KJV
Job 24
1¶ Why, seeing times are not hidden from the Almighty, do they that know him not see his days?
2[Some] remove the landmarks; they violently take away flocks, and feed [thereof].
3They drive away the ass of the fatherless, they take the widow's ox for a pledge.
4They turn the needy out of the way: the poor of the earth hide themselves together.
5Behold, [as] wild asses in the desert, go they forth to their work; rising betimes for a prey: the wilderness [yieldeth] food for them [and] for [their] children.
6They reap [every one] his corn in the field: and they gather the vintage of the wicked.
7They cause the naked to lodge without clothing, that [they have] no covering in the cold.
8They are wet with the showers of the mountains, and embrace the rock for want of a shelter.
9They pluck the fatherless from the breast, and take a pledge of the poor.
10They cause [him] to go naked without clothing, and they take away the sheaf [from] the hungry;
11[Which] make oil within their walls, [and] tread [their] winepresses, and suffer thirst.
12Men groan from out of the city, and the soul of the wounded crieth out: yet God layeth not folly [to them].
13¶ They are of those that rebel against the light; they know not the ways thereof, nor abide in the paths thereof.
14The murderer rising with the light killeth the poor and needy, and in the night is as a thief.
15The eye also of the adulterer waiteth for the twilight, saying, No eye shall see me: and disguiseth [his] face.
16In the dark they dig through houses, [which] they had marked for themselves in the daytime: they know not the light.
17For the morning [is] to them even as the shadow of death: if [one] know [them, they are in] the terrors of the shadow of death.
18¶ He [is] swift as the waters; their portion is cursed in the earth: he beholdeth not the way of the vineyards.
19Drought and heat consume the snow waters: [so doth] the grave [those which] have sinned.
20The womb shall forget him; the worm shall feed sweetly on him; he shall be no more remembered; and wickedness shall be broken as a tree.
21He evil entreateth the barren [that] beareth not: and doeth not good to the widow.
22He draweth also the mighty with his power: he riseth up, and no [man] is sure of life.
23[Though] it be given him [to be] in safety, whereon he resteth; yet his eyes [are] upon their ways.
24They are exalted for a little while, but are gone and brought low; they are taken out of the way as all [other], and cut off as the tops of the ears of corn.
25And if [it be] not [so] now, who will make me a liar, and make my speech nothing worth?
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Adultery: General Scriptures Concerning Job 24:15–18
The eye of the adulterer watches for twilight. Thinking, ‘No eye will see me,’ he covers his face. / In the dark they dig through houses; by day they shut themselves in, never to experience the light. / For to them, deep darkness is their morning; surely they are friends with the terrors of darkness!
Ambition: Vanity of Job 24:24
They are exalted for a moment, then they are gone; they are brought low and gathered up like all others; they are cut off like heads of grain.
Animals: Homes of Job 24:5
Indeed, like wild donkeys in the desert, the poor go to work foraging for food; the wasteland is food for their children.
Character of the Wicked: Hating the Light Job 24:13
Then there are those who rebel against the light, not knowing its ways or staying on its paths.
Children: Sold for Debt Job 24:9
The fatherless infant is snatched from the breast; the nursing child of the poor is seized for a debt.
Creditor: Oppressions of Job 24:3, 9
They drive away the donkey of the fatherless and take the widow’s ox in pledge. / The fatherless infant is snatched from the breast; the nursing child of the poor is seized for a debt.
Creditors: Often Cruel in Exacting Debts Job 24:3–9
They drive away the donkey of the fatherless and take the widow’s ox in pledge. / They push the needy off the road and force all the poor of the land into hiding. / Indeed, like wild donkeys in the desert, the poor go to work foraging for food; the wasteland is food for their children.
Creditors: Often Exacted Debts by Selling the Debtor's Family Job 24:9
The fatherless infant is snatched from the breast; the nursing child of the poor is seized for a debt.
