Job 33:24

24 A messenger who would mercifully intervene, canceling the death sentence with the words: 'I've come up with the ransom!'

Job 33:24 Meaning and Commentary

Job 33:24

Then he is gracious to him
To the sick man; either the messenger or the minister that is with him, who pities his case and prays for him; and by some the following words are supposed to be a prayer of his, "deliver me" since one find in the Gospel there is a ransom for such persons. Rather Christ, who is gracious to man, as appears by his assumption of their nature and becoming a ransom for them, and who upon the foot of redemption which he has "found" or obtained, see ( Hebrews 9:12 ) ; pleads for the present comfort and future happiness of his people, in such language as after expressed, "deliver him" Or rather God the Father is gracious to the sick man for his Son's sake,

and saith, deliver him from going down to the pit;
addressing either the disease, so Mr. Broughton renders the word, "spare him (O killing malady) from descending into the pit", the grave, for the present his disease threatened him with. Or the minister of the word attending the sick man, who is bid to declare to him, as Nathan to David, and Isaiah to Hezekiah, that he should live longer, and not die for the present: or rather the address is to law and justice, to let the redeemed of the Lord go free, and particularly the sick man being one of them; and not thrust him down into the bottomless pit of everlasting ruin and destruction, for the reason following:

I have found a ransom;
which is no other than Christ the Son of God; whom Jehovah, in his infinite wisdom, found out and settled upon to be the ransomer of his people; to which he agreed, and in the fulness of time came to give his life a ransom for many, and for whom he has given himself as a ransom price, which has been testified in due time: and this ransom is for all the elect of God, and is of them from sin, Satan, law, hell, and death; and the finding of it is not of man, nor is the scheme of propitiation, peace and reconciliation by Christ, or of atonement and satisfaction F19 by the sacrifice of Christ, as the word here used signifies, an invention of men; but is the effect of infinite wisdom, and a scheme drawn in the eternal mind, and formed in Christ from everlasting; see ( 2 Corinthians 5:19 ) . Some take these words to be spoken by the Father to the Son, upon his appointment and agreement to be the ransomer and Redeemer, saying, "go, redeem him" for so the words F20 may be rendered; and others think they are the words of the Son the messenger to his Father, the advocate with him for his people, as before observed.


FOOTNOTES:

F19 (rpk) "propitiationem", Beza, Pagninus, Montanus, Munster, Bolducius, Vatablus; "expiationem", Tigurine version; "lytrum", Cocceius; "satisfactionem", Schmidt.
F20 (whedp) "redime eum", Pagninus, Montanus &c.

Job 33:24 In-Context

22 They hang on the cliff-edge of death, knowing the next breath may be their last.
23 "But even then an angel could come, a champion - there are thousands of them! - to take up your cause,
24 A messenger who would mercifully intervene, canceling the death sentence with the words: 'I've come up with the ransom!'
25 Before you know it, you're healed, the very picture of health!
26 "Or, you may fall on your knees and pray - to God's delight! You'll see God's smile and celebrate, finding yourself set right with God.
Published by permission. Originally published by NavPress in English as THE MESSAGE: The Bible in Contemporary Language copyright 2002 by Eugene Peterson. All rights reserved.