
Text -- Job 18:16-21 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 18:18 - -- From a prosperous life to disgrace and misery, and to the grave, the land of darkness.
From a prosperous life to disgrace and misery, and to the grave, the land of darkness.

Wesley: Job 18:20 - -- At the day of his destruction. They shall be amazed at the suddenness, and dreadfulness of it.
At the day of his destruction. They shall be amazed at the suddenness, and dreadfulness of it.

Wesley: Job 18:20 - -- Before the persons last mentioned. Those who lived in the time and place where this judgment was inflicted.
Before the persons last mentioned. Those who lived in the time and place where this judgment was inflicted.
Himself.


JFB: Job 18:17 - -- Men shall not speak of him in meeting in the highways; rather, "in the field" or "meadow"; the shepherds shall no more mention his name--a picture fro...
Men shall not speak of him in meeting in the highways; rather, "in the field" or "meadow"; the shepherds shall no more mention his name--a picture from nomadic life [UMBREIT].

JFB: Job 18:19 - -- (so Isa 14:22). But it is translated "grandson" (Gen 21:23); translate "kinsman."

JFB: Job 18:20 - -- Rather, "those in the West--those in the East"; that is, all people; literally, "those behind--those before"; for Orientals in geography turn with the...
Rather, "those in the West--those in the East"; that is, all people; literally, "those behind--those before"; for Orientals in geography turn with their faces to the east (not to the north as we), and back to the west; so that before--east; behind--north (so Zec 14:8).

Clarke: Job 18:16 - -- His roots shall be dried up - his branch be cut off - He shall be as utterly destroyed, both in himself, his posterity, and his property, as a tree ...
His roots shall be dried up - his branch be cut off - He shall be as utterly destroyed, both in himself, his posterity, and his property, as a tree is whose branches are all lopped off, and whose every root is cut away.

Clarke: Job 18:17 - -- His remembrance shall perish - He shall have none to survive him, to continue his name among men
His remembrance shall perish - He shall have none to survive him, to continue his name among men

Clarke: Job 18:17 - -- No name in the street - He shall never be a man of reputation; after his demise, none shall talk of his fame.
No name in the street - He shall never be a man of reputation; after his demise, none shall talk of his fame.

He shall be driven from light - He shall be taken off by a violent death

Clarke: Job 18:18 - -- And chased out of the world - The wicked is Driven Away in his iniquity. This shows his reluctance to depart from life.
And chased out of the world - The wicked is Driven Away in his iniquity. This shows his reluctance to depart from life.

Clarke: Job 18:19 - -- He shall neither have son nor nephew - Coverdale, following the Vulgate, translates thus: He shal neither have children ner kynss folk among his peo...
He shall neither have son nor nephew - Coverdale, following the Vulgate, translates thus: He shal neither have children ner kynss folk among his people, no ner eny posterite in his countrie: yonge and olde shal be astonyshed at his death.

Clarke: Job 18:20 - -- They that come after him - The young shall be struck with astonishment when they hear the relation of the judgments of God upon this wicked man. As ...
They that come after him - The young shall be struck with astonishment when they hear the relation of the judgments of God upon this wicked man. As they that went before. The aged who were his contemporaries, and who saw the judgments that fell on him, were affrighted,

Clarke: Job 18:21 - -- Such are the dwellings - This is the common lot of the wicked; and it shall be particularly the case with him who knoweth not God, that is Job, for ...
Such are the dwellings - This is the common lot of the wicked; and it shall be particularly the case with him who knoweth not God, that is Job, for it is evident he alludes to him. Poor Job! hard was thy lot, severe were thy sufferings. On the elephant hunt to which I have referred, Job 18:13, I shall borrow the following account extracted from Mr. Cordiner’ s History of Ceylon, by Mr. Good: -
"We have a curious description of the elephant hunt, which is pursued in a manner not essentially different from the preceding, except that the snares are pallisadoed with the strongest possible stakes, instead of being netted, and still farther fortified by interlacings. They are numerous, but connected together; every snare or inclosure growing gradually narrower, and opening into each other by a gate or two that will only admit the entrance of a single animal at a time
"The wood in which elephants are known to abound is first surrounded, excepting at the end where the foremost and widest inclosure is situated, with fires placed on moveable pedestals, which in every direction are drawn closer and closer, and, aided by loud and perpetual shouts, drive the animals forward till they enter into the outer snare. After which the same process is continued, and they are driven by fear into a second, into a third, and into a fourth; till at length the elephants become so much sub-divided, that by the aid of cordage fastened carefully round their limbs, and the management of decoy elephants, they are easily capable of being led away one by one, and tamed. A single hunt thus conducted will sometimes occupy not less than two months of unremitting labor; and the entrance of the elephants into the snares is regarded as an amusement or sport of the highest character, and as such is attended by all the principal families of the country."Account of Ceylon, p. 218-226.
TSK: Job 18:16 - -- roots : Job 29:19; Isa 5:24; Hos 9:16; Amo 2:9; Mal 4:1
shall his branch : Job 5:3, Job 5:4, Job 15:30


