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Text -- Job 24:1-11 (NET)

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Context
The Apparent Indifference of God
24:1 “Why are times not appointed by the Almighty? Why do those who know him not see his days? 24:2 Men move boundary stones; they seize the flock and pasture them. 24:3 They drive away the orphan’s donkey; they take the widow’s ox as a pledge. 24:4 They turn the needy from the pathway, and the poor of the land hide themselves together. 24:5 Like wild donkeys in the desert they go out to their labor, seeking diligently for food; the wasteland provides food for them and for their children. 24:6 They reap fodder in the field, and glean in the vineyard of the wicked. 24:7 They spend the night naked because they lack clothing; they have no covering against the cold. 24:8 They are soaked by mountain rains and huddle in the rocks because they lack shelter. 24:9 The fatherless child is snatched from the breast, the infant of the poor is taken as a pledge. 24:10 They go about naked, without clothing, and go hungry while they carry the sheaves. 24:11 They press out the olive oil between the rows of olive trees; they tread the winepresses while they are thirsty.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Wine-press | WINE | PLEDGE | PALESTINE, 3 | MEEKNESS | LANDMARK | JOB, BOOK OF | HIDDEN | God | Fodder | FATHERLESS | DREDGE | COVER; COVERING | COLD | CHAMPAIGN | BORROWING | BETIMES | Apparel | ASS | AGRICULTURE | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Job 24:1 - -- Why (how comes it to pass) seeing times, (the fittest seasons for every, action, and particularly for the punishment of wicked men,) are not hidden fr...

Why (how comes it to pass) seeing times, (the fittest seasons for every, action, and particularly for the punishment of wicked men,) are not hidden from, or unknown to the Almighty God, (seeing all times, and men that live, and things that are done, or to be done in their times and seasons, are exactly known to God) do they that know him, (who love and obey him) not see (whence is it that they cannot discern) his (that is, God's) days? His times and seasons which he takes for the punishment of ungodly men; which if they were constant and fixed in this life, they would not be unknown to good men, to whom God uses to reveal his secrets.

Wesley: Job 24:3 - -- Contrary to God's law, first written in mens hearts, and afterwards in holy scripture, Exo 22:26-27.

Contrary to God's law, first written in mens hearts, and afterwards in holy scripture, Exo 22:26-27.

Wesley: Job 24:4 - -- Out of the path or place in which these oppressors walk and range. They labour to keep out of their way for fear of their farther injuries.

Out of the path or place in which these oppressors walk and range. They labour to keep out of their way for fear of their farther injuries.

Wesley: Job 24:4 - -- For fear of these tyrants.

For fear of these tyrants.

Wesley: Job 24:5 - -- Which are lawless, and fierce, and greedy of prey.

Which are lawless, and fierce, and greedy of prey.

Wesley: Job 24:5 - -- Which is the proper habitation of wild asses.

Which is the proper habitation of wild asses.

Wesley: Job 24:5 - -- The oppressors.

The oppressors.

Wesley: Job 24:5 - -- To spoil and rob.

To spoil and rob.

Wesley: Job 24:6 - -- The oppressors.

The oppressors.

Wesley: Job 24:6 - -- Of such as themselves: so they promiscuously robbed all, even their brethren in iniquity.

Of such as themselves: so they promiscuously robbed all, even their brethren in iniquity.

Wesley: Job 24:7 - -- Those whom they stripped of their garments and coverings.

Those whom they stripped of their garments and coverings.

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.

Wesley: Job 24:9 - -- The oppressors.

The oppressors.

Wesley: Job 24:9 - -- Out of covetousness; they will not allow the mother time for the suckling of her infant.

Out of covetousness; they will not allow the mother time for the suckling of her infant.

Wesley: Job 24:10 - -- That single sheaf which the poor man had got with the sweat of his brow to satisfy his hunger.

That single sheaf which the poor man had got with the sweat of his brow to satisfy his hunger.

Wesley: Job 24:11 - -- Within the walls of the oppressors for their use.

Within the walls of the oppressors for their use.

Wesley: Job 24:11 - -- Because they are not permitted to quench their thirst out of the wine which they make.

Because they are not permitted to quench their thirst out of the wine which they make.

JFB: Job 24:1 - -- (Job 24:1-25) Why is it that, seeing that the times of punishment (Eze 30:3; "time" in the same sense) are not hidden from the Almighty, they who kno...

(Job 24:1-25)

Why is it that, seeing that the times of punishment (Eze 30:3; "time" in the same sense) are not hidden from the Almighty, they who know Him (His true worshippers, Job 18:21) do not see His days (of vengeance; Joe 1:15; 2Pe 3:10)? Or, with UMBREIT less simply, making the parallel clauses more nicely balanced, Why are not times of punishment hoarded up ("laid up"; Job 21:19; appointed) by the Almighty? that is, Why are they not so appointed as that man may now see them? as the second clause shows. Job does not doubt that they are appointed: nay, he asserts it (Job 21:30); what he wishes is that God would let all now see that it is so.|| 13439||1||23||0||Instances of the wicked doing the worst deeds with seeming impunity (Job 24:2-24).

JFB: Job 24:1 - -- The wicked.

The wicked.

JFB: Job 24:1 - -- Boundaries between different pastures (Deu 19:14; Pro 22:28).

Boundaries between different pastures (Deu 19:14; Pro 22:28).

JFB: Job 24:3 - -- Alluding to Job 22:6. Others really do, and with impunity, that which Eliphaz falsely charges the afflicted Job with.

Alluding to Job 22:6. Others really do, and with impunity, that which Eliphaz falsely charges the afflicted Job with.

JFB: Job 24:4 - -- Literally, they push the poor out of their road in meeting them. Figuratively, they take advantage of them by force and injustice (alluding to the cha...

Literally, they push the poor out of their road in meeting them. Figuratively, they take advantage of them by force and injustice (alluding to the charge of Eliphaz, Job 22:8; 1Sa 8:3).

JFB: Job 24:4 - -- In spirit and in circumstances (Mat 5:3).

In spirit and in circumstances (Mat 5:3).

JFB: Job 24:4 - -- From the injustice of their oppressors, who have robbed them of their all and driven them into unfrequented places (Job 20:19; Job 30:3-6; Pro 28:28).

From the injustice of their oppressors, who have robbed them of their all and driven them into unfrequented places (Job 20:19; Job 30:3-6; Pro 28:28).

JFB: Job 24:5 - -- (Job 11:12). So Ishmael is called a "wild ass-man"; Hebrew (Gen 16:12). These Bedouin robbers, with the unbridled wildness of the ass of the desert, ...

(Job 11:12). So Ishmael is called a "wild ass-man"; Hebrew (Gen 16:12). These Bedouin robbers, with the unbridled wildness of the ass of the desert, go forth thither. Robbery is their lawless "work." The desert, which yields no food to other men, yields food for the robber and his children by the plunder of caravans.

JFB: Job 24:5 - -- In the East travelling is begun very early, before the heat comes on.

In the East travelling is begun very early, before the heat comes on.

JFB: Job 24:6 - -- Like the wild asses (Job 24:5) they (these Bedouin robbers) reap (metaphorically) their various grain (so the Hebrew for "corn" means). The wild ass d...

Like the wild asses (Job 24:5) they (these Bedouin robbers) reap (metaphorically) their various grain (so the Hebrew for "corn" means). The wild ass does not let man pile his mixed provender up in a stable (Isa 30:24); so these robbers find their food in the open air, at one time in the desert (Job 24:5), at another in the fields.

JFB: Job 24:6 - -- Hebrew, "the wicked gather the vintage"; the vintage of robbery, not of honest industry. If we translate "belonging to the wicked," then it will imply...

Hebrew, "the wicked gather the vintage"; the vintage of robbery, not of honest industry. If we translate "belonging to the wicked," then it will imply that the wicked alone have vineyards, the "pious poor" (Job 24:4) have none. "Gather" in Hebrew, is "gather late." As the first clause refers to the early harvest of corn, so the second to the vintage late in autumn.

JFB: Job 24:7 - -- UMBREIT understands it of the Bedouin robbers, who are quite regardless of the comforts of life, "They pass the night naked, and uncovered," &c. But t...

UMBREIT understands it of the Bedouin robbers, who are quite regardless of the comforts of life, "They pass the night naked, and uncovered," &c. But the allusion to Job 22:6, makes the English Version preferable (see on Job 24:10). Frost is not uncommon at night in those regions (Gen 31:40).

JFB: Job 24:8 - -- The plundered travellers.

The plundered travellers.

JFB: Job 24:8 - -- Take refuge under it (Lam 4:5).

