tried to find in them joy and
comfort, but upon due reflection, he found this, too, a striving after the wind
and to no profit under the sun.
In 2:12-17 we have his comparison between wisdom and folly, with the result
that wisdom far excels folly or pleasure, yet the same thing happens to the
fool and to the wise man, viz: both die and are forgotten. So he was made to
hate life because his work was grievous and a striving after wind. There is
ground for the hatred of labor because he must die and leave it to another
(2:18-23). The reference in verse 19 is to Rehoboam; Solomon evidently
suspected his course. Therefore, the conclusion of 2:240 is that there is
nothing better for a man than to eat and drink) and to make his soul enjoy his
labor, but the thought (24b-25f) that it is all from God and that it is all
subject to God's disposal, knocks it over.
In 3:1 to 5:9 we have the elements that limit:
I. The Divine Elements are,
1. The law of opportunes (3:1-8)
2. The eternity in our hearts (3:9-11a)
3. The finiteness of man's nature (3:11b)
4. The laws of God are infrangible (3:14)
II. The Human Elements are,
1. Iniquity in the place of justice (3:16)
2. The oppression of the poor (4:1)
3. Labor and skill actuated only by rivalry with the neighbor (4:4)
4. The elements of weakness in human worship (5:1-7)
On the law of opportunes, will say that we have to work under this law all the
days of our lives. Things must be done in their time or they are a failure.
"God hath put eternity in our hearts" (3:11) is a great text. This
means -that money and worldly things cannot satisfy the yearning of the human
heart, which is for eternal things. Therefore, the conclusion in 3:12 is the
same as in 2:24, but the God thought knocks it over (3:13): "Then I saw
that wisdom excelleth folly, as far as light excelleth darkness."
Verses 14-15 mean that the laws of God are infrangible, i.e., cannot be broken
with impunity, and that whoever breaks the laws of the divine limitations him
will God break.
It is an awful observation the author cites in 3:16. The observation is that
iniquity was in the place of justice; that unjust men in court block the way of
the righteous if they appeal to them. This is like the parable of the widow and
unjust judge. A modification of this thought is found in the divine element,
that God will judge the righteous and the wicked (3:17).
A serious question arises in 3:18-21. This is not a proposition but a heart
question: Is there a distinction between man and beast? Bunyan represents Pilgrim
in this condition when he had advanced far into his pilgrimage: a darkness on
either side of the road; here evil spirits would whisper to him and so impress
him that he would question as to whether he did not originate the thought
himself. Spurgeon found himself in this condition once. The sin of Solomon
doubtless was the cause of his questioning; even so it is with us. The
conclusion of 3:22 is a most natural one. If man dies like a beast and that is
the end of all for him, then he can do no better than to make the most of this
life.
The author records an observation in 4:1 and a question which arose therefrom.
The oppression of the poor and the question arising was a temporary one, as to
whether it would not be better to be dead or never to have been born (w. 2-3).
following that is an observation with respect to labor and a question which
arose from it. The observation was that a man's labor and skill were actuated
only by rivalry with hia neighbor (4:4) and the question arising from it is
this: Is it not better then, just to be a sluggard? (4:5-6).
Then in 4:8 we have an illustration of a miserly bachelor who is never
satisfied with -his acquired wealth, notwithstanding that there is no one to
whom he might leave his wealth at death. I once knew a man in Austin who had no
relatives and owned a great deal of Austin, yet he would go across the street
to his neighbor's to warm rather than buy coal. Verses 9:12 is a contrast with
the condition of the bachelor and is a wonderful gem of literature, expressing
the advantages of co-operation. Two are better than one because they can be
mutually helpful to each other. This is the foundation principle of all
partnerships, whether for business, war or the home. "A threefold cord is
not quickly broken." In 4:13-16 we have an illustration of the same
principle in the vanity of kings in acquiring great dominion to be turned over
to an ungrateful son. There is doubtless a reference here to Solomon himself
and his son, Rehoboam. Solomon foresaw the coming of Rehoboam and his people
who would not rejoice in their heritage.
