Commentaries:
Adam Clarke
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Job 9:33

Neither is there any day' s-man - beyneynu mochiach , a reprover, arguer, or umpire between us. Day' s - Man, in our law, means an arbitrator, or umpire between party and party; as it were bestowing a day, or certain time on a certain day, to decree, judge, or decide a matter - Minshieu. Day is used in law for the day of appearance in court, either originally or upon assignation, for hearing a matter for trial - Idem. But arbitrator is the proper meaning of the term here: one who is, by the consent of both parties, to judge between them, and settle their differences. Instead of lo yesh , there is not, fifteen of Kennicott' s and De Rossi' s MSS., with the Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic, read lu vesh , I wish there were: or, O that there were! ̔ ̔, ; O that we had a mediator, an advocate, and judge between us both! - Sept. Poor Job! He did not yet know the Mediator between God and man: the only means by which God and man can be brought together and reconciled. Had St. Paul this in his eye when he wrote I Timothy 2:5, I Timothy 2:6? For there is one God, and one Mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus; who gave himself a ransom for all. Without this Mediator, and the ransom price which he has laid down, God and man can never be united: and that this union might be made possible, Jesus took the human into conjunction with his Divine nature; and thus God was manifest in the flesh.


 
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