Take refuge under it (Lam 4:5).

JFB: Job 24:9 - -- Of the widowed mother. Kidnapping children for slaves. Here Job passes from wrongs in the desert to those done among the habitations of men.

Of the widowed mother. Kidnapping children for slaves. Here Job passes from wrongs in the desert to those done among the habitations of men.

JFB: Job 24:9 - -- Namely, the garment of the poor debtor, as Job 24:10 shows.

Namely, the garment of the poor debtor, as Job 24:10 shows.

JFB: Job 24:10 - -- (See on Job 22:6). In Job 24:7 a like sin is alluded to: but there he implies open robbery of garments in the desert; here, the more refined robbery i...

(See on Job 22:6). In Job 24:7 a like sin is alluded to: but there he implies open robbery of garments in the desert; here, the more refined robbery in civilized life, under the name of a "pledge." Having stripped the poor, they make them besides labor in their harvest-fields and do not allow them to satisfy their hunger with any of the very corn which they carry to the heap. Worse treatment than that of the ox, according to Deu 25:4. Translate: "they (the poor laborers) hungering carry the sheaves" [UMBREIT].

JFB: Job 24:11 - -- "They," the poor, "press the oil within their wall"; namely, not only in the open fields (Job 24:10), but also in the wall-enclosed vineyards and oliv...

"They," the poor, "press the oil within their wall"; namely, not only in the open fields (Job 24:10), but also in the wall-enclosed vineyards and olive gardens of the oppressor (Isa 5:5). Yet they are not allowed to quench their "thirst" with the grapes and olives. Here, thirsty; Job 24:10, hungry.

Clarke: Job 24:1 - -- Why, seeing times are not hidden from the Almighty - Mr. Good translates: "Wherefore are not doomsdays kept by the Almighty, so that his offenders m...

Why, seeing times are not hidden from the Almighty - Mr. Good translates: "Wherefore are not doomsdays kept by the Almighty, so that his offenders may eye their periods?"Doomsdays are here used in the same sense as term times; and the wish is, that God would appoint such times that the falsely accused might look forward to them with comfort; knowing that, on their arrival, they should have a fair hearing, and their innocence be publicly declared; and their detractors, and the unjust in general, meet with their deserts. But God reserves the knowledge of these things to himself. "The holy patriarch,"says Mr. Good, "has uniformly admitted that in the aggregate scale of Providence the just are rewarded and the wicked punished for their respective deeds, in some period or other of their lives. But he has contended in various places, and especially in Job 21:7-13, that the exceptions to this general rule are numerous: so numerous, as to be sufficient to render the whole scheme of providential interposition perfectly mysterious and incomprehensible, Job 23:8-12; so in the passage before us: if the retribution ye speak of be universal, and which I am ready to admit to a certain extent to be true and unquestionable, I not only ask, Why do the just ever suffer in the midst of their righteousness? but, Why do not the wicked see such retribution displayed before their eyes by stated judgments, so that they may at one and the same time know and tremble?"

Clarke: Job 24:2 - -- Some remove the landmarks - Stones or posts were originally set up to ascertain the bounds of particular estates: and this was necessary in open cou...

Some remove the landmarks - Stones or posts were originally set up to ascertain the bounds of particular estates: and this was necessary in open countries, before hedges and fences were formed. Wicked and covetous men often removed the landmarks or termini, and set them in on their neighbors’ ground, that, by contracting their boundaries, they might enlarge their own. The law of Moses denounces curses on those who remove their neighbors’ landmarks. See Deu 19:14; Deu 27:17, and the note on the former place, where the subject is considered at large

Clarke: Job 24:2 - -- They violently take away flocks, and feed thereof - Mr. Good translates ירעו yiru , they destroy, deriving the word, not from רעה raah , to...

They violently take away flocks, and feed thereof - Mr. Good translates ירעו yiru , they destroy, deriving the word, not from רעה raah , to feed, but from רע ra , to rend, to destroy. The Septuagint had read רעה roch , a shepherd; and therefore have translated ποιμνιον συν ποιμενι ἁρπασαντες, "violently carrying off both the flock and the shepherd."

Clarke: Job 24:4 - -- They turn the needy out of the way - They will not permit them to go by the accustomed paths; they oblige them to take circuitous routes. When the M...

They turn the needy out of the way - They will not permit them to go by the accustomed paths; they oblige them to take circuitous routes. When the Marquis of H. was made ranger of Richmond Park, he thought it his duty to shut up a pathway which had existed for a long time; and those who presumed, after this shutting up, to break the fence, and take that path as formerly, were prosecuted. A cobbler near the place entered an action against the marquis: the cause was tried, the marquis cast, and the path ordered to be opened, on the ground that it had, time out of mind, been a public undisputed path. When one asked the cobbler, "How he could have the boldness to go to law with the Marquis of H.?"he answered, "Because I did not like to leave the world worse than I found it."All tolerated oppression and voluntary forfeiture of ancient rights, are injurious to society at large, and they who wink at them leave the world worse than they found it.

Clarke: Job 24:5 - -- Rising betimes for a prey - The general sense here seems plain enough. There are some who live a lawless roaming life: make a predatory life their e...

Rising betimes for a prey - The general sense here seems plain enough. There are some who live a lawless roaming life: make a predatory life their employment; for this purpose, frequent the wilderness, where they seize on and appropriate whatsoever they find, and by this method they and their families are supported. Mr. Good says: "The sense has never yet been understood by any commentator;"and hence he proposes a different division of the words, placing ערבה arabah , the desert or wilderness, in the first hemistich, thus: -

"Rising early for the pillage of the wilderness

The bread of themselves and of their children.

Others think that the words are spoken solely of the poor under the hand of oppression, who are driven away from their homes, and obliged to seek such support as the wilderness can afford. Such was originally the state of the Bedouins, and of the wandering Arab hordes in general: the oppression of the tyrannous governors obliged them to seek refuge in the deserts, where they still live in a roaming predatory life.

Clarke: Job 24:6 - -- They reap every one his corn in the field - This is perfectly characteristic. These wandering hordes often make sudden irruptions, and carry off the...

They reap every one his corn in the field - This is perfectly characteristic. These wandering hordes often make sudden irruptions, and carry off the harvest of grain, olives, vines, etc., and plunge with it into the wilderness, where none can follow them. The Chaldee gives the same sense: "They reap in a field that is not their own, and cut off the vineyard of the wicked."

Clarke: Job 24:7 - -- They cause the naked to lodge without clothing - Or rather, They spend the night naked, without clothing; and without a covering from the cold: anot...

They cause the naked to lodge without clothing - Or rather, They spend the night naked, without clothing; and without a covering from the cold: another characteristic of the wandering Arabs. They are ill-fed, ill-clothed. and often miserable off, even for tents. They can have little household stuff: as they are plunderers, they are often obliged to fly for their lives, and cannot encumber themselves with what is not absolutely needful.

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 זרם zerem ; but I think showers of the mountain strictly proper. I have seen many of these in mountainous countries, where the tails of water-spouts have been intercepted and broken, and the outpouring of them would be incredible to those who have never witnessed similar phenomena. The rain fell in torrents, and produced torrents on the land, carrying away earth and stones and every thing before them, scooping out great gullies in the sides of the mountains. Mountain torrents are not produced but by such extraordinary outpourings of rain, formed either by water-spouts, or by vast masses of clouds intercepted and broken to pieces by the mountain tops

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.

Clarke: Job 24:9 - -- They pluck the fatherless from the breast - They forcibly take young children in order that they may bring them up in a state of slavery. This verse...

They pluck the fatherless from the breast - They forcibly take young children in order that they may bring them up in a state of slavery. This verse is the commencement of a new paragraph, and points out the arbitrary dealings of oppressors, under despotic governors

Clarke: Job 24:9 - -- Take a pledge of the poor - Oppressive landlords who let out their grounds at an exorbitant rent, which the poor laborers, though using the utmost d...

Take a pledge of the poor - Oppressive landlords who let out their grounds at an exorbitant rent, which the poor laborers, though using the utmost diligence, are unable at all times to pay; and then the unfeeling wretch sells then up, as the phrase here is, or takes their cow, their horse, their cart, or their bed, in pledge, that the money shall be paid in such a time. This is one of the crying sins of some countries of Europe.

Clarke: Job 24:10 - -- They cause him to go naked - These cruel, hard-hearted oppressors seize the cloth made for the family wear, or the wool and flax out of which such c...