The elements of weakness in human worship as noted in 5:1-7 are lack of due
consideration which results in the sacrifice of fools and rash vowing and then
not paying the pledge. Here I give an observation: often let their mouths go
off half-cocked and then when settlement day comes say before the messenger,
"It was an error." This principle applies in all our general work.
For many years I was an agent for different phases of denominational work and handled
thousands of dollars for the kingdom enterprises. On many occasions in our
conventions pledges were made for some kingdom interest and when I took the
matter up with the different ones for collection many of them would not even
answer my letters. Then these same ones would come into the convention again
and make another pledge and refuse again to pay it. This led me to go through
my list of pledges when they were first made and write after each one of these
the German word, nix. One would be astonished to go over these lists because of
the great number on the list with nix after the name and also because certain
ones are in the list whom a credulous person would not suspect. This experience
of mine led me to emphasize very strongly this passage in later years:
"Keep thy foot when thou goest to the house of God."
Another observation is recorded in 5:8-9. This relates to the matter of
injustice so often wrought in governmental affairs, but we are admonished to
remember that the One who is over all regards, and that his purpose in human
government is to secure equal rights to all, since the earth is for all, and
all, including the king, must be fed from the field.
QUESTIONS
1. What the meaning of
"Vanity of vanities," in verse 2?
2. What the meaning and
purpose of the question in. 1:3?
3. What parallel to 1:4 in
modern literature, and what stanza especially fits the teaching here?
4. What the illustrations of
the meaning of the text from the material world?
5. How is the monotony of
all this expressed in verse 8?
6. What is the meaning of
verses 9-10?
7. What is the meaning of
"no remembrance" in verse 11?
8. What the methods applied
in this search for the chief good?
9. What claims does the
author make for himself in 1:12-17 and what the result as expressed in verse
18?
10. What experiment
described in 2:1-3 and what the result?
11. What experiments
described in 2:4-11 and what the result?
12. What comparison in
2:12-17 and what the results?
13. What is his reasoning in
2:18-23 and to whom does the author refer in verse 19?
14. What the conclusion of
2:240 and what the knock over in verges 24b, 25, and 26?
15. In 3:1 to 5:9 we have
the elements that limit. What are they?
16. What can you say of the
law of opportunes?
17. What great text here and
what its meaning?
18. What the conclusion in
3:12 and what the knock over in 13?
19. What the meaning and
application of 3:14-15?
20. What awful observation
does the author cite in 3:16 and what the modification in 3:17?
21. What question arises in
3:18-21, what parallels to this in modern times and what the real cause of this
questioning by Solomon?
22. What the conclusion of
3:22?
23. What observation in 4:1 and
what question arose therefrom?
24. What the observation
with respect to labor and what question arose from it?
25. What illustration given
in 4:8, what the author's observation illustrating this verse and what the
author's reasoning of verses 9-12?
26. What the illustration of
4:13-16 and who the persons primarily referred to?
27. What the elements of
weakness in human worship and what the applicant?
28. What observation in
5:8-9 and what the divine element that helps again?
OTHER METHODS APPLIED
Ecclesiastes 5:10 to 8:15.
The fourth method applied was riches with the result that they were found to be
insufficient because, (1) they cannot satisfy; (2) consumers of wealth increase
with wealth; (3) the owner can only look at it; (4) he cannot sleep like &
laborer; (5) riches may hurt the owner; (6) they may perish in an unlucky
venture; (1) the owner begets a son when he is bankrupt; (8) in any event he is
stripped of it all at death; (9) it causes him to lead a worried life.
The conclusion of this matter is found in 5:18-20. According to this
conclusion, it is good and comely for one to eat and drink and enjoy good in
all his labor, but he must keep in mind that this is the gift of God; he will
not much remember the days of his life, but it does not matter provided they
were filled with the good which brings joy to his heart.
Another observation on riches is noted in 6:1-2, viz: that the man who has
immense wealth may not be able to eat of his bounty) and like one
multimillionaire, may offer a million dollars for a new stomach, but there are
some things that money cannot buy. He must stand by and see another consume
what he has not the ability to enjoy. In verses 3-6 the author reasons that an
untimely birth would be better than the condition of a man, blessed with a
hundred children and a long life, if his soul be not filled with good.
