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Text -- Job 8:15-22 (NET)

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8:15 He leans against his house but it does not hold up, he takes hold of it but it does not stand. 8:16 He is a well-watered plant in the sun, its shoots spread over its garden. 8:17 It wraps its roots around a heap of stones and it looks for a place among stones. 8:18 If he is uprooted from his place, then that place will disown him, saying, ‘I have never seen you!’ 8:19 Indeed, this is the joy of his way, and out of the earth others spring up. 8:20 “Surely, God does not reject a blameless man, nor does he grasp the hand of the evildoers. 8:21 He will yet fill your mouth with laughter, and your lips with gladness. 8:22 Those who hate you will be clothed with shame, and the tent of the wicked will be no more.”
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: JOB, BOOK OF | Heathen | Righteous | Job | Uncharitableness | Wicked | God | Evildoers | Hypocrisy | MARRIAGE | Joy | TENDER | DENY | COLOR; COLORS | BRANCH ;BOUGH | GARDEN | HEAP | SHAME | NOUGHT | LAUGHTER | more
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Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 8:15 The idea is that he grabs hold of the house, not to hold it up, but to hold himself up or support himself. But it cannot support him. This idea applie...

NET Notes: Job 8:16 Some have emended this phrase to obtain “over the roofs.” The LXX has “out of his corruption.” H. M. Orlinsky has shown that t...

NET Notes: Job 8:17 The idea seems to be that the stones around which the roots of the tree wrap themselves suggest strength and security for the tree, but uprooting come...

NET Notes: Job 8:18 Here “saying” is supplied in the translation.

NET Notes: Job 8:19 As with the tree, so with the godless man – his place will soon be taken by another.

NET Notes: Job 8:20 The idiom “to grasp the hand” of someone means to support or help the person.

NET Notes: Job 8:21 “Laughter” (and likewise “gladness”) will here be metonymies of effect or adjunct, being put in place of the reason for the jo...

NET Notes: Job 8:22 “Shame” is compared to a garment that can be worn. The “shame” envisioned here is much more than embarrassment or disgrace ...

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