
Text -- Job 8:18 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
God, who is the saviour of good men, and the destroyer of the wicked.

Wesley: Job 8:18 - -- The place; to which denying him, and seeing him, are here ascribed figuratively.
The place; to which denying him, and seeing him, are here ascribed figuratively.

Wesley: Job 8:18 - -- He shall be so utterly extirpated and destroyed, that there shall be no memorial of him left.
He shall be so utterly extirpated and destroyed, that there shall be no memorial of him left.
JFB -> Job 8:18
JFB: Job 8:18 - -- If He (God) tear him away (properly, "to tear away rapidly and violently") from his place, "then it [the place personified] shall deny him" (Psa 103:1...
If He (God) tear him away (properly, "to tear away rapidly and violently") from his place, "then it [the place personified] shall deny him" (Psa 103:16). The very soil is ashamed of the weeds lying withered on its surface, as though it never had been connected with them. So, when the godless falls from prosperity, his nearest friends disown him.
Clarke -> Job 8:18
Clarke: Job 8:18 - -- If he destroy him from his place - Is not this a plain reference to the alienation of his inheritance? God destroys him from it; it becomes the prop...
If he destroy him from his place - Is not this a plain reference to the alienation of his inheritance? God destroys him from it; it becomes the property of another; and on his revisiting it, the place, by a striking prosopopoeia, says, "I know thee not; I have never seen thee."This also have I witnessed; I looked on it, felt regret, received instruction, and hasted away.
TSK -> Job 8:18

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 8:18
Barnes: Job 8:18 - -- If he destroy him from his place - The particle here which is rendered "if ( אם 'ı̂m ) is often used to denote emphasis, and means her...
If he destroy him from his place - The particle here which is rendered "if (
Then it shall deny him - That is, the soil, the earth, or the place where it stood. This represents a wicked man under the image of a tree. The figure is beautiful. The earth will be ashamed of it; ashamed that it sustained the tree; ashamed that it ever ministered any nutriment, and will refuse to own it. So with the hypocrite. He shall pass away as if the earth refused to own him, or to retain any recollection of him.
I have not seen thee - I never knew thee. It shall utterly deny any acquaintance with it. There is a striking resemblance here to the language which the Savior says he will use respecting the hypocrite in the day of judgment: "and then will I profess to them, I never knew you;"Mat 7:23. The hypocrite has never been known as a pious man. The earth will refuse to own him as such, and so will the heavens.
Poole -> Job 8:18
Poole: Job 8:18 - -- If he either God, who is the Saviour of good men, and the Destroyer of the wicked; or the owner; or any other man; for this is an indefinite speech, ...
If he either God, who is the Saviour of good men, and the Destroyer of the wicked; or the owner; or any other man; for this is an indefinite speech, and may be taken passively and impersonally; which is very common in the holy text and language.
From his place in which he was planted.
Then it i.e. the place; to which denying him and seeing him are here ascribed figuratively, as we have oft seen.
I have not seen thee i.e. I do not know nor remember that ever thou wast planted here. He shall be so utterly extirpated and destroyed, that there shall be no footstep, nor name, nor memorial of him left there.
Gill -> Job 8:18
Gill: Job 8:18 - -- If he destroy him from his place,.... If the sun when he is risen strikes the tree with such vehement heat that it withers and utterly perishes from t...
If he destroy him from his place,.... If the sun when he is risen strikes the tree with such vehement heat that it withers and utterly perishes from the place where it grew; or roots it up, so the Targum and Nachmanides; or, if God destroys the hypocrite from his place, or he is by one means or another removed out of the garden, the church, being detested and rejected by good men; or from all his worldly enjoyments, his honour, credit, and esteem with men, which are all precarious, fickle, and inconstant; or out of the world, being cut down as a cumber ground:
then it shall deny him, saying, I have not seen thee; that is, either the tree shall deny that it ever was planted in such a place, or rather the place shall deny that the tree ever was planted there; the sense is, that it shall be so utterly destroyed, that neither root nor branch shall be left, nor anything to show that it ever grew there; its place shall know it no more, see Job 7:10; or God shall deny the hypocrite, and say he never saw him nor knew him; he never belonged to him, nor was under his care; he never looked upon him with a look of love, grace, and mercy; he never had any delight and pleasure in him, nor regarded him as one of his; he was no tree of his planting, watering, and keeping, see Mat 7:23; this seems most difficult to accommodate to a good man, and those who carry it that way seem to be most puzzled with this; some render it, "shall he be swallowed?" or, "shall anyone in, allow him up?" p destroy or root him out of his place? none shall: the root of the righteous cannot be moved, nor they from that; not from the everlasting love of God, in which they are rooted, nor from Christ, in whom they are fixed: others understand this of the digging up of a tree, and transplanting it to another place, where it grows as well, or better; and so the people of God, though they have many stripping providences, and are removed from place to place, and from one condition to another, so that their former state and place know them no more; yet all things work together for their good.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

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 ...
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 8:16-19
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 8:16-19 - --
16 He dwells with sap in the sunshine,
And his branch spreads itself over his garden.
17 His roots intertwine over heaps of stone,
He looks upon ...
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 ...
