Verse explainer
A quiet prayer buried in a genealogy — not a formula for prosperity, but one man's honest cry to be kept from evil and the grief his very name carried.
And Jabez called on the God of Israel, saying, Oh that thou wouldest bless me indeed, and enlarge my coast, and that thine hand might be with me, and that thou wouldest keep me from evil, that it may not grieve me! And God granted him that which he requested.
BSBAnd Jabez called out to the God of Israel, "If only You would bless me and enlarge my territory! May Your hand be with me and keep me from harm, so that I will be free from pain." And God granted the request of Jabez.
The plain meaning
Jabez appears with almost no backstory except that his mother named him "Jabez" because she bore him in pain (v. 9) — the name itself meant sorrow. His prayer turns that wound into a petition. He asks for four things: blessing, enlarged territory, God's active hand alongside him, and protection from evil so that it would not grieve him. That last clause loops back to his name: he is asking God to break the cycle of pain that marked him from birth. The surrounding chapters are dense genealogy — lists of names, most with no comment at all. Jabez gets two verses. The brevity itself signals something worth noticing. The answer is equally plain: God granted what he asked. John Gill reads the prayer as reaching beyond material concerns toward covenant blessing and spiritual protection from sin and the enemy. Jamieson, Fausset and Brown observe that the answered prayer shows God as not merely a hearer but an answerer — the point is not the formula but the relationship.
The common misreading
What the commentators say
Gill argues the prayer should not be read as merely material. 'Bless me indeed' points to covenant blessings — solid, spiritual, durable ones. 'Enlarge my coast' he reads as a desire for spiritual enlargement: greater light, grace, and the affections of the soul after divine things. The petition to be kept from evil is above all a plea against sin itself, which grieves a godly person far more than outward affliction, and which no one can avoid without God's keeping power.
JFB focus on the conclusion: God granted his request. Whatever the precise circumstances that stirred Jabez to pray, the record shows he enjoyed a remarkable degree of prosperity. The commentators press the theological point — God is not merely a hearer of prayer but an answerer, and this short episode stands as a quiet proof of that within a passage otherwise given entirely to names and lineages.
The word behind it
"You would bless me" — from the root בָּרַךְ (barak), to kneel, to bless. The intensifying particle אִם־בָּרֵךְ תְּבָרְכֵנִי gives the KJV its 'bless me indeed': a doubled verbal form in Hebrew that signals earnestness and totality. This is not casual asking; the construction signals Jabez is pressing the full weight of his need into a single appeal, asking for blessing that is thorough and real, not nominal.
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