Verse 1
Job 18:1. Then answered Bildad
the Shuhite — Bildad, irritated
to the last degree that Job
should treat their advice with
so much contempt, is no longer
able to keep his passions within
the bounds of decency, He
proceeds to downright abuse;
and, finding little attention
given by Job to his arguments,
he tries to terrify him into a
compliance. To that end he draws
a yet more terrible picture of
the final end of a wicked man
than any preceding; throwing in
all the circumstances of Job’s
calamities, that he might
plainly perceive the
resemblance; and, at the same
time, insinuating that he had
much worse still to expect,
unless he prevented it by a
speedy change of behaviour. That
it was the highest arrogance in
him to suppose that he was of
consequence enough to be the
cause of altering the general
rules of providence, And that it
was much more expedient for the
good of the whole, that he, by
his example, should deter others
from treading in the same path
of wickedness and folly. —
Heath.
Verse 2
Job 18:2. How long will it be
ere you wake an end — How long
shall we continue this dispute?
Why do not you, my brethren,
give over discoursing with Job,
who is so transported by his
passions, as not to be fit to be
discoursed with? At least,
forbear to proceed till both you
and he shall better understand
the subject? For, if Bildad be
considered as addressing himself
to his two companions, he must
have meant to reprove them for
making use of too long
discourses, and to advise them
first to consider the subject
well, and then to speak directly
to the purpose. But many
commentators understand him as
addressing Job; using here, as
also Job 18:3, the plural
number, according to the common
idiom of the eastern language:
which was to speak thus to, or
of one person, especially if he
were of great eminence. In this
case he must have intended to
censure Job for puzzling the
cause with cavils and
exceptions, and to call upon him
to produce a plain instance, in
which a righteous man was known
to have had punishment inflicted
on him, or else to own the truth
of the established maxim, that
punishment was a sure mark of
wickedness. Mark, and afterward
we will speak — Consider the
matter better, and then we shall
speak concerning it to more
advantage. Or, inform us: Hebrew
תבינו, tabinu, make us to
understand. Seeing thou lookest
upon us as ignorant and brutish
men, as it follows, Job 18:3, do
thou instruct and inform us.
Cease cavilling, and produce thy
strong reasons, that we may
consider and yield to their
weight, or answer them.
Verse 3-4
Job 18:3-4. Wherefore are we
counted as beasts? — That is,
ignorant and stupid men, Job
17:4; Job 17:10; and reputed
vile in your sight — Hebrew,
נשׂמנו, nitmeinu, polluted or
unclean; that is, not fit to be
conversed with, or contemptible,
as such things are. He teareth
himself in his anger —
That is, Job does, as if he had
said, O thou that tearest
thyself, thou complainest of us
for vexing thee with our
speeches, when, in truth, thou
art thy own greatest tormentor.
Shall the earth be forsaken for
thee? — Shall God, for thy sake,
or to prevent thy complaints and
clamours, give over the
government of the earth and men
and things in it, and suffer all
things to fall out by chance and
promiscuously, to good and bad
men, without any regard to his
truth, wisdom, or justice? And
shall the rock be removed out of
its place? — Shall the counsels
of God, which are more firm and
immoveable than rocks, and the
whole course of his providence,
be altered to comply with thy
fancies or humours?
Verses 5-7
Job 18:5-7. Yea — Depend upon
it, the thing is true and
certain, notwithstanding thy
dissatisfaction and opposition
to it; the light of the wicked
shall be put out — All their
glory and felicity shall perish:
and the spark of his fire shall
not shine — His light is but a
spark, which shines briskly for
a moment, and is soon
extinguished. The light shall be
dark in his tabernacle — That
is, in his family. Instead of
his former splendour, both he
and his children shall fall into
extreme contempt and misery. And
his candle shall be put out with
him — His glory shall not
descend to his posterity, as he
designed and hoped it should,
but die with him. The steps of
his strength — His strong steps,
by a vulgar Hebraism: his
attempts and actions; such of
them as seem to be contrived
with the greatest strength of
understanding, and carried on
with the greatest resolution;
shall be straitened — Shall be
hindered and entangled. He shall
be cast into difficulties and
perplexities, so that he shall
not be able to proceed, and to
accomplish his enterprises. And
his own counsel shall cast him
down — He shall be undone by his
own contrivances; either because
God will give him up to
dangerous and destructive
mistakes, or because he will
oppose him and turn his own
devices against him.
Verse 8
Job 18:8. He is cast into a net
by his own feet — By his own
choice, design, and actions. And
he walketh upon a snare — Or, as
the words may be rendered,
runneth to and fro on the toils,
and therefore must needs be
entangled and destroyed. “The
metaphor” says Heath, “is taken
from a beast, which the hunters
have driven into the toils. He
runs hither and thither,
striving to find a way out, but
the net entangles him more and
more, till at length it fastens
upon him.”
Verse 9-10
Job 18:9-10. The gin shall take
him by the heel — That is, take
fast hold on him, so as to keep
him in those distresses. And the
robber shall prevail against him
— Hebrew, צמים, tsammim, the
horrible or terrible man, the
huntsman that laid the snare for
him shall come upon him, when he
is insnared, take and spoil or
kill him. The snare is laid for
him in the ground — Where he did
not discern nor expect it. The
former snare he laid for
himself, but this was laid for
him by another.