They cause him to go naked - These cruel, hard-hearted oppressors seize the cloth made for the family wear, or the wool and flax out of which such clothes should be made

Clarke: Job 24:10 - -- And they take away the sheaf - Seize the grain as soon as it is reaped, that they may pay themselves the exorbitant rent at which they have leased o...

And they take away the sheaf - Seize the grain as soon as it is reaped, that they may pay themselves the exorbitant rent at which they have leased out their land: and thus the sheaf - the thraves and ricks, by which they should have been supported, are taken away from the hungry.

Clarke: Job 24:11 - -- Make oil within their walls - Thus stripped of all that on which they depended for clothing and food, they are obliged to become vassals to their lo...

Make oil within their walls - Thus stripped of all that on which they depended for clothing and food, they are obliged to become vassals to their lord, labor in the fields on scanty fare, or tread their wine-presses, from the produce of which they are not permitted to quench their thirst.

Defender: Job 24:2 - -- By some means unknown to us, the ancient world was surveyed and apportioned to the descendants of Noah. It is possible that this was the division of t...

By some means unknown to us, the ancient world was surveyed and apportioned to the descendants of Noah. It is possible that this was the division of the lands mentioned in Gen 10:25, Gen 10:32, and Deu 32:8."

TSK: Job 24:1 - -- seeing : Psa 31:15; Ecc 3:17, Ecc 8:6, Ecc 8:7, Ecc 9:11, Ecc 9:12; Isa 60:22; Dan 2:21; Luk 21:22-24; Act 1:7, Act 17:26; 1Th 5:1; 1Ti 4:1, 1Ti 6:15;...

TSK: Job 24:2 - -- landmarks : Deu 19:14, Deu 27:17; Pro 22:28, Pro 23:10; Hos 5:10 violently : Job 1:15, Job 1:17, Job 5:5 feed thereof : or, feed them

landmarks : Deu 19:14, Deu 27:17; Pro 22:28, Pro 23:10; Hos 5:10

violently : Job 1:15, Job 1:17, Job 5:5

feed thereof : or, feed them

TSK: Job 24:3 - -- drive : Job 22:6-9, Job 31:16, Job 31:17; Deu 24:6, Deu 24:10-13, Deu 24:17-21; 1Sa 12:3

TSK: Job 24:4 - -- turn : Job 24:14, Job 31:16; Psa 109:16; Pro 22:16, Pro 30:14; Isa 10:2; Eze 18:12, Eze 18:18, Eze 22:29; Amo 2:7, Amo 8:4-6; Mic 2:1, Mic 2:2 hide : ...

TSK: Job 24:5 - -- wild asses : Job 39:5-7; Jer 2:24; Hos 8:9 rising : Job 24:14; Pro 4:16; Hos 7:6; Mic 2:1; Zep 3:3; Joh 18:28; Act 23:12 the wilderness : Job 5:5, Job...

TSK: Job 24:6 - -- They reap : Deu 28:33, Deu 28:51; Jdg 6:3-6; Mic 6:15 corn : Heb. mingled corn, or, dredge they gather : etc. Heb. the wicked gather the vintage.

They reap : Deu 28:33, Deu 28:51; Jdg 6:3-6; Mic 6:15

corn : Heb. mingled corn, or, dredge

they gather : etc. Heb. the wicked gather the vintage.

TSK: Job 24:7 - -- the naked : Job 24:10, Job 22:6, Job 31:19, Job 31:20; Exo 22:26, Exo 22:27; Deu 24:11-13; Isa 58:7; Act 9:31 no covering : Gen 31:40; Pro 31:21 *marg...

TSK: Job 24:8 - -- wet : Son 5:2 embrace : Lam 4:5; Heb 11:38

wet : Son 5:2

embrace : Lam 4:5; Heb 11:38

TSK: Job 24:9 - -- 2Ki 4:1; Neh 5:5

TSK: Job 24:10 - -- they take away : Deu 24:19; Amo 2:7, Amo 2:8, Amo 5:11, Amo 5:12

they take away : Deu 24:19; Amo 2:7, Amo 2:8, Amo 5:11, Amo 5:12

TSK: Job 24:11 - -- Deu 25:4; Jer 22:13; Jam 5:4

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Job 24:1 - -- Why, seeing times are not hidden froth the Almighty - Dr. Good renders this, "Wherefore are not doomdays kept by the Almighty. So that his of...

Why, seeing times are not hidden froth the Almighty - Dr. Good renders this,

"Wherefore are not doomdays kept by the Almighty.

So that his offenders may eye his periods?"

Dr. Noyes:

"Why are not times of punishment reserved by the Almighty.

And why do not they, who regard him, see his judgments?"

Jerome, "Times are not hidden from the Almighty; but they who know him are ignorant of his days."The Septuagint, "But why have set times - ὧραι hōrai , escaped the notice - ἔλαθον elathon - of the Almighty, and the wicked transgressed all bounds? The word עתים ‛êthı̂ym , here translated "times,"is rendered by the Chaldee ( עדניא ), "set times,"times appointed for an assembly or a trial, beforehand designated for any purpose. The Hebrew word properly means, set time, fit and proper times; and in the plural, as used here, means "seasons,"Est 1:13; 1Ch 12:32; and then vicissitudes of things, fortunes, destinies; Psa 31:16; 1Ch 29:30. Here it means, probably, the vicissitudes of things, or what actually occurs. All changes are known to God. He sees good and bad times; he sees the changes that take place among people. And since he sees all this, Job asks, with concern, Why is it that God does not come forth to deal with people according to their true character? That this was the fact, he proceeds to show further in illustration of the position which he had maintained in Job 21 by specifying a number of additional cases where the wicked undeniably prospered. It was this which perplexed him so much, for he did not doubt that their conduct was clearly known to God. If their conduct had been unknown to God, it would not have been a matter of surprise that they should go unpunished. But since all their ways were clearly seen by him, it might well excite inquiry why they were permitted thus to prosper. "He"believed that they were reserved to a future day of wrath, Job 21:30; Job 24:23-24. They would be punished in due time, but it was not a fact as his friends alleged, that they were punished in this life according to their deeds.

Do they that know him? - His true friends; the pious.

Not see his days - The days of his wrath, or the day when he punishes the wicked. Why are they not permitted to see him come forth to take vengeance on his foes? The phrase "his days"means the days when God would come forth to punish his enemies. They are called "his days,"because at that time God would be the prominent object that would excite attention. They would be days when he would manifest himself in a manner so remarkable as to characterize the period. Thus, the day of judgment is called the day "of the Son of Man,"or "his day"Luk 17:24, because at that time the Lord Jesus will be the prominent and glorious object that shall give character to the day. The "question"here seems to have been asked by Job mainly to call attention to "the fact"which he proceeds to illustrate. The fact was undeniable. Job did "not"maintain, as Eliphaz had charged on him Job 22:12-14, that the reason why God did not punish them was, that he could not see their deeds. He admitted most fully that God did see them, and understood all that they did. In this they were agreed. Since this was so, the question was why the wicked were spared, and lived in prosperity. The fact that it was so, Job affirms. The "reason"why it was so, was the subject of inquiry now. This was perplexing, and Job could solve it only by referring to what was to come hereafter.

Barnes: Job 24:2 - -- Some remove the land-marks - Landmarks are pillars or stones set up to mark the boundaries of a farm. To remove them, by carrying them on to th...

Some remove the land-marks - Landmarks are pillars or stones set up to mark the boundaries of a farm. To remove them, by carrying them on to the land of another, was an act of dishonesty and robbery - since it was only by marks that the extent of a man’ s property could be known. Fences were uncommon; the art of surveying was not well understood, and deeds describing land were probably unknown also, and their whole dependence, therefore, was on the stones that were erected to mark the boundaries of a lot or farm. As it was not difficult to remove them, it became a matter of special importance to guard against it, and to make it a crime of magnitude. Accordingly, it was forbidden in the strictest manner in the law of Moses. "Cursed be he that removeth his neighbor’ s land-mark;"Deu 27:17; compare Deu 19:14; Pro 22:28; Pro 23:10.

And feed thereof - Margin, "or, them."The margin is correct. The meaning is, that they drive off the flocks of others, and "pasture"them; that is, they are at no pains to conceal what they do, but mingle them with their own herds, and feed them as if they were their own. If they drove them away to kill, and removed them wholly from view, it would be less shameful than to keep and claim them as their own, and to make the robbery so public.

Barnes: Job 24:3 - -- They drive away the ass of the fatherless - Of the orphan, who cannot protect himself, and whose only property may consist in this useful anima...

They drive away the ass of the fatherless - Of the orphan, who cannot protect himself, and whose only property may consist in this useful animal. Injury done to an orphan is always regarded as a crime of special magnitude, for they are unable to protect themselves; see the notes at Job 22:9.

