Job 6:8 - Exposition
Oh that I might have my request! Here the second point is taken up. Eliphaz has threatened Job with death, representing it as the last and most terrible of punishments ( Job 4:9 , Job 4:20 , Job 4:21 ; Job 5:2 ). Job's reply is that there is nothing he desires so much as death. His primary wish would have been never to have been born ( Job 3:3-10 ); next to that, he would have desired an early death—the earlier the more acceptable ( Job 3:11-19 ). As both these have been denied him, what he now desires, and earnestly asks for, is a speedy demise. It is not as yet clear what he thinks death to be, or whether he has any hope beyond the grave. Putting aside all such considerations, he here simply balances death against such a life as he now leads, and must expect to lead, since his disease is incurable, and decides in favour of death. It is not only his desire, but his "request" to God, that death may come to him quickly. And that God would grant me the thing that I long for ; literally, my expectation ' or wish . The idea of taking his own life does not seem to have occurred to Job, as it would to a Greek (Plato, 'Phaedo,' § 16) or a Roman (Pithy, 'Epist.,' 1.12). He is too genuine a child of nature, too simple and unsophisticated, for such a thought to occur, and, if it occurred, would be too religious to entertain it for a moment. Like Aristotle, he would feel the act to be cowardly (Aristotle, 'Eth. Nic.,' 5; sub fin. ); and, like Plato ( l.s.c .), he would view it as rebellion against the will of God.
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