The reasons assigned in 6:7-12 for this failure of riches are,
(1) All labor is for his mouth, therefore, the eternity in his soul cannot be
satisfied in this way (6:7-9).
(2) The greatest is but a man and cannot contend against God; neither can
anyone tell man what shall be after him (6:10-12).
The fifth method applied was the golden mean, on which he says that a good name
is better than precious oil (7:1); that it is better to go to the house of
mourning than to the house of feasting, because sorrow makes the heart better
(7: 2-4); that the reproof of the wise is better than the laughter of fools
(7:5-7); that the end of a thing is better than the beginning of it and the
patient in spirit is better than the proud in spirit (7:8); that it is not good
to be hasty to get angry, for that is like a fool (7:9); that we should not
talk of "the good old days," for this is not wise (7:10); that wisdom
is more excellent than wealth because wisdom preserves life to him that has it
(7:11-12); that it is not good to try to make all the crooked things straight
(7:13); that man should be joyful in his prosperity and considerate in his
adversity, for they both come from God (7:14); that since it sometimes happens
that the righteous die while the wicked live, be not righteous over much, nor
too wise, nor too wicked, nor too foolish, but hold somewhat to both (7:15-18);
that wisdom is stronger than ten rulers and this golden mean plan is great
because there is not a righteous man in the earth that sinneth not (7:19-20);
that a man should not try to find out what people say about him, lest he might
hear something bad about himself (7:21-22).
The result of all this golden mean philosophy is that this theory is
unsatisfactory and there is a higher wisdom attainable (7:23-25). It is
unsatisfactory because of its failure in the following particulars:
(1) Because woman is more bitter than death. There is one man of a thousand,
though fallen, but there is not one woman of a thousand. Why? because he gave
only one thousandth part of himself to each of them and for that reason he
ought not to have expected a whole in return (7:26-29).
(2) Because it is a failure when applied to public affairs (8:1-9) saying, (a)
Do not rebel, (8:1-2); (b) Do not resent oppression (8:3-4); (c) Leave the case
to God's retribution (8:5-7) ; (d) The evil ruler will die and there is DO
furlough in that warfare (8:8).
(3) Because there are rulers who rule over men to their hurt (8:9-10).
(4) Because the mills of the gods grind too slowly for the correction of this
evil (8:11-13).
(5) Because, though ultimately it is well with the righteous and evil with the
wicked, yet here and now we do see wicked men get the crown of the righteous
and vice versa (8:14). The conclusion of all this, then, is that he commanded
mirth, because he saw no better thing under the sun than for man to eat and
drink and be joyful all the days of his life (8:15).
QUESTIONS
1. What the fourth method
applied and with what results?
2. Why were riches
insufficient? 3, What the conclusion of this matter?
4. What observation on
riches noted in 6:1-2 and what reasonings based thereon in 6:3-6?
5. What reasons assigned in
6:7-12 for this failure of riches?
6. What the fifth method
applied?
7. On this golden mean what
says he of a good name?
8. What of the house of
mourning and the house of feasting?
9. What of the reproof of
the wise and the laughter of fools?
10. What of the beginning
and end of a thing and the patient and proud in spirit?
11. What of anger?
12. What of "the good
old days"?
13. What of the advantage of
wisdom over wealth?
14. What of the crooked
things?
15. What of prosperity and
adversity?
16. What of the righteous
and the wicked?
17. What of wisdom and
rulers and why is this golden mean great?
18. What of things said
about you?
19. What the result of all
this golden mean philosophy?
20. Why is this golden mean
unsatisfactory?
21. What the conclusion of
all this?
THE MEANS USED TO SOLVE THE PROBLEM
CONDEMNED AND THE FINAL CONCLUSIONS
Ecclesiastes 8:16 to 12:14
There are three reasons given in 8:16 to 9:6 as to why the means used were
condemned, to wit:
1. They were wearisome; wore out the life finding the solution (8:16).
2. Finite wisdom could not fathom it (8:17 to 9:1) compare 1 Corinthians l:19f.
3. Death comes alike to all (9:2-6) Here comes a bundle of conclusions
expressed in 9:7-10, thus: (1) Go on and eat and drink; (2) Dress well and keep
yourself in trim; (3) Live in domestic felicity with one woman; (4) Do with
your might whatever comes to your hand, for no one can work after death.