They take the widow’ s ox for a pledge - See the notes at Job 22:6. The widow was dependent on her ox to till the ground, and hence, the crime of taking it away in pledge for the payment of a debt.

Barnes: Job 24:4 - -- They turn the needy out of the way - They crowd the poor out of the path, and thus oppress and injure them. They do not allow them the advantag...

They turn the needy out of the way - They crowd the poor out of the path, and thus oppress and injure them. They do not allow them the advantages of the highway.

The poor of the earth hide themselves together - For fear of the rich and mighty man. Driven from the society of the rich, without their patronage and friendship, they are obliged to associate together, and find in the wicked man neither protector nor friend. And yet the proud oppressor is not punished.

Barnes: Job 24:5 - -- Behold, as wild asses in the desert - In regard to the wild ass, see the notes at Job 6:5. Schultens, Good, Noyes, and Wemyss, understand this,...

Behold, as wild asses in the desert - In regard to the wild ass, see the notes at Job 6:5. Schultens, Good, Noyes, and Wemyss, understand this, not as referring to the haughty tyrants themselves, but to the oppressed and needy wretches whom they had driven from society, and compelled to seek a precarious subsistence, like the wild ass, in the desert. They suppose that the meaning is, that these outcasts go to their daily toil seeking roots and vegetables in the desert for a subsistence, like wild animals. But it seems to me that the reference is rather to another class of wicked people: to the wandering tribes that live by plunder - who roam through the deserts, and live an unrestrained and a lawless life, like wild animals. The wild ass is distinguished for its fleetness, and the comparison here turns principally on this fact. These marauders move rapidly from place to place, make their assault suddenly and unexpectedly, and, having plundered the traveler, or the caravan, as suddenly disappear. They have no home, cultivate no land, and keep no flocks. The only objection to this interpretation is, that the wild ass is not a beast of prey. But, in reply to this, it may be said, that the comparison does not depend on that, but on the fact that they resemble those animals in their lawless habits of life; see Job 11:12, note; Job 39:5, note.

Go they forth to their work - To their employment - to wit, plunder.

Rising betimes - Rising early. It is a custom of the Orientals everywhere to rise by break of day. In journeys, they usually rise long before day, and travel much in the night, and during the heat of the day they rest. As caravans often traveled early, plunderers would rise early, also, to meet them.

For a prey - For plunder - the business of their lives.

The wilderness - The desert, for so the word wilderness is used in the Scriptures; see Isa 35:1, note; Mat 3:1, note.

Yieldeth food - To wit, by plunder. They obtain subsistence for themselves and their families by plundering the caravans of the desert. The idea of Job is, that they are seen by God, and yet that they are suffered to roam at large.

Barnes: Job 24:6 - -- They reap every one his corn - Margin, "mingled corn,"or "dredge."The word used here ( בליל be lı̂yl ) denotes, properly, "meslin,"m...

They reap every one his corn - Margin, "mingled corn,"or "dredge."The word used here ( בליל be lı̂yl ) denotes, properly, "meslin,"mixed provender, made up of various kinds of grain, as of barley, vetches, etc., prepared for cattle; see the notes at Isa 30:24.

In the field - They break in upon the fields of others, and rob them of their grain, instead of cultivating the earth themselves. So it is rendered by Jerome - Agrum non suum deme-runt; et vineam ejus, quem vi. oppresserint vindemiant. The Septuagint renders it, "A field, not their own, they reap down before the time - πρὸ ὥρας pro hōras .

They gather the vintage of the wicked - Margin, "the wicked gather the vintage."Rather, they gather the vintage of the oppressor. It is not the vintage of honest industry; not a harvest which is the result of their own labor, but of plunder. They live by depredations on others. This is descriptive of those who support themselves by robbery.

Barnes: Job 24:7 - -- They cause the naked to lodge without clothing - They strip others of their clothing, and leave them destitute. That they have no covering...

They cause the naked to lodge without clothing - They strip others of their clothing, and leave them destitute.

That they have no covering in the cold - All travelers tell us, that though the day is intensely hot in the deserts of Arabia, yet the nights are often intensely cold. Hence, the sufferings of those who are plundered, and who have nothing to defend themselves from the cold air of the night.

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.

Barnes: Job 24:9 - -- They pluck the fatherless from the breast - That is, they steal away unprotected children, and sell them, or make slaves of them for their own ...

They pluck the fatherless from the breast - That is, they steal away unprotected children, and sell them, or make slaves of them for their own use. If this is the correct interpretation, then there existed at that time, what has existed since, so much to the disgrace of mankind, the custom of kidnapping children, and bearing them away to be sold as slaves. Slavery existed in early ages; and it must have been in some such way that slaves were procured. The wonder of Job is, that such people were permitted to live - that God did not come forth and punish them. The fact still exists, and the ground of wonder is not diminished. Africa bleeds under wrongs of this kind; and the vengeance of heaven seems to sleep, though the child is torn away from its mother, and conveyed, amid many horrors, to a distant land, to wear out life in hopeless servitude.

And take a pledge of the poor - Take that, therefore, which is necessary for the comfort of the poor, and retain it, so that they cannot enjoy its use; see the notes at Job 22:6.

Barnes: Job 24:10 - -- And they take away the sheaf from the hungry - The meaning of this is, that the hungry are compelled to bear the sheaf for the rich without bei...

And they take away the sheaf from the hungry - The meaning of this is, that the hungry are compelled to bear the sheaf for the rich without being allowed to satisfy their hunger from it. Moses commanded that even the ox should not be muzzled that trod out the grain Deu 25:4; but here was more aggravated cruelty than that would be, in compelling men to bear the sheaf of the harvest without allowing them even to satisfy their hunger. This is an instance of the cruelty which Job says was actually practiced on the earth, and yet God did not interpose to punish it.

Barnes: Job 24:11 - -- Which made oil within their walls - Or rather, they compel them to express oil within their walls. The word יצהירו yatshı̂yrû ,...

Which made oil within their walls - Or rather, they compel them to express oil within their walls. The word יצהירו yatshı̂yrû , rendered "made oil,"is from צחר tsachar , to shine, to give light; and hence, the derivatives of the word are used to denote light, and then oil, and thence the word comes to denote to press out oil for the purpose of light. Oil was obtained for this purpose from olives by pressing them, and the idea here is, that the poor were compelled to engage in this service for others without compensation. The expression "within their walls,"means probably within the walls of the rich; that is, within the enclosures where such presses were erected. They were taken away from their homes; compelled to toil for others; and confined for this purpose within enclosures erected for the purpose of expressing oil. Some have proposed to read this passage, "Between their walls they make them toil at noonday;"as if it referred to the cruelty of causing them to labor in the sweltering heat of the sun. But the former interpretation is the most common, and best agrees with the usual meaning of the word, and with the connection.

And tread their wine-presses and suffer thirst - They compel them to tread out their grapes without allowing them to slake their thirst from the wine. Such a treatment would, of course, be cruel oppression. A similar description is given by Addison in his letter from Italy:

Il povreo Abitante mira indarno

Il roseggiante Arancio e’ l pingue grano,

Crescer dolente ei mira ed oli, e vini,

E de mirti odorar l’ ombra ei sdegna.

In mezzo alla Bonta della Natura

Maledetto languisce, e deatro a cariche

Di vino vigne muore per la sete.

"The poor inhabitant beholds in vain

The reddening orange and the swelling grain;

Joyless he sees the growing oils and wines

And in the myrtle’ s fragrant shade repines;

Starves, in the midst of nature’ s bounty curst,

And in the loaden vineyard dies for thirst."

Addison’ s works, vol. i. pp. 51-53. Ed. Lond. 1721.

Poole: Job 24:1 - -- Why ( how comes it to pass,) seeing times (i.e. the several times of every man’ s life, how long he shall live, or the fittest seasons and oppo...

