Hiob 34:23

23 Denn er darf auf den Menschen nicht erst lange achten, daß er vor Gott ins Gericht komme.

Hiob 34:23 Meaning and Commentary

Job 34:23

For he will not lay upon man more [than right]
Neither in a way of duty, his law being holy, just, and good, not any of his commandments grievous, but all his precepts concerning all things right, his yoke easy and his burden light; nor in a way of punishment, always punishing then less than their iniquities deserve; nor in a way of chastisement, suffering nothing to befall his people but what is common to men; and he is faithful to bear them up under it and through it, and to make a way to escape out of it: or the phrase, "than right", being a supplement, may be left out, and the words be connected with what follows,

that he should enter into judgment with God;
and the sense is, either that God does not put it on man to go again into judgment with him; he does not suffer him to have a cause heard over again, to appeal from God or to him to have a second hearing; nor is anything to be got by it, he is in one mind, and none can turn him or reverse or get reversed any sentence of his; and therefore it was a piece of weakness in Job to insist so much as he did to have a hearing of his cause before him, since he could not expect there would be any alteration made in his favour: or, as Mr. Broughton reads it, "it is not for men to purpose to enter into judgment before the Omnipotent"; such a purpose is vain, he can never carry his cause against him; it is a piece of weakness to pretend to litigate a point with him: or the sense is, he puts no more on man than to come to him in judgment, so Schultens; he has appointed a person and time to judge the world in righteousness, and all must appear before his tribunal; and everything, thought, word and action, will then and there be brought into an account, and righteous judgment will pass; and therefore, since he has fixed such a method of proceeding, and requires no other, he can never be charged with injustice.

Hiob 34:23 In-Context

21 Denn seine Augen sehen auf eines jeglichen Wege, und er schaut alle ihre Gänge.
22 Es ist keine Finsternis noch Dunkel, daß sich da möchten verbergen die Übeltäter.
23 Denn er darf auf den Menschen nicht erst lange achten, daß er vor Gott ins Gericht komme.
24 Er bringt die Stolzen um, ohne erst zu forschen, und stellt andere an ihre Statt:
25 darum daß er kennt ihre Werke und kehrt sie um des Nachts, daß sie zerschlagen werden.
The Luther Bible is in the public domain.