The fourth reason assigned for failure is that the race is not to the swift,
nor the battle to the strong, nor bread to the wise, nor riches to men of
understanding, nor favor to men of skill; but time and chance happeneth to them
all. Everything in life is uncertain and there are snares set for man's
destruction everywhere (9:11-12).
We find further observations in 9:13 to 10:4 illustrating this principle and
the conclusion therefrom. This is the case of the poor wise man who delivered a
city and was forgotten, yet his wisdom was better than strength. It was a case
of wise words in the quiet which are better than the cry of a man who rules
among fools. It was true then and it is true now, that "wisdom is better
than weapons of war." "But one sinner destroyeth much good."
Like dead flies in the ointment, he spoils whatever he touches, as his folly
outweighs wisdom and honor. In meeting all these things it is well to keep in
mind that "gentleness allayeth great offenses." But there are certain
drawbacks to this passive resistance, get forth in 10:5-15, as follows:
(1) The promotion of fools. The ruler sets folly in great dignity and puts the
more influential in low places. He puts servants on horses and causes princes
to walk like servants (10:5-7).
(2) A man's labor turns against him. He that digs a pit may fall into it, or
whoso breaks through a wall may be bitten by a serpent, or whoso hews out
stones may be hurt by them. A dull tool requires more strength, but the wise
can direct to more profit. It is too late to send for the charmer after you are
bitten by the serpent (10:8-11).
(3) The foolishness of fools overbalances the wisdom of the wise. The fool
begins in foolishness and ends in madness; he multiplies words to no purpose
and throws everything into confusion (10:12-15).
The last reason assigned for condemning the means is that the king may be a
child, given to revelry, drunkenness, and slothfulness, and when this is so it
is, "Woe unto the land I" What follows is set forth in three proverbs
thus: By
slothfulness the roof sinketh in; And through idleness of the hands the house
leaketh. A feast is made for laughter, And wine maketh glad the life; And money
answereth all things. Revile not the king, no, not in thy thought; And revile
not the rich in thy bed chamber; For a bird of the heavens shall carry the voice,
And that which hath wings shall tell the matter.
If the means of solution be discarded, the first thing to do, then, is to
"Cast thy bread upon the waters" (11:1) which refers to the ancient
method of sowing on the overflow of the Nile, which came annually, a-"d
covering the seed by driving oxen over them, the only way it could be done. The
spiritual significance of this is the investment of a life in doing good.
The second thing to do is to "Give a portion to all" (11:2), i.e., Do
good as you purpose in your heart while opportunity is afforded you. But there
is a warning given in 11:3-5: Don't watch the wind and the clouds, for the man
who watches the clouds is fearful and will not succeed. Do not hesitate because
you do not understand the principles and methods of God's providences.