Why ( how comes it to pass,)

seeing times (i.e. the several times of every man’ s life, how long he shall live, or the fittest seasons and opportunities (which are oft called times , as Gen 24:11 Psa 31:15 119:126 Act 1:6,7 ) for every action, and particularly for the punishment of wicked men, about which the present controversy was)

are not hidden from or unknown to the almighty God ( i.e. seeing all times, and men that live, and things that are done, or to be done, in their tines and seasons, are exactly known to God,)

do they that know him (i.e. who love and obey him, as that word is oft used, as, Psa 9:10 36:10 91:14 , or they who observe and regard his ways and works done in the world)

not see (whence is it that they cannot discern)

his (i.e. God’ s)

days i.e. his times and seasons which he takes for the punishment of ungodly men? which if they were constant and fixed in this life, as you pretend they are, they would not be unknown to good men, to whom God useth to reveal his secrets, and they could not be unobserved by so many good men, who make it their business to mind and study the works of God, and especially the course and methods of his providence towards good and bad men. The times or days of God’ s executing judgments upon sinners are frequently called the days of the Lord , as Isa 2:12 13:6 Jer 46:10 ; compare Job 20:28 Pro 6:34 Act 2:20 ; as the time of man’ s judging is called man’ s day , 1Co 4:3 . But this verse is in part, and may very agreeably to the Hebrew text be rendered and interpreted thus, Why or how are not times (i.e. the times and seasons appointed for the punishment of evil-doers, about which the dispute was) hidden or reserved by or with God , (i.e. kept as a secret in his own breast, and concealed from the knowledge of mankind. How can you say or think with any colour that these times are fixed and manifest to all men, and that sinners are constantly punished in this life, and that so notoriously that all good men see it, as was said, Job 22:15-19 ) seeing (as the particle you is rendered, Job 19:28 ; or for , as it is frequently used) they that know him (that give themselves to understand and consider his doings in the world, who of all men are most likely to know this, if it were true and certain) do not see his days , to wit, of punishing the wicked in this life? as was said before. And this he mentions as a fit preface to usher in the following discourse concerning the manifold wickedness of men, and withal their present impunity.

Poole: Job 24:2 - -- Some remove the landmarks or, they (i.e. the wicked, of whom he here treats) touch (to wit, in an unlawful manner, and with evil design, as this ...

Some remove the landmarks or, they (i.e. the wicked, of whom he here treats) touch (to wit, in an unlawful manner, and with evil design, as this word is oft used, as Gen 26:11,29 Ru 2:9 , so as to invade, or possess, or remove)

the landmarks by which men’ s lands are discerned, and their properties secured; that so they may enlarge their own border by diminishing their neighbour; which is so horrid an act of injustice, that it hath not only been severely forbidden by God, Deu 19:14 27:17 Pro 22:28 23:10 , but also declared execrable by the heathens, among whom it was permitted to any man to kill him that did it.

Feed thereof or, feed them . They do not hide or kill them, but openly feed them, either in their oppressed neighbour’ s ground, which, by taking away the landmarks, they have made their own, or in their own pastures, without any remorse, or shame, or fear of punishment, either from God or men.

Poole: Job 24:3 - -- The ass either the asses , the singular number being used collectively. Or he saith the ass , to aggravate their sin, that they robbed him who had ...

The ass either the asses , the singular number being used collectively. Or he saith the ass , to aggravate their sin, that they robbed him who had but one ass. Compare 1Sa 12:2-4 .

The fatherless whose helpless condition required their pity and mercy.

The widow’ s ox thereby depriving her not only of the ox itself, but of all the benefit of its labours, by which she sustained her life.

For a pledge contrary to God’ s law, first written in men’ s hearts, and afterwards in Holy Scripture, Exo 22:26,27 De 24:6,10 , &c.

Poole: Job 24:4 - -- Out of the way either, 1. Out of the way of piety and justice. They engage them to take evil courses by their examples, or promises, or threatenings...

Out of the way either,

1. Out of the way of piety and justice. They engage them to take evil courses by their examples, or promises, or threatenings. Or,

2. Out of their right. Or,

3. Out of their course and way of living. Or rather, (as the word properly signifies, and as the next clause explains it,) out of the high-way; out of the path or place in which these wicked oppressors walk and range. They labour to keep out of their way and sight for fear of their further injuries and oppressions.

Hide themselves for fear of these wicked tyrants and persecutors.

Together for their mutual comfort and defence against those who should invade or disturb them there. Or, alike . Though some of the poor are more nearly related, or have been more serviceable to these oppressors, yet none of them can escape their rage and violence.

Poole: Job 24:5 - -- As wild asses which are wild, and lawless, and unteachable, and fierce, and greedy of prey, or food, which they snatch out of the goods or labours of...

As wild asses which are wild, and lawless, and unteachable, and fierce, and greedy of prey, or food, which they snatch out of the goods or labours of the husbandman; in all which they are fit emblems of these men. Or, these wild men ; for so this word signifies, Gen 16:12 , as elsewhere wild asses . The particle as is not in the Hebrew. In the desert , which is the proper habitation of wild asses, Jer 2:24 . If this be understood of the wild men, he placeth them in the desert and wilderness , either because they by their spoils and violences have destroyed or driven away the people, as is intimated, Job 24:4 , and thereby turned populous places into deserts; or because such places as have but few houses and inhabitants (which are oft so called, as Gen 21:20,21 Jos 15:61,62 1Ki 2:34 9:15 Isa 42:11 Mat 3:1 ) are most fit for their robberies.

Go they either,

1. The poor, whom they spoiled and drove away from their own former habitations into deserts, where they hid themselves, and wrought hard for a subsistence. Or rather,

2. The oppressors, who are more fitly compared to wild asses, and more truly said to seek for prey, than those poor oppressed persons mentioned Job 24:4 , and of whom he speaks both in the foregoing and following verses.

To their work i.e. to spoil and rob, which is their constant work and trade.

The wilderness yieldeth food for them they are so diligent and industrious in that work, that they will fetch food for them and theirs even out of desert places, in which the owners can very hardly subsist.

For their children or servants ; for the word signifies both children and servants , even the whole family.

Poole: Job 24:6 - -- They either, 1. The poor, who are forced to gather in the corn and grapes of their wicked oppressors; or rather, 2. The oppressors, of whom he spea...

They either,

1. The poor, who are forced to gather in the corn and grapes of their wicked oppressors; or rather,

2. The oppressors, of whom he speaks Job 4:4,5,7 .

His corn i.e. the corn of the wicked, as it is in the next clause. Or, that which

is not their own as the LXX., and Chaldee, and Vulgar Latin translate it, reading the Hebrew as two distinct words: they reap other men’ s labours.

In the field i.e. in the field of the right owner, from whom they take it. He notes their great power and boldness, that they did not come suddenly, and carry away their corn when it was laid up in the barns, or in heaps; but they proceeded leisurely, and staid to reap the corn, and by degrees carried it away, as it were in triumph, not fearing any interruption or hinderance either from God or man.

The vintage of the wicked of such as themselves: so they promiscuously robbed all, even their own brethren in iniquity; whereby also he may intimate the righteous judgment of God in punishing one wicked man by another, and in depriving men of those goods which they had wickedly gotten. Or, the wicked (the singular number being used collectively for the plural, as is frequent; the oppressors)

gather the vintage to wit, belonging to other men.

Poole: Job 24:7 - -- The naked i.e. those whom they have made naked, whom they stripped of their garments and coverings; so far were they from exercising justice or chari...

The naked i.e. those whom they have made naked, whom they stripped of their garments and coverings; so far were they from exercising justice or charity towards them.

To lodge to sleep in the night, which is the coldest season.

Without clothing without bed-clothes to cover them: compare Deu 24:13 .

In the cold of the night of the winter season. This verse is and may fitly be rendered thus, They cause men to lodge naked, because they have no clothing , (i.e. because they leave them nothing wherewith they can clothe themselves,) and

no covering in the cold they leave them neither raiment to wear in the day, nor a covering for the night.

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 .

Poole: Job 24:9 - -- They the wicked oppressors, as is manifest from the following words. From the breast either out of cruelty, not sparing poor infants, but killing t...

They the wicked oppressors, as is manifest from the following words.

From the breast either out of cruelty, not sparing poor infants, but killing them; or out of covetousness, and with design either to sell the mother, or to employ her in their work, to which they so strictly confine her, that they will not allow any of her time or strength for the suckling of her infant.

Take a pledge of the poor of which See Poole "Job 22:6" .

Poole: Job 24:10 - -- They cause him the poor oppressed person, to go naked without clothing ; leaving him nothing, or next to nothing, to cover him in the day-time, when...

They cause him the poor oppressed person, to go naked without clothing ; leaving him nothing, or next to nothing, to cover him in the day-time, when he should go abroad to his labour to get his living, but cannot for want of clothes to cover his nakedness.

The sheaf from the hungry that single sheaf which the poor man had got with the sweat of his brows to satisfy his hunger, they inhumanly take away, and add it to their own stores and full barns. Or, they are hungry ; or they sent them away hungry; those words being repeated out of the former clause of the verse (as is most usual); which took or carried the sheaf, or their sheaves , i.e. which reaped and gathered in the rich man’ s corn, for which they received injuries instead of a just recompence for their labour; and that when God’ s liberality, and the bounty of the earth to them, invited and obliged them to kind and generous actions to others.

