Job 18:1
XVIII. (1) HOW LONG? — Bildad begins very much as Job himself had done (Job 16).... [ Continue Reading ]
XVIII. (1) HOW LONG? — Bildad begins very much as Job himself had done (Job 16).... [ Continue Reading ]
WHEREFORE ARE WE COUNTED AS BEASTS. — Referring to Job’s words (Job 13:4, &c., Job 16:2, &c.). In this chapter there is a marked increase in his harshness and violence. It has, however, a certain resemblance to Job 8, inasmuch as Bildad works out a simile here, as he did there; and in Job 18:16 the... [ Continue Reading ]
HE TEARETH HIMSELF IN HIS ANGER. — As Eliphaz had charged Job (Job 15:4) with the evil tendencies of his speeches, so Bildad here compares him to a maniac, and assumes that the effect of his teaching will be to banish God from the earth, and remove the strength and hope of man. The last clause is a... [ Continue Reading ]
THE STEPS OF HIS STRENGTH. — _i.e._, his giant strides. He shall be the victim of his own devices, and when they seem to hold out the hope of prosperity shall lead him to destruction. (Comp. Ps. 141:11.)... [ Continue Reading ]
HE IS CAST INTO A NET. — Job had compared himself to one hunted by the Almighty (Job 10:16), and Bildad here describes the evil man as snared in a net, but it is one for which he has no one to thank but himself. It is his own pit he falls into; the insinuation being that Job is likewise responsible... [ Continue Reading ]
SHALL DRIVE HIM TO HIS FEET. — Comp. Job 15:21. One feels very much tempted to understand this, as the English undoubtedly suggests, _shall startle him to his feet,_ but the true meaning is, more probably, _shall chase him at his heels. _... [ Continue Reading ]
HIS STRENGTH. — By “strength” some understand his firstborn son, as Genesis 49:3, but it is not necessary to take it otherwise than literally. DESTRUCTION SHALL BE READY AT HIS SIDE. — Or, according to some, _for his halting;_ shall lie in wait for his tripping in order to overthrow him.... [ Continue Reading ]
THE STRENGTH OF HIS SKIN. — This verse should probably be rendered, “It shall devour the members of his body, even the firstborn of death shall devour his members;” and by the “firstborn of death” is probably to be understood some wasting disease such as Job’s, the phrase being so used as a euphemis... [ Continue Reading ]
HIS CONFIDENCE SHALL BE ROOTED OUT. — Rather, _he shall be rooted out of his tent which he trusted was his own._ THE KING OF TERRORS. — Perhaps the most remarkable personification of unseen forces to be found in the Bible.... [ Continue Reading ]
IT SHALL DWELL IN HIS TABERNACLE. — Or, “There shall dwell in his tent they that are none of his,” or “which is no longer his”: _i.e.,_ terrors shall dwell, or, “which is none of his” may hint that it had been violently taken from some one else. “Brimstone shall be scattered on his dwelling” is prob... [ Continue Reading ]
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.... [ Continue Reading ]
HIS REMEMBRANCE SHALL PERISH. — This is the doom which above all others is dreaded by the modern roamers of the desert. (Comp. also Jeremiah 35:19.)... [ Continue Reading ]
HE SHALL HAVE NEITHER SON NOR NEPHEW. — “He shall have neither his own son’s son among his people, nor any remaining, where he sojourned.”... [ Continue Reading ]
SHALL BE ASTONIED AT HIS DAY. — That is, his doom, or destiny. He shall stand forth as a warning and monument to all.... [ Continue Reading ]
DWELLINGS OF THE WICKED. — That is to say, of the wicked man. As Bildad designedly uses the singular here, there can be little doubt that he as designedly intended this terrible and cruel picture to represent Job himself.... [ Continue Reading ]