The next thing enjoined is to work at all seasons (11:6-8). Remember there will
be dark days, but be diligent in view of the passing of your opportunity. Then
comes a solemn warning to the young in 11:9 to 12:8. Let them in their joys,
remember the judgment; that God will bring everything into judgment; that old
age will come when they will have no pleasure in it if their lives are spent in
folly; that the grave and the judgment are the final destiny of man. Here we have
in 12:3-8, the great figure of the human body, with the following expressions:
"The keepers of the house," which are the hands that have grown weak
and palsied; "the strong men," which are the legs, giving way under
old age; "the grinders," which are the teeth, and most of them gone,
having lost them on account of extreme age; "those that look out of the
windows," which are the eyes, having grown dim with age; "the
doors," the mouth which is not closed because of the. absence of the teeth;
"the grinding," which is the sound of the chewing, now low because
the teeth are gone; "rising up at the voice of a bird," which is
early rising in the morning, at first cock-crowing, because unable to sleep;
"the daughters of music," which are the tongue and the ears, the
tongue no longer able to make music and the ears no longer able to hear and
appreciate it; "they shall be afraid of that which is high," which
means that he is afraid to go up on anything high, as to ascend a ladder;
"terrors shall be in the way," which means that he is always finding
bugbears in the way, such as wagons, carriages, streetcars afraid of things
that he did not notice in early life; "the almond-tree shall
blossom," means that he is now covered with silvery locks, very much like
the almond-tree just before putting out, covered with its silvery blossoms;
"the grasshopper shall be a burden," which means one of two things,
viz: (1) a little weight, as the weight of a grasshopper upon him, becomes a
burden; (2) much more probable, that he now, in his stiffness, resembles the
grasshopper dragging himself along; "desire shall fail," i.e., the
appetite is almost gone and he does not relish things that he once did;
"man goeth to his everlasting, home," which means his final destiny,
he is very near the end now; "mourners go about the streets," which
refers to the hired mourners, according to the custom in the East, or friends
and relatives; "before the silver cord is loosed," i.e., the spinal
cord which resembles silver in color; "the golden bowl," which means
the brain pan; "the pitcher is broken at the fountain," which refers
to the heart, very much like a pitcher in shape; "the wheel broken at the
cistern," which refers to the aorta, just above the heart, where it acts
like a wheel and pumps the blood up from the heart; "the dust returneth to
the earth as it was and the spirit returneth unto God who gave it,"
referring to death, at which the body returns to dust of which it was made and
the spirit goes to God.
In 12:9-10 we have an account of what the Preacher did further: "And
further, because the Preacher was wise, he still taught the people knowledge;
yea, he pondered, and sought out, and set in order many proverbs. The Preacher
sought to find out acceptable words, and that which was written uprightly, even
words of truth."
Then follows a proverb and a warning in 12:11-12: "The words of the wise
are as goads; and as nails well fastened are the words of the masters of
assemblies, which are given from one shepherd. And furthermore, my son, be
admonished: of making many books there is no end; and much study is a weariness
of the flesh."
What, then, the real good thing to do and why? The answer is found in 12:13-14:
"This is the end of the matter; all hath been heard: Fear God, and keep
his commandments; for this is the whole duty of man. For God will bring every
work into judgment, with every hidden thing, whether it be good, or whether it
be evil."
The impress of this book upon the world's literature has been marvelous. It has
made a most wonderful impress upon the world's greatest authors. In
Shakespeare's As You Like It and Tennyson's In Memoriam are many references to
this book. la fact, this book exploded the philosophies of the Epicureans and
Stoics long before these philosophies were developed by the ancient Greeks.
QUESTIONS
1. What three reasons in
8:16 to 9:6 as to why the means used were condemned ?
2. What conclusions
expressed in 9:7-10?
3. What the fourth reason
assigned in 9:11-12?
4. What observations in 9:13
to 10:4 illustrating this principle and what the conclusion therefrom?
5. What the drawbacks of
passive resistance, set forth in 10:5-15?
6. What the last reason
assigned and what proverbs based thereon?
7. If the means of solution
be discarded, what the first thing to do and what does it mean?
8. What the second thing to
do and its meaning?
9. What warning given in
11:3-5?
10. What the next thing
enjoined?
11. What warning to the
young in 11:9 to 12:8?
12. On 12:3-8, the great
figure of the human body, answers' (1) What "the keepers of the
house"? (2) What "the strong men"? (3) What "the
grinders"? (4) What "those that look out of the windows"? (5)
What "the doors"? (6) What "the grinding"? (7) What the
meaning of "rising up at the voice of a bird"? (8) What "the
daughters of music"? (9) What is the meaning of "they shall be afraid
of that which is high"? (10) What is the meaning of "terrors shall be
in the way"? (11) What is the meaning of "the almond-tree shall
blossom"? (12) What is the meaning of "the grasshopper shall be a
burden"? (13) What is the meaning of "desire shall fail"? (14)
What is the meaning of "man goeth to his everlasting home"? (15) What
is the meaning of "mourners go about the streets"? (16) What is the
meaning of "before the silver cord is loosed"? (17) What is the
meaning of "the golden bowl"? (18) What is the meaning of "the
pitcher is broken at the fountain"? (19) What is the meaning of "the
wheel broken at the cistern"? (20) What is the meaning of "the dust
returneth to the earth as it was and the spirit returneth unto God who gave
it"?