Darkness: The Wicked: Perpetuate Their Designs In Job 24:16
In the dark they dig through houses; by day they shut themselves in, never to experience the light.
Death of the Wicked Job 24:20, 24
The womb forgets them; the worm feeds on them; they are remembered no more. So injustice is like a broken tree. / They are exalted for a moment, then they are gone; they are brought low and gathered up like all others; they are cut off like heads of grain.
Debt: Security For Job 24:9
The fatherless infant is snatched from the breast; the nursing child of the poor is seized for a debt.
Dishonesty: General Scriptures Concerning Job 24:2–11
Men move boundary stones; they pasture stolen flocks. / They drive away the donkey of the fatherless and take the widow’s ox in pledge. / They push the needy off the road and force all the poor of the land into hiding.
Donkey: Wild Job 24:5
Indeed, like wild donkeys in the desert, the poor go to work foraging for food; the wasteland is food for their children.
Eyes Roam Job 24:23
He gives them a sense of security, but His eyes are on their ways.
Fatherless: The Wicked: Oppress Job 24:3
They drive away the donkey of the fatherless and take the widow’s ox in pledge.
God: Knowledge of Job 24:1, 23
“Why does the Almighty not reserve times for judgment? Why may those who know Him never see His days? / He gives them a sense of security, but His eyes are on their ways.
God: Mercy of Job 24:12
From the city, men groan, and the souls of the wounded cry out, yet God charges no one with wrongdoing.
God: Providence of, Mysterious and Misinterpreted Job 24:1–12
“Why does the Almighty not reserve times for judgment? Why may those who know Him never see His days? / Men move boundary stones; they pasture stolen flocks. / They drive away the donkey of the fatherless and take the widow’s ox in pledge.
Harvest: Figurative Job 24:6
They gather fodder in the fields and glean the vineyards of the wicked.
Hell: |Sheol| is Translated |Grave| in Av In Job 24:19
As drought and heat consume the melting snow, so Sheol steals those who have sinned.
Herbs: Found in The Deserts Job 24:5
Indeed, like wild donkeys in the desert, the poor go to work foraging for food; the wasteland is food for their children.
Homicide: Felonious, or Murder Job 24:1–25
“Why does the Almighty not reserve times for judgment? Why may those who know Him never see His days? / Men move boundary stones; they pasture stolen flocks. / They drive away the donkey of the fatherless and take the widow’s ox in pledge.
Houses of Brick or Clay: Easily Broken Through Job 24:16
In the dark they dig through houses; by day they shut themselves in, never to experience the light.
Impenitence: General Scriptures Concerning Job 24:13
Then there are those who rebel against the light, not knowing its ways or staying on its paths.
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Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Commentary
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Job 24:1-10 God's supreme sovereignty requires a befitting holiness of
life and heart in His worshippers; a sentiment sublimely illustrated by describing His entrance into the sanctuary, by the symbol of His worship--the ark, as requiring the most profound homage to the glory of His Majesty.
Job 24:1 Verse 1
fulness--everything. world--the habitable globe, with they that dwell--forming a parallel expression to the first clause.
Job 24:1 Verse 1
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. 2-24. Instances of the wicked doing the worst deeds with seeming impunity (Job 24:2-24). Some--the wicked. landmarks--boundaries between different pastures (De 19:14; Pr 22:28).
Job 24:2 Verse 2
Poetically represents the facts of Ge 1:9.
Job 24:3-4 Verses 3-4
The form of a question gives vivacity. Hands, tongue, and heart are organs of action, speech, and feeling, which compose character. hill of the Lord--(compare Ps 2:6, &c.). His Church--the true or invisible, as typified by the earthly sanctuary.
Job 24:3 Verse 3
pledge--alluding to Job 22:6. Others really do, and with impunity, that which Eliphaz falsely charges the afflicted Job with.
Job 24:4 Verse 4
lifted up his soul--is to set the affections (Ps 25:1) on an object; here, vanity--or, any false thing, of which swearing falsely, or to falsehood, is a specification.