TSK: Job 18:18 - -- He shall be driven : Heb. They shall drive him, Job 3:20, Job 10:22, Job 11:14; Isa 8:21, Isa 8:22; Jud 1:13
chased : Job 20:8; Pro 14:32; Isa 17:13, ...

TSK: Job 18:19 - -- neither : Job 1:19, Job 8:4, Job 42:13-16; Psa 109:13; Isa 14:21, Isa 14:22; Jer 22:30
nor any : Job 20:26-28; Isa 5:8, Isa 5:9
neither : Job 1:19, Job 8:4, Job 42:13-16; Psa 109:13; Isa 14:21, Isa 14:22; Jer 22:30
nor any : Job 20:26-28; Isa 5:8, Isa 5:9

TSK: Job 18:20 - -- astonied : Deu 29:23, Deu 29:24; 1Ki 9:8; Jer 18:16
his day : Psa 37:13, Psa 137:7; Eze 21:25; Oba 1:11-15; Luk 19:42, Luk 19:44
went : or, lived with...

TSK: Job 18:21 - -- such are : Job 18:14-16
knoweth : Job 21:14; Exo 5:2; Jdg 2:10; 1Sa 2:12; 1Ch 28:9; Psa 79:6; Jer 9:3, Jer 10:25; Rom 1:28; 1Th 4:5; 2Th 1:8; Tit 1:16

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Job 18:16 - -- His roots shall be dried up - Another image of complete desolation - where he is compared to a tree that is dead - a figure whose meaning is ob...
His roots shall be dried up - Another image of complete desolation - where he is compared to a tree that is dead - a figure whose meaning is obvious, and which often occurs; see Job 15:30, note; Job 8:12-13, notes.
Above his branch - Perhaps referring to his children or family. All shall be swept away - an allusion which Job could not well hesitate to apply to himself.

Barnes: Job 18:17 - -- His remembrance shall perish - His name - all recollection of him. Calamity shall follow him even after death; and that which every man desires...
His remembrance shall perish - His name - all recollection of him. Calamity shall follow him even after death; and that which every man desires, and every good man has, and honored name when he is dead, will be denied him. Men will hasten to forget him as fast as possible; compare Pro 10:7, "The name of the wicked shall rot."
No name in the street - Men when they meet together in highways and places of concourse - when traveler meets traveler, and caravan caravan, shall not pause to speak of him and of the loss which society has substained by his death. It is one of the rewards of virtue that the good will speak of the upright man when he is dead; that they will pause in their journey, or in their business, to converse about him; and that the poor and the needy will dwell with affectionate interest upon their loss. "This"blessing, Bildad says, will be denied the wicked man. The world will not feel that they have any loss to deplore when he is dead. No great plan of benvolence has been arrested by his removal. The poor and the needy fare as well as they did before. The widow and the fatherless make no grateful remembrance of his name, and the world hastens to forget him as soon as possible. There is no man, except one who is lost to all virtue, who does not desire to be remembered when he is dead - by his children, his neighbors, his friends, and by the stranger who may read the record on the stone that marks his grave. Where this desire is "wholly"extinguished, man has reached the lowest possible point of degradation, and the last hold on him in favor of virtue has expired.

Barnes: Job 18:18 - -- He shall be driven from light into darkness - Margin, "They shall drive him."The meaning is, that he should be driven from a state of prosperit...
He shall be driven from light into darkness - Margin, "They shall drive him."The meaning is, that he should be driven from a state of prosperity to one of calamity.
And chased out of the world - Perhaps meaning that he should not be conducted to the grave with the slow and solemn pomp of a respectful funeral, but in a hurry - as a malefactor is driven from human life, and hastily commited to the earth. The living would be glad to be rid of him, and would "chase"him out of life.

Barnes: Job 18:19 - -- He shall neither have son ... - All his family shall be cut off. He shall have no one to perpetuate his name or remembrance. All this Job could...
He shall neither have son ... - All his family shall be cut off. He shall have no one to perpetuate his name or remembrance. All this Job could not help applying to himself, as it was doubtless intended he should. The facts in his case were just such as were supposed in these proverbs about the wicked; and hence, his friends could not but conclude that he was a wicked man; and hence, his friends could not but conclude that he was a wicked man; and hence, too, since these were undisputed maxims, Job felt so much embarrassment in answering them.

