Job 7:2-12

2 Like a slave he longs for [the] shadow, and like a laborer he waits for his wages.
3 So {I had to inherit} months of worthlessness, and nights of misery are apportioned to me.
4 When I lie down, I say, 'When shall I rise?' But [the] night is long, and I have my fill of tossing until dawn.
5 My body is clothed [with] maggots and clods of dust; my skin hardens, then it gives way [again].
6 "My days are swifter than a weaver's shuttle, and they come to an end {without hope}.
7 Remember that my life [is] a breath; my eye will not return to see good.
8 The eye of [the one] seeing me will not see me; your eyes [are] upon me, but {I will be gone}.
9 A cloud vanishes, and it goes away, so [he who] goes down to Sheol will not come up.
10 He does not return again to his house, and his place does not recognize him again.
11 "Even I will not restrain my mouth; I will speak in my spirit's anguish; I will complain in my inner self's bitterness.
12 Am I [the] sea, or a sea monster, that you set a guard over me?

Job 7:2-12 Meaning and Commentary

INTRODUCTION TO JOB 7

In this chapter Job goes on to defend himself in an address to God; as that he had reason to complain of his extraordinary afflictions, and wish for death; by observing the common case of mankind, which he illustrates by that of an hireling, Job 7:1; and justifies his eager desire of death by the servant and hireling; the one earnestly desiring the shadow, and the other the reward of his work, Job 7:2; by representing his present state as exceeding deplorable, even worse than that of the servant and hireling, since they had rest at night, when he had none, and were free from pain, whereas he was not, Job 7:3-5; by taking notice of the swiftness and shortness of his days, in which he had no hope of enjoying any good, Job 7:6,7; and so thought his case hard; and the rather, since after death he could enjoy no temporal good: and therefore to be deprived of it while living gave him just reason of complaint, Job 7:8-11; and then he expostulates with God for setting such a strict watch upon him; giving him no ease night nor day, but terrifying him with dreams and visions, which made life disagreeable to him, and death more eligible than that, Job 7:12-16; and represents man as unworthy of the divine regard, and below his notice to bestow favours on him, or to chastise him for doing amiss, Job 7:17,18; and admitting that he himself had sinned, yet he should forgive his iniquity, and not bear so hard upon him, and follow him with one affliction after another without intermission, and make him the butt of his arrows; but should spare him and let him alone, or however take him out of the world, Job 7:19-21.

Footnotes 9

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