Job 21:5

5 Look at me, and be appalled, and lay your hand upon your mouth.

Job 21:5 Meaning and Commentary

Job 21:5

Mark me
Or "look at me" F14; not at his person, which was no lovely sight to behold, being covered with boils from head to foot, his flesh clothed with worms and clods of dust, his skin broken, yea, scarce any left; however, he was become a mere skeleton, reduced to skin and bone; but at his sorrows, and sufferings, and consider and contemplate them in their minds, and see if there was any sorrow like his, or anyone that suffered as he did, and in such pitiful circumstances; or that they would have a regard to his words, and well weigh what he had said, or was about to say, concerning his own case, or concerning the providences of God with respect to good and bad men, and especially the latter:

and be astonished;
at what had befallen him, at his afflictions, being an innocent man, and not chargeable with any crime for which it could be thought that these came upon him; and at the different methods of Providence towards good men and bad men, the one being afflicted, and the other in prosperous circumstances, see ( Job 17:8 ) ;

and lay [your] hand upon [your] mouth;
and be silent, since such dispensations of Providence are unsearchable, and past finding out; and, as they are not to be accounted for, are not to be spoken against: and it would have been well if Job had taken the same advice himself, and had been still, and owned and acknowledged the sovereignty of God, and not opened his mouth in the manner he had done, and cursed the of his birth, and complained of hard treatment at the hand of God perhaps his sense may be, that he would have his friends be silent, and forbear drawing the characters of men from the outward dealings of God with them. This phrase is used of silence in ( Job 29:9 ) ( 40:4 ) ; thus Harpocrates, the god of silence with the Heathens, is always pictured with his hand to his mouth.


FOOTNOTES:

F14 (yla wnp) "respicite ad me", Pagninus, Montanus, Junius & Tremellius, Piscator

Job 21:5 In-Context

3 Bear with me, and I will speak; then after I have spoken, mock on.
4 As for me, is my complaint addressed to mortals? Why should I not be impatient?
5 Look at me, and be appalled, and lay your hand upon your mouth.
6 When I think of it I am dismayed, and shuddering seizes my flesh.
7 Why do the wicked live on, reach old age, and grow mighty in power?
New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright 1989, Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.