Poole: Job 24:11 - -- To wit, the poor man last mentioned. Within their walls either, 1. Within their own walls, i.e. in private and secret places, for fear of the opp...

To wit, the poor man last mentioned.

Within their walls either,

1. Within their own walls, i.e. in private and secret places, for fear of the oppressors. Or rather,

2. Within the walls of the rich oppressors, for their use and benefit; for the poor, alas! had no walls, nor houses, nor oliveyards, nor vineyards left to them, but they were violently spoiled of and driven away from all those things, as was said in the foregoing verses.

Their wine-presses i.e. the grapes in their wine-presses, by a metonymy of the thing containing for the thing contained.

Suffer thirst because they are not permitted to quench their thirst out of the wine which they make, though their labor’ s both need and deserve refreshment.

Haydock: Job 24:1 - -- Death. They are as much afraid of the light as others are of profound darkness. (Calmet) --- They dread being detected. (Haydock)

Death. They are as much afraid of the light as others are of profound darkness. (Calmet) ---

They dread being detected. (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 24:1 - -- Days, when he will be punished. (Menochius) --- They are convinced it will be sometime: while the wicked flatter themselves with impunity. (Worthi...

Days, when he will be punished. (Menochius) ---

They are convinced it will be sometime: while the wicked flatter themselves with impunity. (Worthington) ---

Job has already shewn that his complaints had not been excessive, and that they were extorted chiefly by the dread which he had of God. He now comes to prove that he had not denied Providence. For though he asserted that the wicked were sometimes at ease, he maintained that there was another world, where all would be set to rights. Without this the book would be inexplicable. (Calmet) ---

Know him. Septuagint, "the impious." (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 24:2 - -- Marks. This was a heinous offence, (Deuteronomy xix. 14.) which Numa punished with death. (Halyc. i.) (Calmet) --- And fed. Septuagint, "and th...

Marks. This was a heinous offence, (Deuteronomy xix. 14.) which Numa punished with death. (Halyc. i.) (Calmet) ---

And fed. Septuagint, "and those who fed them."

Haydock: Job 24:4 - -- Poor, by oppression, not allowing them to get their bread, or to walk on the same road. (Calmet) --- And have. Hebrew and Septuagint, "the meek.....

Poor, by oppression, not allowing them to get their bread, or to walk on the same road. (Calmet) ---

And have. Hebrew and Septuagint, "the meek....have hidden themselves together."

Haydock: Job 24:5 - -- Others. Hebrew, "Behold as," (Haydock) which may be explained of these oppressors, or rather of the poor, who are forced to flee before them to se...

Others. Hebrew, "Behold as," (Haydock) which may be explained of these oppressors, or rather of the poor, who are forced to flee before them to seek for food. (Calmet) ---

The Vulgate and Septuagint seem more favourable to the former supposition. (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 24:6 - -- Not, is omitted by the Protestants. (Haydock) --- Hebrew, "they reap in the field food for the cattle." (Calmet) --- His. Hebrew, "the wicked m...

Not, is omitted by the Protestants. (Haydock) ---

Hebrew, "they reap in the field food for the cattle." (Calmet) ---

His. Hebrew, "the wicked man's vineyard." (Haydock) ---

They do not examine whether the person whom they plunder be just or not. (Calmet) ---

Septuagint, "they have reaped before the season the field which was not theirs. But the poor (helpless men) have laboured in the vineyards of the wicked without wages or meat." (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 24:7 - -- Cold. Hebrew is still ambiguous, as it may be understood either of the oppressor or of the poor. The cruelty here reprobated is contrary to the law...

Cold. Hebrew is still ambiguous, as it may be understood either of the oppressor or of the poor. The cruelty here reprobated is contrary to the law, Exodus xxii. 26. (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 24:8 - -- Stones, for their bed, though they be so wet. (Haydock)

Stones, for their bed, though they be so wet. (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 24:9 - -- Robbed. Hebrew and Septuagint, "snatched from the breast." --- Stript. Septuagint, "knocked down." Hebrew, "taken a pledge of, or seized the p...

Robbed. Hebrew and Septuagint, "snatched from the breast." ---

Stript. Septuagint, "knocked down." Hebrew, "taken a pledge of, or seized the poor." (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 24:10 - -- Corn, which they had gleaned for their daily sustenance. Hebrew also, "the poor, perishing through hunger, carry the sheaf" of the rich.

Corn, which they had gleaned for their daily sustenance. Hebrew also, "the poor, perishing through hunger, carry the sheaf" of the rich.

Haydock: Job 24:11 - -- Of them. Hebrew, "of corn, and thirst while pressing out their olives." (Calmet) --- Protestants, "they take away the sheaf from the hungry, ( 1...

Of them. Hebrew, "of corn, and thirst while pressing out their olives." (Calmet) ---

Protestants, "they take away the sheaf from the hungry, ( 11 ) which make oil within their walls, and tread their wine-presses, and suffer thirst," (Haydock) not being allowed to taste any thing, though the law of Moses would not suffer even the ox to be muzzled, Deuteronomy xxv. 4. The rich look on without pity, taking their rest at noon, amid the heaps which really belong to the poor, whom they force to labour for them.

Gill: Job 24:1 - -- Why, seeing times are not hidden from the Almighty,.... Which seems to be an inference deduced from what he had said in Job 23:14; that since all thin...

Why, seeing times are not hidden from the Almighty,.... Which seems to be an inference deduced from what he had said in Job 23:14; that since all things are appointed by God, and his appointments are punctually performed by him, the times of his carrying his purposes and decrees into execution cannot be hidden from him; for, as he has determined what shall be done, he has determined the time before appointed for the doing of them; as there is a purpose for everything under the heavens, there is a time set for the execution of that purpose, which must be known unto God that has fixed it; for as all his works are known to him from the beginning, or from eternity, the times when those works should be wrought must also be known to him. The Vulgate Latin, version reduces the words to a categorical proposition, "times are not hidden from the Almighty"; either temporal things, as Sephorno interprets it, things done in time, or the times of doing those things; no sort of time is hid from God; time respecting the world in general, its beginning, duration, and end; all seasons in it, day and night, summer and winter, seedtime and harvest, which are all fixed and settled by him; the several distinct ages and periods of time, into which it has been divided; the old and new world, the legal and Gospel dispensation, the various generations in it; the four great monarchies of the world, their rise, and duration, and end, with all other lesser kingdoms and states; time respecting the inhabitants of the world, their coming into and passing out of it in successive generations, the time of their birth, and of their death, and of adversity and prosperity, which interchangeably take place during their abode in it; and particularly the people of God, the time of their redemption by Christ, of their conversion by the grace of God, and all their times of darkness, desertion, temptation, and afflictions, and of peace, joy, and comfort; time, past and future, respecting the church of God, and the state of it, and all things relative thereunto; and the times of Israel's affliction in a land not theirs, four hundred years, and of their seventy years' captivity in Babylon, were not hidden from the Almighty, but foretold by him; the suffering times of the church under the New Testament; the ten persecutions of it by the Roman emperors; the flight and nourishment of it in the wilderness for a time, and times, and half a time; the treading down of the holy city forty two months; the witnesses prophesying: in sackcloth 1260 days; the killing of them, and their bodies lying unburied three days and a half, and then rising; the reign of antichrist forty two months, at the end of which antichristian time will be no more; the time of Christ's coming to judgment, which is a day appointed, though unknown to men and angels, and the reign of Christ on earth for a thousand years; all these times are not hidden from, but known to the Almighty, even all time, past, present, and to come, and all things that have been, are, or shall be done therein. Several Jewish commentators c interpret these words as an expostulation or wish, "why are not times hidden?" &c. if they were, I should not wonder at it that those that knew him do not know what shall be; but he knows the times and days in which wicked men will do wickedness, why is he silent? Mr. Broughton, and others d, render them, "why are not", or "why should not times be hidden by the Almighty?" that is, be hidden in his own breast from men, as they are; for the times and seasons it is not for man to know, which God has put in his own power, Act 1:6; as the times of future troubles, of a man's death, and the day of judgment; it is but right and fit, on many accounts, that they should be hid by him from them; but others of later date translate the words perhaps much better, "why are not certain stated times laid up", or "reserved by the Almighty" e? that is, for punishing wicked men in this, life, as would be the case, Job suggests, if it was true what his friends had asserted, that wicked men are always punished here: and then upon this another question follows, why

do they that know him not see his days? that know him not merely by the light of nature, but as revealed in Christ; and that have not a mere knowledge of him, but a spiritual and experimental one; who know him so as to love him, believe in him, fear, serve, and worship him; and who have a greater knowledge of him than others may have, and have an intimate acquaintance and familiarity with him, are his bosom friends; and if there are fixed times for punishing the wicked in this life, how comes it to pass that these friends of God, to whom he reveals his secrets, cannot see and observe any such days and times of his as these? but, on the contrary, observe, even to the stumbling of the greatest saints, that the wicked prosper and increase in riches. Job seems to refer to what Eliphaz had said, Job 22:19; which he here tacitly denies, and proves the contrary by various instances, as follows.

