Verse 1
Job 24:1. Why, &c. — Job, having
by his complaints, in the
foregoing chapter, given vent to
his passion, and thereby gained
some ease, breaks them off
abruptly, and now applies
himself to a further discussion
of the doctrinal controversy
between him and his friends,
concerning the prosperity of
wicked people. That many live at
ease, who yet are ungodly and
profane, and despise all the
exercises of devotion, he had
showed, chap. 21. Now he goes
further, and shows that many who
are mischievous to mankind, and
live in open defiance of all the
laws of justice and common
honesty, yet thrive and succeed
in their unrighteous practices;
and we do not see them reckoned
with in this world. He first
lays down his general
proposition, That the punishment
of wicked people is not so
visible and apparent as his
friends supposed, and then
proves it by an induction of
particulars. Why — How comes it
to pass; seeing times are not
hidden from the Almighty —
Seeing the fittest seasons for
every action, and particularly
for the punishment of wicked
men, are not unknown to God: do
they that know him — That love
and obey him; not see his days?
— The times and seasons which he
takes for the punishment of
ungodly men; which times are
frequently called the days of
the Lord, as Isaiah 2:12; Isaiah
13:6; Jeremiah 46:10; Acts 2:20.
Surely, if they were constant
and fixed in this life, they
would not be unknown to good
men, to whom God is wont to
reveal his secrets. His words
may be paraphrased a little more
at large, thus: To answer a
little what you have so often
asserted: If punishments from
God upon the wicked, in this
world, are so certain as you
say, why do not they who are
truly pious see them openly
inflicted? Surely it is most
strange, that there are not some
certain fixed times when God
arises publicly, and in the face
of the whole world inflicts
these deserved punishments upon
the wicked. Whereas, experience
shows, that these visible
judgments are very rarely
inflicted, and many true
worshippers of God pass through
the world without ever seeing
any thing of this kind. Heath
renders the verse, Why are not
stated seasons set apart by the
Almighty? And why do not those
who know him see his days?
namely, of vengeance on the
wicked.
Verse 2
Job 24:2. Some, &c. — In proof
that wicked persons prosper, he
instances in two sorts of
unrighteous people, whom all the
world saw thriving in their
iniquity: 1st, Tyrants, and
those that did wrong under
pretence of law and authority;
and, 2d, Robbers and plunderers,
that did wrong by downright
force, as the bands of the
Sabeans and Chaldeans, who had
lately plundered him. Remove the
landmark — By which men’s lands
are distinguished, and their
properties secured, that so they
may enlarge their own border by
diminishing the estate of their
neighbour — which is so great an
act of injustice that it was not
only very strictly forbidden by
God in his law, but also
declared execrable by the
heathen, among some of whom it
was permitted to any man to kill
him that did it. Forging or
destroying deeds is now a crime
equivalent to this. They
violently take away flocks, and
feed thereof — They take away
cattle by force, and use them as
if they were their own. Or, they
feed them; they do not hide, or
kill them, but openly feed them
in their pastures, without any
remorse, or shame, or fear of
punishment, either from God or
man.
Verse 3-4
Job 24:3-4. They drive away the
ass of the fatherless — Whose
helpless condition required
their pity and mercy. He says,
the ass, to aggravate their sin,
in that they robbed him who had
but one ass. They take the
widow’s ox — Thereby depriving
her, not only of the ox itself,
but of all the benefit of its
labours, by which her life was
sustained; for a pledge —
Contrary to God’s law, first
written in men’s hearts, and
afterward in the Holy
Scriptures, Exodus 22:26. They
turn the needy out of the way —
Out of the way of piety and
virtue. They engage them to take
evil courses by their examples,
or promises, or threatenings.
Or, out of their right, of which
they deprive them, by subtlety
or power. Or, rather, as the
word מדרךְ, middarech, more
properly signifies, and as the
next clause explains it, out of
the highway, out of the path or
place in which these oppressors
walk and range. These needy
persons labour to keep out of
their way for fear of their
further injuries and
oppressions. The poor of the
earth hide themselves, &c. — For
fear of these wicked tyrants and
persecutors.