Verse 11-12
Job 18:11-12. Terrors shall make
him afraid — Both from men and
from God, and also from his own
unquiet mind and guilty
conscience. And drive him to his
feet — Shall force him to flee
different ways, being safe
nowhere, but pursued by terrors
from place to place, which, as
Houbigant renders it, shall be
spread around his feet. His
strength — Either his children,
who are, and are called a man’s
strength, Genesis 49:3; Psalms
127:4, or rather, his wealth,
power, and prosperity; shall be
hunger-bitten — Or famished,
that is, utterly consumed. The
Vulgate renders it, His strength
shall be eaten by famine. And
destruction shall be ready at
his side — Shall attend him as a
constant companion, or follow
him at the heels as a diligent
servant. Or, he may allude to an
arrow fitted to a string, and
ready to be discharged at him.
Verse 13
Job 18:13. It shall devour, &c.
— “Filthy ulcers shall consume
his skin; an untimely death
shall destroy his children. —
Heath and Houbigant. This
sarcasm was peculiarly adapted
to the case of Job, whose skin
was thus consumed, and whose
children had been destroyed in
this manner. The reader must
have had occasion frequently to
remark, in this book, how often,
amidst the sublimity of the
eastern metaphors, the author
drops the metaphor and treats of
his subject simply; as in the
present case, having spoken of
the wicked man under the
metaphor of a wild beast caught
in a snare, in this verse he
considers him no longer in that
view, but speaks of him
immediately in his own
character.” — Dodd.
Verse 14
Job 18:14. His confidence — That
is, all the matter of his
confidence, his riches,
children, &c.; shall be rooted
out of his tabernacle — That is,
out of his habitation. And it —
Namely, the loss of his
confidence; shall bring him to
the king of terrors — Either,
1st, Into extreme fears and
horrors of mind; or, 2d, To
death, which even Aristotle
called the most terrible of all
terribles. And this it will do,
either because it will expose
him to his enemies, who will
kill him; or, because the sense
of his disappointments, and
losses, and dangers, will break
his heart.
Verse 15
Job 18:15. It shall dwell in his
tabernacle — Destruction,
expressed Job 18:12, shall fix
its abode with him. Because it
is none of his — Because it is
none of his own, being got from
others by deceit or violence.
Brimstone shall be scattered on
his habitation — It shall be
utterly destroyed, as it were,
by fire and brimstone. He seems
to allude both to the
destruction of Sodom, which
happened not long before these
times, and to the judgment which
befell Job, chap. Job 1:16. When
the stranger hath taken and
rifled his dwelling, he shall
forsake it as an accursed place,
and shall burn it with fire and
brimstone, that there may be no
monument of so vile a person
left upon the earth. Heath’s
interpretation of this verse is,
“They shall take up their
habitation in his tent, because
he hath no surviver: brimstone
shall be sprinkled upon his
habitation. As much as to say,
‘Since he hath no one to survive
him, his posterity is utterly
exterminated: horror takes
possession of his habitation,
and it is sprinkled with
brimstone, that no person may
ever after inhabit it; but that
it may remain an object of
terror to future ages.’ The
image is grand, and worthy of
the tragic style.”
Verses 16-19
Job 18:16-19. 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 designed and
expected to have, both while he
lived, and after his death, he
shall not be so much as
remembered, unless it be with
contempt and reproach. He shall
be driven from light into
darkness, &c. — From a
prosperous state to disgrace and
misery, and to the grave, the
land of darkness. He shall
neither have son nor nephew, &c.
— But if any such survive, they
shall be in the hands and power
of strangers, or rather of their
enemies, and not among his own
people.
Verse 20-21
Job 18:20-21. They that come
after him — And hear the report
of it, shall be astonied at his
day — The day of his
destruction. They shall be
amazed at the suddenness and
dreadfulness of it. As they that
went before were affrighted — As
his elders (so Heath renders it)
were seized with horror; namely,
those who lived in the time and
place where this judgment was
inflicted. Hebrew, אחזו שׂער,
achazu sagnar, apprehenderunt
horrorem, they took hold on
horror, a beautiful metonymy, as
if they took hold on their hair,
which, by reason of the terror
they were in, stood upright. Or,
They were filled with horror,
partly through humanity and
compassion, and partly for fear
lest the judgment should
overtake them also. “The plain
meaning of the verse seems to
be, His elders, who saw so
signal an instance of divine
vengeance, were seized with
horror; and whoever, in after
times, should hear his story
related, would be in amazement
at it.” — Heath. Surely such are
the dwellings of the wicked —
This is a just description of
their miserable condition at
last, and thus shall those who
dishonour God be abased. Such,
according to Eliphaz, was the
unanimous sense of the
patriarchal age, grounded on
their knowledge of God and the
many observations which they had
made on the dispensations of his
providence. And this is the
place of him that knoweth not
God — Who is not truly
acquainted with him, and
reconciled to him; who does not
know him experimentally and
practically, so as truly to
fear, love, and serve him, or
who, professing to know him, by
works denies him. Here then we
see what is the beginning and
what is the end of the
wickedness of mankind. The
beginning of it is ignorance of
God, which ignorance is wilful,
for God has made to all men
those discoveries of himself
which are sufficient to render
those of them for ever
inexcusable who live and die
ignorant of him and disobedient
to him. The end of it is utter
destruction. Such, so miserable,
are the dwellings of the wicked.
Vengeance will be taken on them
that know not God, and obey not
his revealed will, 2
Thessalonians 1:8. Let us
therefore stand in awe, and not
sin, for it will certainly be
bitterness in the latter end:
nay, let us acquaint ourselves
with him and be at peace; for
thereby good will come unto us,
in time and in eternity. |