You will be hidden from the lash of the tongue, and you will
not fear violence when it comes. Job 5:21 Modern English Version (MEV) ************** Thou
shall be hid from the scourge of the tongue,.... Of Satan, as Jarchi, the accuser of the
brethren; or rather from the evil tongue of wicked men, their slanders,
calumnies, and reproaches; the tongue is a small weapon, but it is a cutting
one; it is like a scourge or whip, with which wicked men strike hard: the
enemies of Jeremiah encouraged one another to smite him with their tongue, Jer_18:18;
and a sad thing it is to be under the lash of some men's tongues, and a great
mercy it is to be delivered from them: God does sometimes hide his people, and keeps
them secretly, as in a pavilion, from the strife of tongues; Psa_31:20;
he either restrains the tongues of men, lays an embargo on them, and will not
suffer them to say that evil of his people which Satan and their wicked hearts
prompt them to; or, if they are suffered to defame and speak evil of good men,
yet they do it in such a romantic way, and so overcharge and load it, that it
is not credited by any what they say, even by those of their own party; so that
the characters of God's people suffer not by their lies and calumnies: some
render it, "when the tongue wanders about" (g); walks through the
earth, and spares none, all ranks and degrees of men; God hides his people from
being hurt by it, see Psa_73:9; Aben Ezra interprets the word rendered
"tongue" of a nation or people; and so it may be understood of one
nation entering into another, passing through it, and making desolations in it;
as the Scythians, Gauls, Goths, Huns, and Vandals, have done in different ages;
and that, in such a time of calamity, God has his hiding places in Providence
for the protection and safety of his people: but the Targum interprets it of an
evil tongue, and particularly of the tongue of Balaam: neither
shall thou be afraid of destruction when it cometh: meaning either of pestilence, which is the
destruction that wastes at noonday, Psa_91:6; which, when it comes into
a nation or neighbourhood, shall not come nigh the good man, and infect him; or
if it does, shall not carry him off; and if it does that, it carries him home
to heaven and happiness, and therefore he has no reason to be afraid of it: or
of a general calamity; as when there is a complication of judgments in a
nation, or in the world in general, as war, famine, pestilence, earthquakes,
&c. as if all were just falling to pieces and into ruin; and yet even then
the saints have no cause to fear; see Psa_46:1; or the destruction of
the whole world at the last day, when the heavens and earth, and all therein,
shall be burnt up: for then good and righteous men will be safe with Christ,
and dwell with him in the new heavens and the new earth, which shall be prepared
for them; see 2Pe_3:10; the Targum refers this to the destruction of the
Midianites. (g) בשוט "dum pervagabitur", Vatablus; "quum
grassatur", Cocceius, Godurcus; "grassabitur", Grotius; so Aben
Ezra and Ben Gersom, and R. Jonah, in Ben Melech. John Gill’s Exposition of the Bible ************** Not sure how much more I can say about this pretty little
speech other than the fact that Eliphaz has no clue how to read the room.
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