Gill: Job 24:2 - -- Some remove the landmarks,.... Anciently set to distinguish one man's land from another, to secure property, and preserve from encroachments; but som...

Some remove the landmarks,.... Anciently set to distinguish one man's land from another, to secure property, and preserve from encroachments; but some were so wicked as either secretly in the night to remove them, or openly to do it, having power on their side, pretending they were wrongly located; this was not only prohibited by the law of God, and pronounced an accursed thing, Deu 19:14; but was reckoned so before the law was given, being known to be such by the light of nature, as what was now, and here condemned, was before that law was in being; and so we find that this was accounted an execrable thing among the Heathens, who had a deity they called Jupiter Terminalis, who was appointed over bounds and landmarks; so Numa Pompilius appointed stones to be set as bounds to everyone's lands, and dedicated them to Jupiter Terminalis, and ordered that those that removed them should be slain as sacrilegious persons, and they and their oxen devoted to destruction f: some render it, "they touch the landmarks" g, as if to touch them was unlawful, and therefore much more to remove them:

they violently take away flocks, and feed thereof; not content with a sheep or a lamb, they took away whole flocks, and that by force and violence, openly and publicly, and slew them, and fed on them; or else took them and put them into their own grounds, or such as they had got by encroachments from others, where they fed them without any fear of men; which shows the effrontery and impudence of them.

Gill: Job 24:3 - -- They drive away the ass of the fatherless,.... Who are left destitute of friends, and have none to take care of them, and provide for them; and who ha...

They drive away the ass of the fatherless,.... Who are left destitute of friends, and have none to take care of them, and provide for them; and who having one ass to carry their goods for them from place to place, or to ride upon, which though a creature of no great worth, yet of some usefulness, this they drove away from its pasture, or however from its right owner; and who having but one, it was the more cruel and inhuman to take it from him, see, 2Sa 12:3;

they take the widow's ox for a pledge; or oxen, the singular for the plural, with which her lands were ploughed, for a single ox could be but of little service: some render it "a cow" h, by the milk of which she and her family were chiefly supported, as many poor country families are by the means of a good milch cow; and to take this, on which her livelihood depended, and retain for a pledge, was very barbarous; when the law concerning pledges took place among the Jews, in the times of Moses, which it seems was in being before with others, whatsoever was useful to persons, either to keep them warm, or by which they got their bread, were not to be taken, at least not detained for a pledge, see Exo 22:26.

Gill: Job 24:4 - -- They turn the needy out of the way,.... Either, in a moral sense, out of the right way, the way of righteousness and truth, by their bad examples, or ...

They turn the needy out of the way,.... Either, in a moral sense, out of the right way, the way of righteousness and truth, by their bad examples, or by their threatenings or flatteries; or, in a civil sense, out of the way of their livelihood, by taking that from them by which they got it; or, in a literal sense, obliging them to turn out of the way from them, in a supercilious and haughty manner, or causing them, through fear of them, to get out of the way, that they might not meet them, lest they should insult them, beat and abuse them, or take that little from them they had, as follows:

the poor of the earth hide themselves together; who are not only poor in purse, but poor in spirit, meek, humble, and lowly, and have not spirit and courage to stand against such oppressors, but are easily crushed by them; these through fear of them hide themselves in holes and corners in a body, in a large company together, lest they should fall into their cruel hands, and be used by them in a barbarous manner, see Pro 28:28.

Gill: Job 24:5 - -- Behold, as wild asses in the desert,.... The word "as" is a supplement, and may be omitted, and the words be interpreted literally of wild asses, as ...

Behold, as wild asses in the desert,.... The word "as" is a supplement, and may be omitted, and the words be interpreted literally of wild asses, as they are by Sephorno, whose proper place is in the wilderness, to which they are used, and where their food is provided for them, and which they diligently seek for, for them and their young; and so the words may be descriptive of the place where the poor hide themselves, and of the company they are obliged to keep; but the Targum supplies the note of similitude as we do; and others i observe it to be wanting, and so it may respect wicked men before described, who may be compared to the wild asses of the wilderness for their folly and stupidity, man being born like a wild ass's colt, Job 11:12; and for their lust and wantonness, and for their rebellion against God and his laws, and their unteachableness. Perhaps some regard may be had to the wild Arabs that were in Job's neighbourhood, the descendants of Ishmael, called the wild man, as he is in Gen 16:12; who lived by plunder and robbery, as these here:

they go forth to their work: of thieving and stealing, robbing and plundering, as their trade, and business, and occupation of life, and as naturally and constantly as men go to their lawful employment, and as if it was one:

rising betimes for a prey; getting up early in a morning to meet the industrious traveller on the road, and make a prey of him, rob him of what he has about him; for they cannot sleep unless they do mischief:

the wilderness yieldeth food for them, and for their children; though they are lurking in a wilderness where no sustenance is to be had, yet, by robbing everyone that passes by, they get enough for them and their families: though some understand all this of the poor, who are obliged to hide themselves from their oppressors, and go into the wilderness in droves like wild asses, and as timorous and as swift as they in fleeing; and are forced to hard service, and to rise early to earn their bread, and get sustenance for their families; and who in the main are obliged to live on berries and roots, and what a wild desert will afford; but the, word "prey" is not applicable to the pains and labours of such industrious people, wherefore the former sense is best; and besides, there seems to be one continued account of wicked men.

Gill: Job 24:6 - -- They reap everyone his corn in the field,.... Not the poor, who are obliged to reap the corn of the wicked for them without any wages, as some; but r...

They reap everyone his corn in the field,.... Not the poor, who are obliged to reap the corn of the wicked for them without any wages, as some; but rather the wicked reap the corn of the poor; they are so insolent and impudent, that they do not take the corn out of their barns by stealth, but while it is standing in the field; they come openly and reap it down, as if it was their own, without any fear of God or men: it is observed, that the word k signifies a mixture of the poorer sorts of corn, which is scarce anything better than food for cattle; yet this they cut down and carry off, as forage for their horses and asses at least. Some of the ancient versions, taking it to be two words, render them, "which is not their own" l; they go into a field that is not theirs, and reap corn that do not belong to them, that they have no right unto, and so are guilty of great injustice, and of doing injury to others:

and they gather the vintage of the wicked; gather the grapes off of the vines of wicked men, which are gathered, as the word signifies, at the latter end of the year, in autumn; and though they belong to wicked men like themselves, yet they spare them not, but seize on all that come to hand, whether the property of good men or bad men; and thus sometimes one wicked man is an instrument of punishing another: or "the wicked gather the vintage" m; that is, of the poor; as they reap where they have not sown, they gather of that they have not planted.

Gill: Job 24:7 - -- They cause the naked to lodge without clothing,.... That is, such as are poorly clothed, thinly arrayed, have scarce anything but rags, and yet so cru...

They cause the naked to lodge without clothing,.... That is, such as are poorly clothed, thinly arrayed, have scarce anything but rags, and yet so cruel the wicked men above described, that they take these away from the poor, and even their bed clothes, which seem chiefly designed; so that they are obliged to lodge or lie all night without anything upon them:

that they have no covering in the cold; neither in the daytime, nor in the night, and especially the latter; and having no house to go to, and obliged to lay themselves down upon the bare ground, had nothing to cover them from the inclemency of the weather; for even in hot countries nights are sometimes cold, and large dews fall, yea, sometimes it is a frost, see Gen 31:40.

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.

Gill: Job 24:9 - -- They pluck the fatherless from the breast,.... Either on purpose to starve it, which must be extremely barbarous; or to sell it to be brought up a sla...

