
Text -- Job 31:8 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Job 31:8
All my plants, and fruits, and improvements.
JFB: Job 31:8 - -- Apodosis to Job 31:5, Job 31:7; the curses which he imprecates on himself, if he had done these things (Lev 26:16; Amo 9:14; Psa 128:2).
Clarke: Job 31:8 - -- Let me sow, and let another eat - Let me be plagued both in my circumstances and in my family
Let me sow, and let another eat - Let me be plagued both in my circumstances and in my family

Clarke: Job 31:8 - -- My offspring be rooted out - It has already appeared probable that all Job’ s children were not destroyed in the fall of the house mentioned Jo...
TSK -> Job 31:8
TSK: Job 31:8 - -- let me : Job 5:5, Job 24:6; Lev 26:16; Deu 28:30-33, Deu 28:38, Deu 28:51; Jdg 6:3-6; Mic 6:15
let my : Job 5:4, Job 15:30, Job 18:19; Psa 109:13

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 31:8
Barnes: Job 31:8 - -- Then let me sow, and let another eat - This is the imprecation which he invokes, in case he had been guilty in this respect. He consented to so...
Then let me sow, and let another eat - This is the imprecation which he invokes, in case he had been guilty in this respect. He consented to sow his fields, and let others enjoy the harvest. The expression used here is common in the Scriptures to denote insecurity of property or calamity in general; see Lev 26:16 : "And ye shall sow your seed in vain, for your enemies shall eat it;"compare Deu 28:30; Amo 9:13-14.
Yea, let my offspring be rooted out - Or, rather, "Let what I plant be rooted up."So Umbreit, Noyes, Schultens, Rosenmuller, Herder, and Lee understand it. There is no evidence that he here alludes to his children, for the connection does not demand it, nor does the word used here require such an interpretation. The word
Poole -> Job 31:8
Poole: Job 31:8 - -- Let strangers enjoy the fruit of my labours, according to God’ s curse, Lev 26:16 Deu 28:30 .
My offspring as this word is used, Job 5:25 27:...
Let strangers enjoy the fruit of my labours, according to God’ s curse, Lev 26:16 Deu 28:30 .
My offspring as this word is used, Job 5:25 27:14 . Or rather, my increase , or growths , or sprouts , i.e. all my plants, and fruits, and improvements. For,
1. So the word properly signifies.
2. So this latter branch of the verse explains the former, as is most frequent in this and some other books of Scripture.
3. He had not now any children to be rooted out.
Gill -> Job 31:8
Gill: Job 31:8 - -- Then let me sow, and another eat,.... If what he had before said was not true; but he had turned out of the way of righteousness, and walked after th...
Then let me sow, and another eat,.... If what he had before said was not true; but he had turned out of the way of righteousness, and walked after the sight of his eyes, and the mammon of unrighteousness cleaved to his hands; then he wishes might sow his fields, and another enjoy the increase of them, which is one of God's judgments threatened unto the wicked and disobedient, Lev 26:16;
let my offspring be rooted out; but Job had no offspring or children at this time to be rooted out or destroyed; they were all destroyed already; some think therefore that this imprecation was made by him in the time of his prosperity, though here repeated as it was then, he made a covenant with his eyes; but then this might have been improved against him and retorted on him, that so it was according to his wish; and therefore he must have been guilty of the sin he would have purged himself from; others suppose that he refers to the future, and to the offspring he hoped to have hereafter; and when he should have them, wishes they may be rooted out, if he had done what he denies he had; but it does not appear that Job had any hope at all of being restored to his former state of prosperity, and of being possessed of a family and substance again, but the reverse. Gussetius a will have it, that he means his grandchildren; those indeed are sometimes called a man's children, and may propriety be said to be his offspring, they springing frown him; and it is possible, that, as his sons were settled from him, they were married and had children; but this is not certain, or, if they had any, that these were not destroyed with them; wherefore it is best to take the word b in its first and literal sense, for what springs out of the earth, herbs, plants, and trees, as in Isa 42:5; so Ben Gersom and Bar Tzemach, and which best agrees with the phrase of being "rooted out", and with what goes before; that as he had wished that which was sown in his fields might be eaten up by another, so what was planted and grew up in his gardens, orchards, vineyards, and olive yards, and the like, might be quite rooted out and destroyed; if he was not the man he declared himself to be, or had wronged any of their goods and property, then this would have been a just retaliation of him.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 31:1-40
MHCC -> Job 31:1-8
MHCC: Job 31:1-8 - --Job did not speak the things here recorded by way of boasting, but in answer to the charge of hypocrisy. He understood the spiritual nature of God's c...
Matthew Henry -> Job 31:1-8
Matthew Henry: Job 31:1-8 - -- The lusts of the flesh, and the love of the world, are the two fatal rocks on which multitudes split; against these Job protests he was always caref...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 31:5-8
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 31:5-8 - --
5 If I had intercourse with falsehood,
And my foot hastened after deceit:
6 Let Him weigh me in the balances of justice,
And let Eloah know my in...
Constable -> Job 29:1--31:40; Job 31:1-40
Constable: Job 29:1--31:40 - --2. Job's defense of his innocence ch. 29-31
Job gave a soliloquy before his dialogue with his th...