Barnes: Job 18:20 - -- They that come after him - Future ages; they who may hear of his history and of the manner in which he was cut off from life. So the passage ha...
They that come after him - Future ages; they who may hear of his history and of the manner in which he was cut off from life. So the passage has been generally rendered; so, substantially, it is by Dr. Good, Dr. Noyes, Rosenmuller, and Luther. The Vulgate translates it novissimi ; the Septuagint,
"The West shall be astonished at his end;
The East shall be panic-struck."
According to this, it means that those who dwelt in the remotest regions would be astonished at the calamities which would come upon him. It seems to me that this accords better with the scope of the passage than the other interpretation, and avoids some difficulties which cannot be separated from the other view. The word translated in our version, "that come after him"
Thus, the phrase
Shall be astonied - Shall be "astonished"- the old mode of writing the word being "astonied;"Isa 52:14. It is not known, however, to be used in any other book than the Bible.
As they that went before - Margin, or "lived with him."Noyes, "his elders shall be struck with horror."Vulgate, "et primos invadet "horror."Septuagint, "amazement seizes "the first"-
Were affrighted - Margin, "laid hold on horror."This is a more literal rendering. The sense is, they would be struck with horror at what would occur to him.

Barnes: Job 18:21 - -- Surely such are the dwellings of the wicked - The conclusion or sum of the whole matter. The meaning is, that the habitations of all that knew ...
Surely such are the dwellings of the wicked - The conclusion or sum of the whole matter. The meaning is, that the habitations of all that knew not God would be desolate - a declaration which Job could not but regard as aimed at himself; compare Job 20:29. This is the close of this harsh and severe speech. It is no wonder that Job should feel it keenly, and that he "did"feel it is apparent from the following chapter. A string of proverbs has been presented, having the appearance of proof, and as the result of the long observation of the course of events, evidently bearing on his circumstances, and so much in point that he could not well deny their pertinency to his condition. He was stung to the quick, and and gave vent to his agonized feelings in the following chapter.
Poole: Job 18:16 - -- i.e. He shall be destroyed, both root and branch, i.e. both himself and his posterity. Compare Mal 4:1 .
i.e. He shall be destroyed, both root and branch, i.e. both himself and his posterity. Compare Mal 4:1 .

Poole: Job 18:17 - -- Instead of that honour and renown which he designed to have, both whilst he lived, and after his death, he is not so much as remembered, unless it b...
Instead of that honour and renown which he designed to have, both whilst he lived, and after his death, he is not so much as remembered, unless it be with contempt and reproach.

Poole: Job 18:18 - -- He shall be driven Heb. they shall drive him , i.e. his enemies, or those whom he hath oppressed; or they whom God shall appoint to do it, whether a...
He shall be driven Heb. they shall drive him , i.e. his enemies, or those whom he hath oppressed; or they whom God shall appoint to do it, whether angels or men. Or it is an impersonal speech, and to be rendered passively, as it is also Job 7:3 Luk 12:20 16:9 .
From light into darkness from a splendid and prosperous life to disgrace and misery, and to the grave, the land of darkness and forgetfulness, as the following words explain it.

Poole: Job 18:19 - -- But if any such survive, they shall be in the hands and power of strangers, or rather of their enemies.
But if any such survive, they shall be in the hands and power of strangers, or rather of their enemies.

Poole: Job 18:20 - -- At his day i.e. at the day of his destruction, as the word day is used, Psa 37:13 137:7 Eze 21:25 Oba 1:12 . They shall be amazed at the suddenness, ...
At his day i.e. at the day of his destruction, as the word day is used, Psa 37:13 137:7 Eze 21:25 Oba 1:12 . They shall be amazed at the suddenness, and dreadfulness, and prodigiousness of it, as Job’ s friends were at his calamities, Job 2:12,13 . They that went before, i.e. before the persons last mentioned; those who lived in the time and place where this judgment was inflicted.
Affrighted or, filled with horror ; partly through humanity and compassion, and partly for fear, lest the judgment should overtake them also.
Haydock -> Job 18:20
Them. Literally, "the first," who were witnesses of his misery. (Haydock)
Gill: Job 18:16 - -- His roots shall be dried up beneath,.... Wicked men are sometimes compared to trees; to trees of the wood, barren, and unfruitful; to trees without fr...
His roots shall be dried up beneath,.... Wicked men are sometimes compared to trees; to trees of the wood, barren, and unfruitful; to trees without fruit, twice dead, plucked up by the roots; and sometimes to green bay trees, very flourishing for a while, and which on a sudden perish, and come to nothing, see Son 2:3, Jud 1:12; and such a simile is here used; and by his roots may be meant his family, from whence he sprung, which now should be extinct with him, see Isa 11:1; or his substance, which being greatly increased, he seemed to take root in the earth, and not only to be in a prosperous, but in a stable settled condition; but now, like Ephraim, he should be smitten, and his root dried up; all his wealth, and all the resources of it, should be exhausted, be no more, see Jer 12:2;
and above shall his branch be cut off; his children that sprung from him, as branches from a tree, and were his glory and beauty, these should be cut off; referring no doubt in both clauses to Job's present circumstances, whose root in the time of his prosperity was spread out by the waters, but now dried up, and on whose branches the dew lay all night, but now cut off, Job 29:19; so the Targum,
"his children shall be cut off out of the earth, and from heaven his destruction shall be decreed;''
both clauses signify the utter destruction of the family of the wicked man, root and branch, see Mal 4:1. It is a beautiful description of a tree struck with thunder and lightning, and burnt and shattered to pieces, and agrees with Job 18:15.

