Job 3:2

2 Thus Job {spoke up} and said,

Job 3:2 Meaning and Commentary

Job 3:2

And Job spake, and said.
] Or "answered and said" F20, though not a word was spoken to him by his friends; he answered to his own calamity, and to their silence, as Schmidt observes; and this word is sometimes used when nothing goes before, to which the answer is, as many Jewish writers observe, as in ( Exodus 32:27 ) ( Deuteronomy 26:5 ) ( 27:14 ) ; Jarchi interprets it, "he cried", and so some others F21 render it: from henceforwards to ( Job 42:6 ) , this book is written in a poetical style, in Hebrew metre as is thought, which at present is pretty much unknown, even to the Jews themselves; some have been of opinion, that the following discourses between Job and his friends were not originally delivered in metre, but were put into this form by the penman or writer of the book; but of this we cannot be certain; in the Targum in the king of Spain's Bible it is, "and Job sung and said".


FOOTNOTES:

F20 (Neyw) "et respondit", Pagninus, Montanus, Schmidt, Schultens, Michaelis.
F21 "Clamavitquo", Mercerus; "nam proloquens", Junius & Tremellius, Piscator.

Job 3:2 In-Context

1 {Afterward} Job opened his mouth and cursed his day.
2 Thus Job {spoke up} and said,
3 "Let [the] day perish on which I was born, and the night that said, 'A man-child is conceived.'
4 Let that day become darkness; may God not seek it from above, nor may daylight shine on it.
5 Let darkness and deep shadow claim it; let clouds settle on it; let them terrify it [with the] blackness of day.

Footnotes 2

Scripture quotations marked (LEB) are from the Lexham English Bible. Copyright 2012 Logos Bible Software. Lexham is a registered trademark of Logos Bible Software.