
Text -- Job 8:14 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 8:14 - -- Whose wealth and outward glory, the matter of his hope, and trust, shall be cut off suddenly and violently taken away from him.
Whose wealth and outward glory, the matter of his hope, and trust, shall be cut off suddenly and violently taken away from him.

Wesley: Job 8:14 - -- Which tho' it be formed with great art and industry, is easily swept down, or pulled in pieces.
Which tho' it be formed with great art and industry, is easily swept down, or pulled in pieces.
JFB -> Job 8:14
JFB: Job 8:14 - -- So GESENIUS; or, to accord with the metaphor of the spider's "house," "The confidence (on which he builds) shall be laid in ruins" (Isa 59:5-6).
So GESENIUS; or, to accord with the metaphor of the spider's "house," "The confidence (on which he builds) shall be laid in ruins" (Isa 59:5-6).
Clarke -> Job 8:14
Clarke: Job 8:14 - -- Whose hope shall be cut off - Such persons, subdued by the strong habits of sin, hope on fruitlessly, till the last thread of the web of life is cut...
Whose hope shall be cut off - Such persons, subdued by the strong habits of sin, hope on fruitlessly, till the last thread of the web of life is cut off from the beam; and then they find no more strength in their hope than is in the threads of the spider’ s web. Mr. Good renders, Thus shall their support rot away. The foundation on which they trust is rotten, and by and by the whole superstructure of their confidence shall tumble into ruin.
TSK -> Job 8:14

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 8:14
Barnes: Job 8:14 - -- Whose hope shall be cut off - Schultens supposes that the quotation from the ancients closes with Job 8:13, and that these are the comments of ...
Whose hope shall be cut off - Schultens supposes that the quotation from the ancients closes with Job 8:13, and that these are the comments of Bildad on the passage to which he had referred. Rosenmuller and Noyes continue the quotation to the close of Job 8:19; Dr. Good closes it at Job 8:13. It seems to me that it is extended further than Job 8:13, and probably it is to be regarded as continued to the close of Job 8:18. The beginning of this verse has been very variously rendered. Dr. Good says that it has never been understood, and proposes to translate it, "thus shall his support rot away."Noyes renders it, "whose expectation shall come to naught;"Gesenius, "shall be cut off."Jerome, Non ei placebit vecordia sua . "his madness (do age, rage, or frenzy) shall not please him?"The Septuagint, "his house shall be uninhabitable, and his tent shall pass away as the spider."
The Hebrew word translated "cut off"(
And whose trust - Whose confidence, or expectation.
A spider’ s web - Margin, "house."So the Hebrew
Poole -> Job 8:14
Poole: Job 8:14 - -- i.e. Whose wealth and outward glory, which is the matter of his hope and trust , shall be cut off, i.e. suddenly and violently taken away from hi...
i.e. Whose wealth and outward glory, which is the matter of his hope and trust , shall be cut off, i.e. suddenly and violently taken away from him. Whose hope shall be irksome or tedious to him , by the succession of earnest expectation and great disappointment.
A spider’ s web which though it be formed with great art and industry, and may do much mischief to others, yet is most slender and feeble, and easily swept down or pulled in pieces, and unable to defend the spider that made it. The application is obvious.
Haydock -> Job 8:14
Haydock: Job 8:14 - -- Him, the hypocrite, or God. (Calmet) ---
Both shall one day condemn the ill use of riches. (Haydock)
Him, the hypocrite, or God. (Calmet) ---
Both shall one day condemn the ill use of riches. (Haydock)
Gill -> Job 8:14
Gill: Job 8:14 - -- Whose hope shall be cut off,.... The same thing as before, expressed in different words, and repeated for the certainty of it; signifying that it shou...
Whose hope shall be cut off,.... The same thing as before, expressed in different words, and repeated for the certainty of it; signifying that it should be of no manner of use, should be wholly lost, and issue in black despair: the word has the signification of loathing, and is differently rendered, either, "whom his hope shall loathe" e or, "who shall loathe his hope" f; he shall fret and tease, and vex himself that he should be such a fool to entertain such a vain hope, or to place hope and confidence in such vain things, finding himself most sadly disappointed:
and whose trust shall be a spider's web; or "a spider's house" g; and such its web is to it; having made it, it encloses itself in it, and dwells securely: very fitly is the hope and confidence of an hypocrite compared to a spider's web, which is a very nice and curious piece of workmanship, as are the outward works of righteousness, done by hypocrites they are wrought out and set off to the best advantage, to be seen of men; yet very slight and thin, and will bear no weight; such are the best works of carnal professors; they make a fine appearance, but have no substance, do not flow from principles of grace, nor are done in the strength of Christ, or to the glory of God; are but "splendida peccata", as one calls them, and fall infinitely short of bearing the weight of the salvation of the soul: as the spider's web is spun out of its own bowels, so the works of such persons are wholly of themselves; they are their own, done without the grace of God and spirit of Christ; and such webs are not fit for garments, are too thin to cover naked souls; insufficient to shelter from divine wrath and vengeance; cannot bear the besom of justice, one stroke of which will sweep them all away; and though they may think themselves safe enclosed in them as in a house, they will find themselves in the issue wretchedly mistaken; for there is no shelter, safety, and security, in such cobwebs; there is none but in Christ and his righteousness.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 8:14 The second half of the verse is very clear. What the godless person relies on for security is as fragile as a spider’s web – he may as wel...
Geneva Bible -> Job 8:14
Geneva Bible: Job 8:14 Whose hope shall be cut off, and whose trust [shall be] a ( h ) spider's web.
( h ) Which is today and tomorrow swept away.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 8:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Job 8:1-22 - --1 Bildad shews God's justice in dealing with men according to their works.8 He alleges antiquity to prove the certain destruction of the hypocrite.20 ...
Maclaren -> Job 8:14
Maclaren: Job 8:14 - --Two Kinds Of Hope
Whose hope shall be cut off, and whose trust shall be a spider's web.'--Job 8:14.
And hope maketh not ashamed.'--Romans 5:5.
THESE ...
MHCC -> Job 8:8-19
MHCC: Job 8:8-19 - --Bildad discourses well of hypocrites and evil-doers, and the fatal end of all their hopes and joys. He proves this truth of the destruction of the hop...
Matthew Henry -> Job 8:8-19
Matthew Henry: Job 8:8-19 - -- Bildad here discourses very well on the sad catastrophe of hypocrites and evil-doers and the fatal period of all their hopes and joys. He will not b...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 8:11-15
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 8:11-15 - --
11 Doth papyrus grow up without mire?
Doth the reed shoot up without water?
12 It is still in luxuriant verdure, when it is not cut off,
Then bef...
Constable: Job 4:1--14:22 - --B. The First Cycle of Speeches between Job and His Three Friends chs. 4-14
The two soliloquies of Job (c...

Constable: Job 8:1-22 - --3. Bildad's first speech ch. 8
Bildad agreed with Eliphaz that God was paying Job back for some ...