13. What did the Preacher
further do?
14. What proverb and what
warning in 12:11-12?
15. What, then, the real
good thing to do and why?
16. What can you say of the impress
of this book upon the world's literature?
17. What the philosophies
exploded in this book?
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE SONG OF SOLOMON
Solomon wrote this book. It is attributed to him in the title and the internal
evidence strongly supports it. He wrote it probably early in his reign as king,
and its place as an integral part of the Scriptures has never been questioned.
There is quite a bit of evidence of its fitting into other scriptures. There
are back references to Genesis and some of the Prophets refer to it. There are
also New Testament references to it, some of which cannot be explained except
by this book.
This poem is an exquisite gem of literature. It is a dramatico-lyrical pastoral
poem concerning love. By "dramatic" is meant a form of literature
that gives idealized representations of human experience. By
"lyrical" is meant that it is fitted to be sung to a lyre. Hence it
is appropriate for a song. By "pastoral" is meant a poem describing
the life and manners of shepherds. "It is a poem in which any action or
passion is represented by its effects on a country life," Rambler. The
whole scenery of Palestine is here referred to.
Many plants and trees are named in this book, as follows: cedars, firs, thorns,
apple tree, fig tree, henna, spikenard, saffron, calamus, cinnamon) aloe,
wheat, palm tree, and mandrake.
Several animals are referred to in it, viz: roes, hinds, harts, foxes, goats,
lions, leopards, and fawns.
The mountains referred to are Bether, Lebanon, Gilead, Amana, Senir, Hermon,
and Carmel.
Many other things of interest are mentioned in this book. The cities mentioned
are Jerusalem, Tirzah, and Damascus; other places are Engedi, Sharon, Zion,
Mahanaim, Heshbon, Bathrabbim, and Baal-hammon; the flowers are henna flower,
rose, and lily; the nations are Kedar and Israel; the perfumes are spikenard,
myrrh, frankincense, oils, and spices; the birds are the dove (turtle dove) and
raven; the prominent characters are Solomon, Pharaoh, and David; the heavenly
bodies are the sun and moon; the precious things are jewels, silver; gold,
purple, beryl, ivory, sapphires, and marble; the foods and fruits are raisins,
apples, figs, pomegranates, honey, milk, and honeycomb; the name of God,
mentioned one time, is Jehovah.
The speakers in this book are Solomon, the Shulammite and the Daughters of
Jerusalem.
There are three methods, or ways, of interpreting this book:
1. The historical and literal, representing love between man and woman. In this
it is plain, that there is no spiritual application and that the subject of
love between man and woman is deserving of a place in the Bible.
2. The second method claims that the book has a historical basis and is typical
of Christ and his people, showing his love for them and their love for him.
3. The third method claims it to be an allegory setting forth Christ's love for
his people and their relation to him. This is in line with all the older
interpretations and is really the only one tenable. There is nothing in history
to indicate that this is literal or to indicate in the least that it even has a
historical basis.
The analysis of the book consists of the title, a prologue, four parts, and an
epilogue, as follows:
The Title (1:1) : Name and author of the book.
The Prologue (1:2-6): The bride speaking and expressing her desire.
Part I (1:7 to 2:7):
The bride and the groom speak to each other.
Part II (2:8-3:5):