Verse 5
Job 24:5. Behold, as wild asses
— Which are lawless and fierce,
and greedy of prey; in the
desert — Which is the proper
habitation of wild asses,
Jeremiah 2:24 : they go forth to
their work — These oppressors go
forth to spoil and rob, which is
their constant work and trade:
rising betimes for the prey —
Beginning their work of plunder
before the poor go to their
daily labour. The wilderness
yieldeth food for them — They
are so diligent and industrious
in their wicked work, that they
fetch food for themselves and
families even out of desert
places, in which the owners can
with difficulty subsist.
Verse 6
Job 24:6. They reap every one
his corn in the field — The
words, every one, are not in the
original, and ought not to have
been inserted here, as they
alter the sense. The clause
would be better translated
without them. They reap his corn
in the field; that is, these
plunderers make incursions, reap
and take away the corn of the
honest, industrious husbandman,
which he had sown for the
support of his family. They
gather the vintage of the wicked
— Or, rather, the vintage of
wickedness; that is, they
plunder the vineyards of the
honest, just man, as well as his
corn-fields.
Verse 7
Job 24:7. They cause the naked —
That is, those whom they have
made naked, whom they have
stripped of their garments and
coverings; so far were they from
exercising charity or even
justice toward them; to lodge
without clothing — To sleep in
the night without bed-clothes to
cover them; that they have no
covering in the cold — Of the
night, in the winter season.
This verse perhaps would be
better rendered thus, They cause
men to lodge naked, because they
have no clothing, (that is,
because they leave them nothing
wherewith they can clothe
themselves,) and no covering in
the cold; they leave them
neither raiment to wear in the
day, nor a covering in the
night.
Verse 8
Job 24:8. They are wet — That
is, the poor, being stripped of
their raiment, and forced away
from their houses; with the
showers of the mountains — With
the rain-water, which, in great
showers, runs down from the
rocks or mountains into the
caves or holes in the sides of
them, to which they have fled
for shelter. And embrace the
rock — That is, are glad when
they can find a cavern, or cleft
of a rock, in which they may
have some protection against the
injuries of the weather, and a
hiding-place from the fury of
their oppressors.
Verse 9-10
Job 24:9-10. They — The wicked
oppressors; pluck the fatherless
from the breast — Either out of
cruelty, not sparing poor
infants, or out of covetousness,
not allowing the mother time for
the suckling of her infant. They
take away the sheaf from the
hungry — That single sheaf,
which the poor man had got with
the sweat of his brow, to
satisfy his hunger.
Verse 11-12
Job 24:11-12. Which make oil
within their walls — The walls
of the rich oppressors, for
their use and benefit. And tread
their wine-presses — That is,
the grapes in their
wine-presses; and suffer thirst
— Because they are not permitted
to quench their thirst out of
the wine which they make. Men
groan — Under the burden of
injuries and grievous
oppressions; from out of the
city — Not only in deserts, or
less inhabited places, where
these tyrants have the greater
opportunity to practise their
villanies; but even in cities,
where there is a face of order,
and government, and courts of
justice, and a multitude of
people to observe and restrain
such actions; whereby they
plainly declare that they
neither fear God nor reverence
man. The soul of the wounded
crieth out — The life or blood
of those who are wounded to
death (as the word חללים,
chalalim, properly signifies)
crieth aloud to God for
vengeance; yet God layeth not
folly to them — Does not appear
to impute, or lay to their
charge, this folly, or
wickedness; does not punish them
for it as it deserves.
Verse 13
Job 24:13. Those that rebel
against the light — Who sin
impudently, in the face of the
sun, and obstinately, in spite
of all their light, as well the
light of reason and conscience,
which abhors and condemns their
wicked actions, as the light of
divine revelation, which was
then, in good measure, imparted
to the people of God, and
shortly after committed to
writing; all which they set at
defiance, sinning with manifest
contempt of God, and of men, and
of their own consciences. They
know not the ways thereof —
That is, of the light, or such
ways and courses as are
agreeable to the light; they do
not approve, love, or choose
them. Nor abide in the paths
thereof — If they begin to walk
in those paths: and do some good
actions, yet they do not
persevere in well-doing: they
are not constant and fixed in a
good course of life.