They pluck the fatherless from the breast,.... Either on purpose to starve it, which must be extremely barbarous; or to sell it to be brought up a slave; or by obliging the mother to wean it before the due time, that she might be the better able to do work for them they obliged her to. Mr. Broughton renders the words, "of mischievousness they rob the fatherless"; that is, through the greatness of the mischief they do, as Ben Gersom interprets it; or through the exceeding mischievous disposition they are of; of which this is a flagrant instance; or

"they rob the fatherless of what remains for him after spoiling n,''

or devastation, through the plunder of his father's substance now dead, which was exceeding cruel:

and take a pledge of the poor; either the poor himself, or his poor fatherless children, see 2Ki 4:1; or what is "upon the poor" o, as it may be rendered; that is, his raiment, which was commonly taken for a pledge; and, by a law afterwards established in Israel, was obliged to be restored before sunset, that he might have a covering to sleep in, Exo 22:26; See Gill on Job 22:6.

Gill: Job 24:10 - -- They cause him to go naked without clothing,.... Having taken his raiment from him for a pledge, or refusing to give him his wages for his work, wher...

They cause him to go naked without clothing,.... Having taken his raiment from him for a pledge, or refusing to give him his wages for his work, whereby he might procure clothes to cover him, but that being withheld, is obliged to go naked, or next to it:

and they take away the sheaf from the hungry; the Vulgate Latin version renders it, "ears of corn", such as the poor man plucked as he walked through a corn field, in order to rub them in his hand, and eat of, as the disciples of Christ, with which the Pharisees were offended, Luk 6:1; and which, according to a law in Israel, was allowed to be done, Deu 23:25; but now so severe were these wicked men to these poor persons, that they took away from them such ears of corn: but it is more likely that this sheaf was what the poor had gleaned, and what they had been picking up ear by ear, and had bound up into a sheaf, in order to carry home and beat it out, and then grind the corn of it, and make a loaf of it to satisfy their hunger; but so cruel and hardhearted were these men, that they took it away from them, which they had been all, or the greatest part of the day, picking up; unless it can be thought there was a custom in Job's country, which was afterwards a law among the Jews, that if a sheaf was forgotten by the owner, and left in the field when he gathered in his corn, he was not to go back for it, and fetch it, but leave it to the poor, Deu 24:19; but these men would not suffer them to have it, but took it away from them; or the words may be rendered, as they are by some, "the hungry carry the sheaf" p that is, of their rich oppressive masters, who having reaped their fields for them, and bound up the corn in sheaves, carry it home for them; and yet they do not so much as give them food for their labour, or wages to purchase food to satisfy their; hunger, and so dealt with them worse than the oxen were, according to the Jewish law, which were not to be muzzled when they trod out the corn, but might eat of it, Deu 25:4.

Gill: Job 24:11 - -- Which make oil within their walls,.... Not the poor within their own walls; as if the sense was, that they made their oil in a private manner within ...

Which make oil within their walls,.... Not the poor within their own walls; as if the sense was, that they made their oil in a private manner within the walls of their houses, or in their cellars, lest it should be known and taken away from them; for such cannot be thought to have had oliveyards to make oil of; rather within the walls of their rich masters, where they were kept closely confined to their work, as if in a prison; or within the walls and fences of their oliveyards, where their olive presses stood; or best of all "within the rows q of their olive trees", as the word signifies, where having gathered the olives, they pressed out the oil in the presses and this they did at noon, in the heat of the day, as the word r for making oil is observed by some to signify, and yet had nothing given them to quench their thirst, as follows:

and tread their winepresses, and suffer thirst; after having gathered their grapes from their vines for them, they trod them in the winepresses, and made their wine, and yet would not allow them to drink of it to allay their thirst.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 24:1 The LXX reads “Why are times hidden from the Almighty?” as if to say that God is not interested in the events on the earth. The MT reading...

NET Notes: Job 24:2 The LXX reads “and their shepherd.” Many commentators accept this reading. But the MT says that they graze the flocks that they have stole...

NET Notes: Job 24:4 Because of the violence and oppression of the wicked, the poor and needy, the widows and orphans, all are deprived of their rights and forced out of t...

NET Notes: Job 24:5 The verb is not included in the Hebrew text but is supplied in the translation.

NET Notes: Job 24:6 The verbs in this verse are uncertain. In the first line “reap” is used, and that would be the work of a hired man (and certainly not done...

NET Notes: Job 24:8 Heb “embrace” or “hug.”

NET Notes: Job 24:9 The MT has a very brief and strange reading: “they take as a pledge upon the poor.” This could be taken as “they take a pledge again...

NET Notes: Job 24:10 The point should not be missed – amidst abundant harvests, carrying sheaves about, they are still going hungry.

NET Notes: Job 24:11 The final verb, a preterite with the ו (vav) consecutive, is here interpreted as a circumstantial clause.

Geneva Bible: Job 24:1 Why, seeing times ( a ) are not hidden from the Almighty, do they that know him not see his ( b ) days? ( a ) Thus Job speaks in his passions, and af...

Geneva Bible: Job 24:4 They turn the needy out of the way: the poor of the earth hide themselves ( c ) together. ( c ) And for cruelty and oppression dare not show their fa...

Geneva Bible: Job 24:5 Behold, [as] wild asses in the desert, go they forth to their work; ( d ) rising betimes for a prey: the wilderness ( e ) [yieldeth] food for them [an...

Geneva Bible: Job 24:6 They reap [every one] ( f ) his corn in the field: and they gather the ( g ) vintage of the wicked. ( f ) Meaning the poor man's. ( g ) Signifying t...

Geneva Bible: Job 24:8 They are wet with the showers of the mountains, ( h ) and embrace the rock for want of a shelter. ( h ) The poor are driven by the wicked into the ro...

Geneva Bible: Job 24:9 They pluck the fatherless ( i ) from the breast, and take a pledge of ( k ) the poor. ( i ) That is, they so pillage and plunder the poor widow that ...

Geneva Bible: Job 24:11 [Which] make oil ( l ) within their walls, [and] tread [their] winepresses, and suffer thirst. ( l ) In such places which are appointed for that purp...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

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 - --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 - -- 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 24:1-4 - -- 1 Wherefore are not bounds reserved by the Almighty, And they who honour Him see not His days? 2 They remove the landmarks, They steal flocks and...

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 ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 24:9-12 - -- 9 They tear the fatherless from the breast, And defraud the poor. 10 Naked, they slink away without clothes, And hungering they bear the sheaves....

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...

Constable: Job 23:1--24:25 - --2. Job's third reply to Eliphaz chs. 23-24 Job ignored Eliphaz's groundless charges of sin tempo...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Job (Book Introduction) JOB A REAL PERSON.--It has been supposed by some that the book of Job is an allegory, not a real narrative, on account of the artificial character of ...

JFB: Job (Outline) THE HOLINESS OF JOB, HIS WEALTH, &c. (Job 1:1-5) SATAN, APPEARING BEFORE GOD, FALSELY ACCUSES JOB. (Job 1:6-12) SATAN FURTHER TEMPTS JOB. (Job 2:1-8)...

TSK: Job (Book Introduction) A large aquatic animal, perhaps the extinct dinosaur, plesiosaurus, the exact meaning is unknown. Some think this to be a crocodile but from the desc...

TSK: Job 24 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Job 24:1, Wickedness often goes unpunished; Job 24:17, There is a secret judgment for the wicked.

Poole: Job 24 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 24 The practice and prosperity of the wicked, Job 24:1-16 . Their punishment and curse in the end, Job 24:17-25 . The sense of the words ...

MHCC: Job (Book Introduction) This book is so called from Job, whose prosperity, afflictions, and restoration, are here recorded. He lived soon after Abraham, or perhaps before tha...

MHCC: Job 24 (Chapter Introduction) (Job 24:1-12) Wickedness often unpunished. (Job 24:13-17) The wicked shun the light. (Job 24:18-25) Judgements for the wicked.

Matthew Henry: Job (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Job This book of Job stands by itself, is not connected with any other, and is therefore to...

Matthew Henry: Job 24 (Chapter Introduction) Job having by his complaints in the foregoing chapter given vent to his passion, and thereby gained some ease, breaks them off abruptly, and now ap...

Constable: Job (Book Introduction) Introduction Title This book, like many others in the Old Testament, got its name from...

Constable: Job (Outline) Outline I. Prologue chs. 1-2 A. Job's character 1:1-5 B. Job's calamitie...

Constable: Job Job Bibliography Andersen, Francis I. Job. Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries series. Leicester, Eng. and Downe...

Haydock: Job (Book Introduction) THE BOOK OF JOB. INTRODUCTION. This Book takes its name from the holy man, of whom it treats; who, according to the more probable opinion, was ...

Gill: Job (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JOB This book, in the Hebrew copies, generally goes by this name, from Job, who is however the subject, if not the writer of it. In...

Gill: Job 24 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JOB 24 This chapter contains the second part of Job's answer to the last discourse of Eliphaz, in which he shows that wicked men, t...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


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