1. The bride tells of the bridegroom and how he serenades (2:8-14):
2. Alienation between them caused by little foxes (2:15-17);
3. How she went out to find him to be reconciled to him (3:1-5).
Part III (3:6 to 8:4):
1. A description of the bridegroom (3:6-11)
2. How he wooed her (4:1-15)
3. She, charmed by his wooing, gives him an invitation (4:16)
4. He accepts the invitation, comes and knocks at the door (5:1)
5. Half asleep she does not open to him (5:2-5)
6. He, wounded at her delay, went away (5:5-6)
7. She finally goes to the door and finds that he is gone and then goes out to
seek for him and is maltreated by the city watchman (5:7)
8. She appeals to the daughters of Jerusalem (5:8)
9. They ask his value (5:9)
10. Her reply (5:10-16)
11. Their second inquiry (6:1)
12. Her reply (6:2-3)
13. He comes on the scene and again speaks his love (6: 4-9)
14. While speaking a kind of soliloquy he sees her and exclaims (6:10)
15. The groom goes down into the garden (6:11-12)
16. He pleads for her return (6:13a)
17. The daughters ask why he looks upon her as the dance of Mahanaim (6:13b)
18. He describes her beauty (7:1-9)
19. She declares her love and invites him to the field (7: 10 to 8:4)
Part IV (8:5-10):
1. The daughters see them coming and ask who she is (8:50)
2. He speaks to her of their first acquaintance (8:5b)
3. She speaks of love and jealousy in contrast, and also of her little sister
(8:6-8)
4. He speaks in reply, of the little sister (8:9)
5. She speaks of herself as a wall (8:10)
Epilogue: She speaks and vows to do her part (8:11-14).
QUESTIONS
1. Who wrote the Song of
Solomon and what the evidence?
2. When did he write it?
3. What of its place in the
canon of Scripture?
4. Is there any evidence as
to its fitting into other scriptures?
5. Are there any New
Testament references to it?
6. What of the character of
this poem?
7. What is the literary form
of this book? (Explain the terms used.)
8. What plants and trees are
named in the book?
9. What animals referred to
in it?
10. What mountains are
referred to?
11. What other things of
interest mentioned in this book?
12. Who the speakers in this
book?
13. What the several methods
of interpretation and which is the correct one and why?
14. What is the analysis of
the book?
According to the first verse, the title of this book is "The Song of
Songs," and the author was Solomon. The Vulgate has the title, Canticum
Canticorum, from which comes the title, "Canticles," by which it is
sometimes called and to which the references in some English versions are made.
This title, as it appears here, implies that it is the choicest of all songs,
in keeping with the saying of an early writer that "the entire world, from
the beginning until now, does not outweigh the day in which Canticles was given
to Israel."
The parts of the book are marked with a refrain, thus: I adjure you, O daughters of
Jerusalem, By the roes, or by the hinds of the field, That ye stir not up, nor
awake my love, Until he please, Song of Solomon 2:7; 3:5; and 8:4.
It will be noted that the second line in 8:4 is omitted, perhaps, because it
had been given twice before and the shortened form suited better the purpose of
the author here.
It is well at this point to fix in mind the representative characters of the
book, so as to make clear the interpretation and application. In this allegory
the Shulammite may represent souls collectively, but more aptly applied to the
individual soul seeking Christ. The daughters of Jerusalem represent the
church. Solomon represents Christ, and the watchmen represent the spiritual
leaders, such as priests, prophets, and preachers.
The prologue expresses the desire of a soul for Christ, a prayer to be drawn to
him, conversion, and a consciousness of unworthiness.
In Part I the soul is instructed to seek its lover at the feeding places of the
flock, or places where Christ meets his people; as, in meetings, etc., and upon
their meeting they express their love for each other in which the soul is
represented as being completely enraptured by its first love to Christ.
In Part II we have the beautiful serenade in which Christ is represented as
entreating this new convert to come away and separate herself from her people
and everything that might cause alienation. But upon neglect to heed this
entreaty the little foxes, that is, little sins creep in and alienation is the
result. 80 she sends him away till the cool of the day so characteristic of
the soul that is neglectful of its early Christian duties. But soon she goes
out to seek him another characteristic of the sheep that has wandered away
from its shepherd and the flock. As she goes out to seek him she meets the city
watchmen and inquires of them likewise the soul thus realizing its need at
this point makes inquiry of spiritual leaders. She soon finds him and brings
him to her mother's house, thus representing the soul that has not left its
former associations.