Gill: Job 18:17 - -- His remembrance shall perish from the earth,.... Not only are the wicked forgotten of God in heaven, and are as the slain he remembers no more, unless...
His remembrance shall perish from the earth,.... Not only are the wicked forgotten of God in heaven, and are as the slain he remembers no more, unless it be to pour out his wrath upon them, and punish them for their sins, for which great Babylon will come up in remembrance before him; but of men on earth, and in the very places where they were born, and lived all their days, Ecc 8:10; yea, those places, houses and palaces, towns and cities, which they have built to perpetuate their memory among men, perish and come to nought, and their memorial with them, Psa 9:5;
and he shall have no name in the street; much less in the house of God, still less in heaven, in the Lamb's book of life; so far from it, that he shall have none on earth, no good name among men; if ever his name is mentioned after his death, it is with some brand of infamy upon him; he is not spoken of in public, in a court of judicature, nor in any place of commerce and trade, nor in any concourse of people, or public assembly of any note, especially with any credit or commendation; such is the difference between a good man and a wicked man, see Pro 11:7.

Gill: Job 18:18 - -- He shall be driven from light into darkness,.... Either from the light of outward prosperity, formerly enjoyed by him, into the darkness of adversity;...
He shall be driven from light into darkness,.... Either from the light of outward prosperity, formerly enjoyed by him, into the darkness of adversity; or rather from the light of the living, the light of the present life, to the darkness of death, and the grave, the land of darkness, and of the shadow of death, Job 10:21; and even into utter darkness, blackness of darkness, the darkness of hell, eternal darkness; opposed to the light of the divine Presence, and the inheritance of the saints in light, possessed by them to all eternity; which the wicked man is deprived of, and will have no share in, but shall be driven from the presence of God, and by him; for so the words may be rendered, "they shall drive him" n, God, Father, Son, and Spirit; God by the east wind and storm of his wrath shall carry him away, and hurl him out of his place, and shall cast the fury of his wrath on him, and not spare, nor shall he flee out of his hands, though he fain would, Job 27:21; or the angels, good or bad, shall drive him into endless torments, or shall, by the divine order, take him and cast him into outward darkness, where are weeping, wailing, and gnashing of teeth; thus are the wicked driven against their will, and must go whether they will or not, and, like beasts to the slaughter, are driven in their wickedness, in order to suffer the punishment due unto it, when the righteous hath hope in his death, Pro 14:32;
and chased out of the world; or cast out of it, as an unclean or excommunicated person, of which the word here is sometimes used o; and not only chased out of his own place, out of his own house, and out of his own country, but even out of the world, so as to have no place any more in it, see Job 20:8.

Gill: Job 18:19 - -- He shall neither have son nor nephew among his people,.... Neither son, nor son's son, or grandson; so the Targum, Jarchi, and Bar Tzemach; that is, h...
He shall neither have son nor nephew among his people,.... Neither son, nor son's son, or grandson; so the Targum, Jarchi, and Bar Tzemach; that is, he shall be childless, and have no heirs, successors, or survivors, to inherit his estate, bear and perpetuate his name among the people of his country, city, or neighbourhood. Bildad respects no doubt the present case of Job, who had lost all his children; but he was mistaken if he thought he should die so, for he had after this as many children as he had before:
nor any remaining in his dwellings; being all dead, or fled from them, through the terror, desolation, and destruction in them. Aben Ezra and Bar Tzemach interpret them places in which he was a sojourner or stranger; and Mr. Broughton, nor remnant in his pilgrimage.

