
Text -- Job 24:8 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 24:8 - -- With the rain - water, which runs down the rocks or mountains into the caves, to which they fled for shelter.
With the rain - water, which runs down the rocks or mountains into the caves, to which they fled for shelter.

Wesley: Job 24:8 - -- Are glad when they can find a cleft of a rock in which they may have some protection against the weather.
Are glad when they can find a cleft of a rock in which they may have some protection against the weather.
The plundered travellers.
Clarke: Job 24:8 - -- They are wet with the showers of the mountains - Mr. Good thinks that torrents, not showers, is the proper translation of the original זרם zerem...
They are wet with the showers of the mountains - Mr. Good thinks that torrents, not showers, is the proper translation of the original

Clarke: Job 24:8 - -- And embrace the rock for want of a shelter - In such cases as that related above, the firm rock is the only shelter which can be found, or safely tr...
And embrace the rock for want of a shelter - In such cases as that related above, the firm rock is the only shelter which can be found, or safely trusted.
TSK -> Job 24:8

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 24:8
Barnes: Job 24:8 - -- They are wet with the showers of the mountains - That is, the poor persons, or the travelers whom they have robbed. Hills collect the clouds, a...
They are wet with the showers of the mountains - That is, the poor persons, or the travelers whom they have robbed. Hills collect the clouds, and showers seem to pour down from the mountains. These showers often collect and pour down so suddenly that there is scarcely time to seek a shelter.
And embrace the rock for want of a shelter - Take refuge beneath a projecting rock. The robbers drive them away from their homes, or plunder them of their tents, and leave them to find a shelter from the storm, or at night, beneath a rock. This agrees exactly with what Niebuhr says of the wandering Arabs near mount Sinai: "Those who cannot afford a tent, spread out a cloth upon four or six stakes; and others spread their cloth near a tree, or endeavor to shelter themselves from the heat and the rain in the cavities of the rocks. Reisebeschreib. i. Thes s. 233.
Poole -> Job 24:8
Poole: Job 24:8 - -- They i.e. the poor, being stripped of their raiment, and forced away from their houses.
With the showers of the mountains with the rain water, whic...
They i.e. 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 run down from the rocks or mountains into the caves or holes in the sides of them, to which they fled for shelter.
Embrace the rock , i.e. 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. Compare Lam 4:5 .
Haydock -> Job 24:8
Stones, for their bed, though they be so wet. (Haydock)
Gill -> Job 24:8
Gill: Job 24:8 - -- They are wet with the showers of the mountains,.... They that are without any clothes to cover them, lying down at the bottom of a hill or mountain, w...
They are wet with the showers of the mountains,.... They that are without any clothes to cover them, lying down at the bottom of a hill or mountain, where the clouds often gather, and there break, or the snow at the top of them melts through the heat of the day; and whether by the one or by the other, large streams of water run down the mountains, and the naked poor, or such who are thinly clothed, are all over wet therewith, as Nebuchadnezzar's body was with the dew of heaven, when he was driven from men, and lived among beasts, Dan 4:33,
and embrace the rock for want of a shelter; or habitation, as the Targum; having no house to dwell in, nor any raiment to cover them, they were glad to get into the hole of a rock, in a cave or den there, and where some good men in former times were obliged to wander, Heb 11:38; and whither mean persons, in the time and country in which Job lived, were driven to dwell in, see Job 30:6.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 24:1-25
TSK Synopsis: Job 24:1-25 - --1 Wickedness often goes unpunished.17 There is a secret judgment for the wicked.
MHCC -> Job 24:1-12
MHCC: Job 24:1-12 - --Job discourses further about the prosperity of the wicked. That many live at ease who are ungodly and profane, he had showed, ch. 21. Here he shows th...
Matthew Henry -> Job 24:1-12
Matthew Henry: Job 24:1-12 - -- Job's friends had been very positive in it that they should soon see the fall of wicked people, how much soever they might prosper for a while. By n...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 24:5-8
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 24:5-8 - --
5 Behold, as wild asses in the desert,
They go forth in their work seeking for prey,
The steppe is food to them for the children.
6 In the field ...
Constable -> Job 22:1--27:23; Job 23:1--24:25
Constable: Job 22:1--27:23 - --D. The Third cycle of Speeches between Job and His Three Friends chs. 22-27
In round one of the debate J...
