
Text -- Job 18:10 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 18:10
Barnes: Job 18:10 - -- The snare is laid - All this language is taken from the modes of taking wild beasts; but it is not possible to designate with absolute certaint...
The snare is laid - All this language is taken from the modes of taking wild beasts; but it is not possible to designate with absolute certainty the methods in which it was done. The word used here (
And a trap - We have no reason to suppose that at that time they employed steel to construct traps as we do now, or that the word here has exactly the sense which we give to it. The Hebrew word (
This seems to be a self-acting net, so constructed that the birds, when coming in contact with it, close it upon themselves.
This trap appears as if in a vertical position, although, doubtless, it is intended to represent a trap lying upon the ground.
There are other traps very similar to this, except that they are oval; and probably have a net like the former. They are composed of two arcs, which, being kept open by machinery in the middle, furnish the oval frame of the net; but when the bird flies in, and knocks out the pin in the center, the arcs collapse enclosing the bird in the net. One instance occurs, in a painting at Thebes, of a trap, in which a hyaena is caught, and carried on the shoulders of two men. It was a common method of hunting to enclose a large tract of land by a circle of nets, or to station men at convenient distances, and gradually to contract the circle by coming near to each other, and thus to drive all the wild animals into a narrow enclosure, where they could be easily slain. Some idea of the extent of those enclosures may be formed from the by no means incredible circumstance related by Plutarch, that when the Macedonian conquerors were in Persia, Philotos, the son of Armenio, had hunting-nets that would enclose the space of an hundred furlongs. The Oriental sovereigns have sometimes employed whole armies in this species of hunting. Picture Bible.
Poole -> Job 18:10
Poole: Job 18:10 - -- In the ground where he doth not expect nor discern it. The former snare he laid for himself, but this was laid for him by another.
In the ground where he doth not expect nor discern it. The former snare he laid for himself, but this was laid for him by another.
Gill -> Job 18:10
Gill: Job 18:10 - -- The snare is laid for him in the ground,.... Or "hidden" r there; for, as Solomon says, "in vain the net is spread in sight of any bird", Pro 1:17; a...
The snare is laid for him in the ground,.... Or "hidden" r there; for, as Solomon says, "in vain the net is spread in sight of any bird", Pro 1:17; and in vain it is to lay a snare publicly in the sight or creature, it will not then come near it, but shun and avoid it; and therefore it is laid underground, or hid in the earth, or in some private place, where the creature it is designed for may be thought to come, or into which it is decoyed; or "the cord" s, that which is fastened to the snare or net, and which the fowler holds in his hand, and pulls with; as he finds occasion and opportunity offers; but this is hid as much as possible, that it may not be seen:
and a trap for him in the way; in which he is used to walk, by the roadside, or in it; Mr. Broughton renders it, "a pitfall on the wayside", such as is dug for beasts to fall into and be taken. The whole of this is designed to show how suddenly and secretly wicked men are taken in nets, and snares, and gins, either of their own or others laying, and, while they are crying "Peace, peace, sudden destruction comes upon them"; see Ecc 9:12.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

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TSK Synopsis -> Job 18:1-21
TSK Synopsis: Job 18:1-21 - --1 Bildad reproves Job for presumption and impatience.5 The calamities of the wicked.
MHCC -> Job 18:5-10
MHCC: Job 18:5-10 - --Bildad describes the miserable condition of a wicked man; in which there is much certain truth, if we consider that a sinful condition is a sad condit...
Matthew Henry -> Job 18:5-10
Matthew Henry: Job 18:5-10 - -- The rest of Bildad's discourse is entirely taken up in an elegant description of the miserable condition of a wicked man, in which there is a great ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 18:8-11
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 18:8-11 - --
8 For he is driven into the net by his own feet,
And he walketh over a snare.
9 The trap holdeth his heel fast,
The noose bindeth him.
10 His sn...
Constable: Job 15:1--21:34 - --C. The Second Cycle of Speeches between Job and His Three Friends chs. 15-21
In the second cycle of spee...

Constable: Job 18:1-21 - --3. Bildad's second speech ch. 18
In his second speech Bildad emphasized the fate of the wicked. ...
