Moreover Job continued his parable
Having finished his discourse concerning the worlds and ways of
God, and the display of his majesty, power, and glory, in them,
he pauses awhile, waiting for Zophar, whose turn was next to rise
up, and make a reply to him; but neither he, nor any of his
friends, reassumed the debate, but kept a profound silence, and
chose not to carry on the dispute any further with him; either
concluding him to be an obstinate man, not open to conviction,
and on whom no impressions could be made, and that it was all
lost time and labour to use any argument with him; or else being
convicted in their minds that he was in the right, and they in
the wrong, though they did not choose to own it; and especially
being surprised with what he had last said concerning God and his
works, whereby they perceived he had great knowledge of divine
things, and could not be the man they had suspected him to be
from his afflictions: however, though they are silent, Job was
not, "he added to take or lift up his parable" F1, as the
words may be rendered; or his oration, as Mr. Broughton, his
discourse; which, because it consisted of choice and principal
things, which command regard and attention, of wise, grave,
serious, and sententious sayings, and some of them such as not
easy to be understood, being delivered in similes and figurative
expressions, as particularly in the following chapter, it is
called his parable; what are called parables being proverbial
phrases, dark sayings, allegorical or metaphorical expressions,
and the like; and which way of speaking Job is here said to take,
"and lift up", which is an eastern phraseology, as appears from
Balaam's use of it, ( Numbers 23:7
) ( Numbers
24:3 Numbers
24:15 ) ; and may signify, that he delivered the following
oration with great freedom, boldness, and confidence, and with a
high tone and loud voice; to all which he might be induced by
observing, through the silence of his friends, that he had got
the advantage of them, and had carried his point, and had brought
them to conviction or confusion, or however to silence, which
gave him heart and spirit to proceed on with his oration, which
he added to his former discourse:
and said;
as follows.