In Part III we have the procession of Solomon coming out to her to take her to
his own home. Here he praises her, wooes her, and pleads with her to come away
from her old associations. She is won and agrees to go with him, but when he
knocks at the door she is half asleep and does not open to him. Her
indifference brings about another alienation, and he leaves. Soon she arises to
open, but, alas! he has grown tired of waiting and has gone away. She seeks him
again, but the preachers (city watchmen) make it hard for her this time, upon
which she appeals to the members of the church (daughters of Jerusalem) and
they test her with a question, whereupon she declares her appreciation of him
in a most glowing description of him. Then they submit the second test by
asking another question as to his whereabouts. Here she understands perfectly
as to his abiding place, which she shows them. While this is going on he draws
near, speaking of his love. Surely, it is a sweet thought that, while we are
talking about Christ and praising him, he draws near and is mindful of us,
though we have suffered the little foxes to do their work and have not heeded
every knock upon the door by our Lord. As he is thinking and speaking of her he
sees her in the distance and exclaims, Who is she that looketh forth as the morning, Fair
as the moon, Clear as the sun, Terrible as an army with banners?
After telling where he had been he pleads again, very earnestly, for her
return. In the remaining part of this division they converse with each other
and he wooes her again and she agrees to leave all and go with him into the
fields and villages.
In Part IV the daughters describe them as they proceed toward his house,
conversing with each other of love in which she shows love to be the strongest
thing in the world.
The Epilogue contains the vows of the woman to do her part and applies
beautifully to the loyalty of the soul espoused to Christ.
Now, I call attention to the prayers of the Shulammite which indicate the
conflict and progress of the Christian life. These are as follows: Draw me; we will run after
thee: The king hath brought me into his chambers; We will be glad and rejoice
in thee; We will make mention of thy love more than of wine: Rightly do they
love thee. (1:4) Tell me, O thou, whom my soul loveth, Where thou feedest thy
flock, Where thou makest it to rest at noon: For why should I be as one that is
veiled Beside the flocks of thy companions? (1:7) Awake, O north wind; and
come, thou south; Blow upon my garden, that the spices thereof may flow out.
Let my beloved come into his garden, And eat his precious fruits. (4:16) Come,
my beloved, let us go forth into the field; Let us lodge in the villages.
(7:11) Set me as a seal upon thy heart, As a seal upon thine arm: For love is
strong as death; Jealousy is cruel as Sheol; The flashes thereof are flashes of
fire, A very flame of Jehovah. (8:6)
Two of the most beautiful passages in the book are the Serenade, which pictures
all nature calling to activity, and the passage on Love and Jealousy, showing
love to be "The Greatest Thing in the World." These passages are well
adapted to the theme of the book and furnish an appropriate closing for our
discussion on "The Poetical Books of the Bible." THE SERENADE My beloved spake, and said
unto me, Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away. For, lo, the winter is
past; The rain is over and gone; The flowers appear on the earth; The time of
the singing of birds is come, And the voice of the turtle-dove is heard in our
land; The fig-tree ripeneth her green figs, And the vines are in blossom; They
give forth their fragrance, Arise, my love, my fair one, and come away. O my
dove, that art in the clefts of the rock, In the covert of the steep place, Let
me see thy countenance, Let me hear thy voice; For sweet is thy voice, and thy
countenance is comely. The Song of Solomon 2:10-14
LOVE AND JEALOUSY
Set me as a seal upon thy
heart, as a seal upon thine arm: For love is strong as death; Jealousy is cruel
as Sheol; The flashes thereof are flashes of fire, A very flame of Jehovah.
Many waters cannot quench love, Neither can floods drown it: If a man would
give all the substance of his house for love, He would utterly be condemned.
The Song of Solomon 8:6-7
QUESTIONS
1. According to verse I,
what is the title and who is the author of The Song of Solomon?
2. How are the parts of the
book marked?
3. Whom does the Shulammite
represent?
4. Whom do the daughters of
Jerusalem represent?
5. Whom does Solomon
represent?
6. Whom do the watchmen
represent?
7. What the spiritual
interpretation and application of the Prologue?
8. What the spiritual interpretation
and application of Part I?
9. What the spiritual
interpretation and application of Part II?
10. What the story and
spiritual application of Part III?
11. What the interpretation
of Part IV?
12. What the contents of the
Epilogue and its application?
13. What the prayers of the
Shulammite?
14. What to you are the moat
beautiful passages in the book and in what consists their beauty?