Gill: Job 18:20 - -- They that come after him shall be astonished at his day,.... At the day of his calamity and distress, ruin and destruction, see Psa 37:13; it would b...
They that come after him shall be astonished at his day,.... At the day of his calamity and distress, ruin and destruction, see Psa 37:13; it would be extremely amazing to them how it should be, that a man who was in such flourishing and prosperous circumstances, should be brought at once, he and his family, into such extreme poverty, and into such a distressed and forlorn condition; they should be, as it were, thunderstruck at it, not being able to account for it: by these are meant such as are younger than the wicked man, and that continue longer than he, yet upon the spot when his calamity befell; or else posterity in later times, who would be made acquainted with the whole affair, and be surprised at the relation of it:
as they that went before were affrighted; not that lived before the times of the wicked man, for they could not see his day, or be spectators of his ruin, and so be frightened at it; but his contemporaries, who are said to be those that went before, not with respect to the wicked man, but with respect to younger persons or posterity that were after; so Bar Tzemach interprets it, which were in his time, or his contemporaries; and Mr. Broughton,
"the present took an horror;''
a late learned commentator p renders the words, western and eastern; as if all people in the world, east and west, would be amazed and astonished at the sudden and utter destruction of this wicked man.

Gill: Job 18:21 - -- Surely such are the dwellings of the wicked,.... As before described; as that the light should be dark in them; a wicked man's confidence should be r...
Surely such are the dwellings of the wicked,.... As before described; as that the light should be dark in them; a wicked man's confidence should be rooted out of them; everything shocking and dreadful should dwell in them; brimstone should be scattered on them, they should be utterly consumed, and none remaining in them, Job 18:6. The Targum represents these as the words of the persons astonished and frightened, who at the sight of such a dismal spectacle should utter them, prefacing them thus,
"and they shall say, but these are the dwellings, &c.''
and this is the place of him that knoweth not God; the place that he shall be driven to when chased out of the world, even a place of darkness and misery, Job 18:18; or "this is the case of him that knoweth not the Omnipotent", as Mr. Broughton translates the words; that is, which is above described in the several particulars of it; this is sooner or later the case of every wicked man, as Bildad supposed it now was Job's case, at least in part, or would be hereafter: one "that knows not God", is the periphrasis of a wicked man, that has no knowledge of God, at least no practical knowledge of him, that lives without God in the world, or like an atheist; such shall be punished with everlasting destruction by him, see 2Th 1:8; either one whom "God knows not" q, so some render the words; for though God by the perfection of his omniscience knows all men, good and bad, yet there are some he knows not so as to approve of, love, and delight in, see Mat 7:23; or rather that have no knowledge of God, who though they may know there is a God, yet do not worship and glorify him as God; and though they may profess to know him, yet in works they deny him, and however have no spiritual and experimental knowledge of him; do not know him in Christ, as the God of all grace, and as their God in him; they do not know him, so as to love him, fear, worship, and obey him.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 18:17 Heb “outside.” Cf. ESV, “in the street,” referring to absence from his community’s memory.

NET Notes: Job 18:18 The verbs in this verse are plural; without the expressed subject they should be taken in the passive sense.

NET Notes: Job 18:19 Heb “in his sojournings.” The verb גּוּר (gur) means “to reside; to sojourn” temporarily, withou...

NET Notes: Job 18:20 The word “saying” is supplied in the translation to mark and introduce the following as a quotation of these people who are seized with ho...

NET Notes: Job 18:21 The word “place” is in construct; the clause following it replaces the genitive: “this is the place of – he has not known God....
Geneva Bible: Job 18:18 He shall be driven from ( m ) light into darkness, and chased out of the world.
( m ) He will fall from prosperity to adversity.

Geneva Bible: Job 18:20 They that come after [him] shall be astonied at his ( n ) day, as they that went before were affrighted.
( n ) When they will see what came to him.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
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 18:11-21
MHCC: Job 18:11-21 - --Bildad describes the destruction wicked people are kept for, in the other world, and which in some degree, often seizes them in this world. The way of...
Matthew Henry -> Job 18:11-21
Matthew Henry: Job 18:11-21 - -- Bildad here describes the destruction itself which wicked people are reserved for in the other world, and which, in some degree, often seizes them i...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 18:16-19; Job 18:20-21
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 18:16-19 - --
16 His roots wither beneath,
And above his branch is lopped off.
17 His remembrance is vanished from the land,
And he hath no name far and wide o...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 18:20-21 - --
20 Those who dwell in the west are astonished at his day,
And trembling seizeth those who dwell in the east;
21 Surely thus it befalleth the dwell...
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. ...