Verse 14-15
Job 24:14-15. The murderer
rising with the light — As soon
as the light appears, using no
less diligence in his wicked
practices than labourers do in
their honest and daily
employments; killeth the poor
and needy — Where he finds
nothing to satisfy his
covetousness, he exerciseth his
cruelty. And in the night is as
a thief — He is really a thief;
the particle as being often used
to express, not the resemblance,
but the truth, of the thing. In
the night they rob men secretly
and cunningly, as in the
day-time they do it more openly
and avowedly. The adulterer
waiteth for the twilight —
Namely, for the evening
twilight, which is his
opportunity; saying — In his
heart; No eye shall see me —
Comforting himself with the
thoughts of secrecy and
impunity; and disguiseth his
face — Hebrew, putteth his face
in secret; covers it with a mask
that he may not be discovered.
Verse 16-17
Job 24:16-17. In the dark they
dig through houses — Either the
adulterer last mentioned, or
rather the thief or robber,
whose common practice this is,
of whom he spake, Job 24:14; and
having, on that occasion,
inserted the mention of the
adulterer, as one who acted his
sin in the same manner as the
night thief did, he now returns
to the latter again: which they
had marked for themselves —
Distinguishing, by some secret
mark, the house of some rich man
which they intended to rob, and
the part of the house where they
resolved to enter it. They know
not the light — Do not love nor
make use of it, but abhor and
shun it. For the morning is as
the shadow of death — Terrible
and hateful, because it both
discovers them and hinders their
practices. If one know them, &c.
— If they are brought to light,
or discovered, they are
overwhelmed with deadly horrors
and terrors.
Verse 18
Job 24:18. He is swift as the
waters — That is, the wicked man
quickly passeth away, with all
his glory, as the waters, which
never stay in one place, but are
always hasting away. Their
portion — Or, his portion (for
he still speaks of the same
person, though with a change of
the number) is cursed in the
earth — His habitation and
estate, which he leaves behind
him, is accursed of God; and, by
all men who live near it, or
observe it, is pronounced
accursed, because of the
remarkable judgments of God upon
it, and upon his posterity or
family, to which he left it, and
from whom it is strangely and
unexpectedly alienated. He
beholdeth not the way of the
vineyards — He shall never more
see or enjoy his vineyards, or
other pleasant places and
things, which seem to be
comprehended under this
particular. Thus, though Job
constantly maintains against his
friends, that many ungodly men
do prosper, and escape
punishment, in this life, yet,
withal, he asserts that God will
certainly, sooner or later,
punish them; and that he
sometimes doth it here, cutting
them off by cruel and untimely
deaths, or otherwise inflicting
some notable judgment upon them,
of which he also speaks Job
21:17.
Verse 19
Job 24:19. Drought and heat
consume the snow-waters — As the
snow, though it doth for a time
lie upon the ground, yet at last
is dissolved into water by the
heat of the season, and that
water is quickly swallowed up by
the earth when it is dry and
thirsty; so ungodly sinners,
though they live and prosper for
a season, yet at last shall go
into the grave, which will
consume them, together with all
their hopes and comforts; their
merry life is followed by a sad
and ofttimes sudden death; not
with such a death as the godly
die, which perfects them, and
brings them to happiness, but
with a consuming and never-dying
death.
Verse 20
Job 24:20. The womb shall forget
him — His mother that bare him,
and much more the rest of his
friends, shall seldom or never
mention or remember him, but
shall rather be ashamed to own
their relation to one that lived
such a vile and wretched life,
and died such an accursed death.
