
Text -- Job 25:6 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 25:6 - -- Mean, and vile, and impotent; proceeding from corruption, and returning to it.
Mean, and vile, and impotent; proceeding from corruption, and returning to it.

Wesley: Job 25:6 - -- For miserable man in the last branch he here puts the son of any man, to shew that this is true even of the greatest and best of men. Let us then wond...
For miserable man in the last branch he here puts the son of any man, to shew that this is true even of the greatest and best of men. Let us then wonder at the condescension of God, in taking such worms into covenant and communion with himself!
(Job 4:19-21; Job 15:16).

JFB: Job 25:6 - -- Two distinct Hebrew words. The first, a worm bred in putridity; alluding to man's corruption. The second a crawling worm; implying that man is weak an...
Two distinct Hebrew words. The first, a worm bred in putridity; alluding to man's corruption. The second a crawling worm; implying that man is weak and grovelling.
Clarke -> Job 25:6
Clarke: Job 25:6 - -- How much less man, that is a worm? - Or as the Targum - "How much more man, who in his life is a reptile; and the son of man, who in his death is a ...
How much less man, that is a worm? - Or as the Targum - "How much more man, who in his life is a reptile; and the son of man, who in his death is a worm."Almost all the versions read, "Truly man is corruption, and the son of man a worm."The original is degradingly expressive: "Even because
TSK -> Job 25:6
TSK: Job 25:6 - -- How much less : etc. The original is degradingly expressive: ""How much less enosh , miserable man, who is a worm; and the son of Adam, who is tole...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 25:6
Barnes: Job 25:6 - -- How much less man - See Job 4:19. Man is mentioned here as a worm; in Job 4:19 he is said to dwell in a house of clay and to be crushed before ...
How much less man - See Job 4:19. Man is mentioned here as a worm; in Job 4:19 he is said to dwell in a house of clay and to be crushed before the moth. In both cases the design is to represent him as insignificant in comparison with God.
A worm -
And the son of man - Another mode of speaking of man. Any one of the children of man is the same. No one of them can be compared with God; compare the notes at Mat 1:1.
Which is a worm -
Poole -> Job 25:6
Poole: Job 25:6 - -- A worm to wit, mean, and vile, and impotent; proceeding from corruption, and returning to it; and withal filthy and loathsome, and so every way a ver...
A worm to wit, mean, and vile, and impotent; proceeding from corruption, and returning to it; and withal filthy and loathsome, and so every way a very unfit person to appear before the high and holy God, and much more to contend with him. The same thing is repeated in other words; only for miserable man in the last branch he here puts the son of any man , of what degree or quality soever, to show that this is true even of the greatest and best of men.
Gill -> Job 25:6
Gill: Job 25:6 - -- How much less man, that is a worm?.... Whose original is of the earth, dwells in it, and is supported by it, and creeps into it again; who is impure ...
How much less man, that is a worm?.... Whose original is of the earth, dwells in it, and is supported by it, and creeps into it again; who is impure by nature and by practice, weak and impotent to do anything that is spiritually good, or to defend himself from his spiritual enemies; and is mean and despicable, as even the best of men are, in their own eyes, and in the eyes of the world: and, if the best of men are comparable to such creatures, and our Lord himself, in human nature, was content to be called a worm, and no man; what must the worst of men be, or man be in and of himself, without the grace of God and righteousness of Christ, by which he can be only clean and righteous? see Isa 41:14; and, if the celestial bodies above mentioned are eclipsed of all their brightness and glory, in the presence of God; what a contemptible figure must man make in the court of heaven, who, in comparison of them, is but a worm, and much more so, as appearing before God?
and the son of man, which is a worm; which is repeated with a little variation for the confirmation of it; or it may signify, that even the first man was no other than of the earth, earthy, and so are all his sons. The Targum is,
"how much more man, who in his life is a reptile, and the son of man, who in his death is a worm?''
to which may be added, that he is in his grave a companion for the worms; and indeed it appears by the observations made through microscopes, that man, in his first state of generation, is really a worm p; so that, as Pliny says q, one that is a judge of things may pity and be ashamed of the sorry original of the proudest of animals. By this short reply of Bildad, and which contains little more than what had been before said, it is plain that he was tired of the controversy, and glad to give out.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 25:1-6
MHCC -> Job 25:1-6
MHCC: Job 25:1-6 - --Bildad drops the question concerning the prosperity of wicked men; but shows the infinite distance there is between God and man. He represents to Job ...
Matthew Henry -> Job 25:1-6
Matthew Henry: Job 25:1-6 - -- Bildad is to be commended here for two things: - 1. For speaking no more on the subject about which Job and he differed. Perhaps he began to think J...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 25:1-6
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 25:1-6 - --
1 Then began Bildad the Shuhite, and said:
2 Dominion and terror are with Him,
He maketh peace in His high places.
3 Is there any number to His a...
Constable -> Job 22:1--27:23; Job 25:1-6
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...
