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Text -- Job 24:6 (NET)

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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
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.
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.
Clarke -> Job 24:6
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."
TSK -> Job 24:6
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.

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 24:6
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 (
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 -
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.
Poole -> Job 24:6
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.
Haydock -> Job 24:6
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)
Gill -> Job 24:6
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.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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...
Geneva Bible -> Job 24:6
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...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 24:1-25
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
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
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 24:5-8
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 ...
Constable -> Job 22:1--27:23; Job 23:1--24:25
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...




