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Verse Job 18:16. _HIS ROOTS SHALL BE DRIED UP - HIS BRANCH BE CUT
OFF._] He shall be as utterly destroyed, both in _himself_, his
_posterity_, and his _property_, as a tree is whose branches are all
l...
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HIS ROOTS SHALL BE DRIED UP - Another image of complete desolation -
where he is compared to a tree that is dead - a figure whose meaning
is obvious, and which often occurs; see Job 15:30, note; Job 8...
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CHAPTER 18 BILDAD'S SECOND ADDRESS
_ 1. New reproaches (Job 18:1)_
2. Once again, the wicked and what they deserve (Job 18:5)
Job 18:1. Bildad has the good sense in this second oration to be very
br...
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JOB 18. SECOND SPEECH OF BILDAD.Bildad speaks this time at unusual
length, but his speech has no significance, since it simply describes
the fate of the godless. Into the description of this, however,...
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The disastrous end of the wicked, in the moral order of the world, is
certain
The last verse naturally led over to this idea, which is the theme of
the speech. The idea is set out in a great variety...
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_shall his branch be cut off_ Rather, HIS BRANCHES SHALL WITHER, see
on ch. Job 14:2. The tree is not a figure for the sinner as a single
person, but as the centre of a family, widely ramified and fir...
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The extinction of his name and race....
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TEXT 18:5-21
5 YEA, THE LIGHT OF THE WICKED SHALL BE PUT OUT,
And the spark of the fire shall not shine.
6 The light shall be dark in his tent,
And his lamp above him shall be put out.
7 The step...
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_HIS ROOTS SHALL BE DRIED UP BENEATH, AND ABOVE SHALL HIS BRANCH BE
CUT OFF._
Roots - himself.
BRANCH - his children (Job 8:12; Job 15:30; Malachi 4:1, "The day
that cometh shall burn them up, that...
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BILDAD'S SECOND SPEECH
Bildad replies with a rebuke to Job and a reassertion of the miserable
lot of the wicked already asserted by Eliphaz; not so much, however,
with covert reference to Job, to who...
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JOB, A SERVANT OF GOD
Job
_KEITH SIMONS_
Words in boxes (except for words in brackets) are from the Bible.
This commentary has been through Advanced Checking.
CHAPTER 18
BILDAD’S SECOND SPEECH...
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Bildad’s only idea in this chapter was that a wicked man is never
successful. Bildad did not actually say that Job was wicked. But
Bildad clearly had this opinion....
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The thought about a tree gave comfort to Job (Job 14:7-9). A tree that
seems dead can live again. But Bildad thought that Job’s idea was
not reality. He reminded Job that a tree can really die....
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HIS ROOTS SHALL BE DRIED UP. — With tacit allusion to what he had
said in Job 8:12, and also to the destruction of Job’s own
offspring, which had already been accomplished....
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מִ֭ תַּחַת שָֽׁרָשָׁ֣יו יִבָ֑שׁוּ וּ֝
מִ מַּ֗
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XV.
A SCHEME OF WORLD RULE
Job 18:1
BILDAD SPEAKS
COMPOSED in the orderly parallelism of the finished _ mashal_, this
speech of Bildad stands out in its strength and subtlety and, no less,
in its c...
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“CAST INTO A NET”
Job 18:1
Bildad's second speech reveals how utterly he failed to understand
Job's appeal for a divine witness and surety. Such words were _snares_
to him, Job 18:2, r.v. The deep t...
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Bildad now returned to the charge, and as was the case with Eliphaz it
is perfectly evident from his opening rebuke that he was speaking
under a sense of annoyance. He was wounded at the wrongs done t...
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CHAPTER XVIII.
_ Harvest. Hebrew also, "branch;" (Calmet) his family, (Menochius) and
all on which he trusted. (Calmet) --- All must be destroyed, root and
branch._...
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(6) The light shall be dark in his tabernacle, and his candle shall be
put out with him. (7) The steps of his strength shall be straitened,
and his own counsel shall cast him down. (8) For he is cast...
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THE FOLLOWING COMMENTARY COVERS CHAPTER S 4 THROUGH 31.
As to the friends of Job, they do not call for any extended remarks.
They urge the doctrine that God's earthly government is a full measure
and...
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HIS ROOTS SHALL BE DRIED UP BENEATH,.... Wicked men are sometimes
compared to trees; to trees of the wood, barren, and unfruitful; to
trees without fruit, twice dead, plucked up by the roots; and
some...
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His roots shall be dried up beneath, and above shall his branch be cut
off.
Ver. 16. _His roots shall be dried up beneath, &c._] The meaning is,
saith Diodati, he shall be deprived of God's grace, wh...
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_His roots shall be dried up_, &c. That is, he shall be destroyed,
both root and branch; both himself and his posterity. _His remembrance
shall perish_ Instead of that honour and renown which he desig...
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His roots shall be dried up beneath, as in a tree which is dead, AND
ABOVE SHALL HIS BRANCH BE CUT OFF, withering and decaying with the
trunk, both the wicked person and his children being struck by G...
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BILDAD RECKONS JOB WITH THE HARDENED SINNERS...
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BILDAD'S STRONG REPROOF
(vv.1-3)
Bildad did not learn from Job's words to be a little more considerate
than before, but shows only more strong opposition, reproving Job
unjustly. He considered Job's...
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The wicked man becomes like. rootless, branchless tree. This may also
be. veiled reference to the fact that Job had been deprived of all his
children, and yet that point will be driven home in Job 18:...
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11-21 Bildad describes the destruction wicked people are kept for, in
the other world, and which in some degree, often seizes them in this
world. The way of sin is the way of fear, and leads to everl...
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i.e. He shall be destroyed, both root and branch, i.e. both himself
and his posterity. Compare ZECHARIAH 4:1....
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Job 18:16 roots H8328 out H3001 (H8799) branch H7105 withers H5243
(H8799) above H4605
roots -...
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CONTENTS: Bildad's second discourse on Job's case.
CHARACTERS: God, Bildad, Job.
CONCLUSION: The way of sin is a way of fear and leads to everlasting
confusion, of which the present terrors of consc...
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Job 18:6. _The light shall be dark in his tabernacle._ Darkness is a
most ancient figure of speech for all kinds of affliction. But to good
men, “the Lord will make darkness light before them.” Isaiah...
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_Then answered Bildad the Shuhite._
THE DANGER OF DENOUNCING WICKEDNESS
How wonderfully well the three comforters painted the portrait of
wickedness! Nothing can be added to their delineation of sin....
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JOB—NOTE ON JOB 18:1 Like Eliphaz, Bildad expressed his frustration
(vv. Job 18:2): Who is Job to maintain his position and criticize the
words of his friends? The remainder of Bildad’s response is a...
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JOB—NOTE ON JOB 18:14 Bildad refers throughout these verses to the
destruction of both the house and the household of the wicked (both of
which Job has endured; Job 1:13) to assert that Job’s circumst...
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_BILDAD’S SECOND SPEECH_
Bildad the bitterest and most hostile of the three friends. No speech
as yet so insolent and provoking. Full of fiery scathing denunciation
against—the wicked—intending, of c...
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EXPOSITION
JOB 18:1
Bildad's second speech is no improvement upon his first (Job 8:1.). He
has evidently been exceedingly nettled by Job's contemptuous words
concerning his "comforters" (Job 16:2,...
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Then answered Bildad (Job 18:1),
So this is Bildad's second discourse with him.
How long will it be before you make an end of words? just make the
mark, and afterwards we will speak. Why do you count...