This portion he shall have,
instead of that honour and
renown which he thirsted and
laboured for, and expected
should perfume his name and
memory. The worm shall feed
sweetly on him — This proud and
insolent tyrant, that preyed
upon all his neighbours, shall
himself become a prey to the
contemptible worms; he shall be
no more remembered — Namely,
with honour, or so as to be
desired; but his name shall rot,
and scarcely ever be mentioned
but with infamy. And wickedness
shall be broken — The wicked man
shall be broken to pieces, or
violently broken down, as the
word תשׁבר, tishaber, signifies;
shall be utterly and
irrecoverably destroyed; as a
tree — Which being once broken
never groweth again.
Verse 21
Job 24:21. He evil-entreateth
the barren — Job here returns to
the declaration of his further
acts of wickedness, the causes
of these judgments; that heareth
not — Barrenness was esteemed a
curse and reproach; and so it is
mentioned as an instance of this
man’s wickedness, that he added
affliction to the afflicted,
whom he should have pitied and
helped; but because the barren
had no children, and the widows
no husbands to defend or avenge
their cause, he exercised
cruelty upon them.
Verse 22
Job 24:22. He draweth also the
mighty with his power — He
draweth into his net, as Psalms
10:9, or to his party, to assist
and serve him in his
enterprises, those who are
mighty in place, or wealth, or
power; he practiseth upon these
as well as upon the poor: he
riseth up — Namely, against any
man, as the same word קום, kum,
is rendered, Psalms 18:39;
Psalms 44:5. When he sets
himself against a man and
resolves to destroy him, no man
is sure of life — None of them,
whom he so opposes, can be
secure of holding his life, but
all such give themselves up as
lost men, as knowing they cannot
resist his greater power.
Verse 23
Job 24:23. Though it be given
him — Namely, of God; to be in
safety — That is, Though God
granteth to the oppressor to be
for a time in apparent safety,
and to live a comfortable life;
whereon he resteth — His former
experience of God’s
long-suffering makes him
confident of the continuance of
it, so that he is not only happy
in his present enjoyments, but
also in his freedom from
distracting fears of future
miseries; yet his eyes are upon
their ways — That is, the eyes
of God, who, although he gives
wicked men such strange
successes and great prosperity,
yet he sees and observes them
all, and marks their whole
conduct, and will in due time
punish them severely.
Verse 24
Job 24:24. They are exalted for
a little while — They live in
honour and prosperity, but not
for ever; it is only, at the
most, during this short and
mortal life, which lasts but for
a very little time; and,
therefore, their present
happiness is not to be envied;
nor is it any reproach to God’s
providence, which has time
enough to reckon with them
hereafter; but are gone —
Hebrew, איננו, einennu, are not;
namely, in this world, they die.
And are brought low — As low as
their graves. They are taken out
of the way — Out of this world;
as all other — They can no more
prevent, or delay their death,
than the meanest men in the
world: and cut off — By the
sickle of death, perhaps by the
hand of violence; as the tops of
the ears of corn — When in its
greatest height and maturity;
when they are arrived at their
perfect stature of worldly power
and glory, then God cuts them
off, and that suddenly and
unexpectedly.
Verse 25
Job 24:25. And if it be not so
now — Namely, as I have
discoursed; if God does not
often suffer wicked men to live
long and prosperously in the
world, before he punishes them;
and if good men be not sometimes
sorely afflicted here; if all
things do not fall alike to all
men in these matters; and if it
do not from hence follow, that I
am unjustly injured and
condemned: who will make me a
liar? Or, as Sol. Jarchi
interprets the words, Let one of
you come and make me a liar, and
make my speech nothing worth —
Let them that can undertake to
prove that my discourse is
either false in itself, and then
they prove me a liar; or
foreign, and nothing to the
purpose, and then they prove it
frivolous and nothing worth.
That, indeed, which is false is
nothing worth: where there is
not truth, how can there be
goodness? But they that speak
the words of truth and
soberness, need not fear having
what they say brought to the
test, but can cheerfully submit
it to a fair examination, as Job
here submits what he had spoken. |