Job 24:4 Verse 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 charge of Eliphaz, Job 22:8; 1Sa 8:3). poor--in spirit and in circumstances (Mt 5:3). hide--from the injustice of their oppressors, who have robbed them of their all and driven them into unfrequented places (Job 20:19; 30:3-6; Pr 28:28).
Job 24:5 Verse 5
righteousness--the rewards which God bestows on His people, or the grace to secure those rewards as well as the result.
Job 24:5 Verse 5
wild asses--(Job 11:12). So Ishmael is called a "wild ass-man"; Hebrew (Ge 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. rising betimes--In the East travelling is begun very early, before the heat comes on.
Job 24:6 Verse 6
Jacob--By "Jacob," we may understand God's people (compare Isa 43:22; 44:2, &c.), corresponding to "the generation," as if he had said, "those who seek Thy face are Thy chosen people." 7-10. The entrance of the ark, with the attending procession, into the holy sanctuary is pictured to us. The repetition of the terms gives emphasis.
Job 24:6 Verse 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 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. the vintage of the wicked--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.
Job 24:7 Verse 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 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 (Ge 31:40).
Job 24:8 Verse 8
They--the plundered travellers. embrace the rock--take refuge under it (La 4:5).
Job 24:9 Verse 9
from the breast--of the widowed mother. Kidnapping children for slaves. Here Job passes from wrongs in the desert to those done among the habitations of men. pledge--namely, the garment of the poor debtor, as Job 24:10 shows.
Job 24:10 Verse 10
Lord of hosts--or fully, Lord God of hosts (Ho 12:5; Am 4:13), describes God by a title indicative of supremacy over all creatures, and especially the heavenly armies (Jos 5:14; 1Ki 22:19). Whether, as some think, the actual enlargement of the ancient gates of Jerusalem be the basis of the figure, the effect of the whole is to impress us with a conception of the matchless majesty of God. PSALM 25
Job 24:10 Verse 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 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 De 25:4. Translate: "they (the poor laborers) hungering carry the sheaves" [Umbreit].
Job 24:11 Verse 11
Which--"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.
Job 24:12 Verse 12
Men--rather, "mortals" (not the common Hebrew for "men"); so the Masoretic vowel points read as English Version. But the vowel points are modern. The true reading is, "The dying," answering to "the wounded" in the next clause, so Syriac. Not merely in the country (Job 24:11), but also in the city there are oppressed sufferers, who cry for help in vain. "From out of the city"; that is, they long to get forth and be free outside of it (Ex 1:11; 2:23). wounded--by the oppressor (Eze 30:24). layeth not folly--takes no account of (by punishing) their sin ("folly" in Scripture; Job 1:22). This is the gist of the whole previous list of sins (Ac 17:30). Umbreit with Syriac reads by changing a vowel point, "Regards not their supplication."
Job 24:13 Verse 13
So far as to openly committed sins; now, those done in the dark. Translate: "There are those among them (the wicked) who rebel," &c. light--both literal and figurative (Joh 3:19, 20; Pr 2:13). paths thereof--places where the light shines.
Job 24:14 Verse 14
with the light--at early dawn, while still dark, when the traveller in the East usually sets out, and the poor laborer to his work; the murderous robber lies in wait then (Ps 10:8). is as a thief--Thieves in the East steal while men sleep at night; robbers murder at early dawn. The same man who steals at night, when light dawns not only robs, but murders to escape detection.
Job 24:15 Verse 15
(Pr 7:9; Ps 10:11). disguiseth--puts a veil on.
Job 24:16 Verse 16
dig through--Houses in the East are generally built of sun-dried mud bricks (so Mt 6:19). "Thieves break through," literally, "dig through" (Eze 12:7). had marked--Rather, as in Job 9:7, "They shut themselves up" (in their houses); literally, "they seal up." for themselves--for their own ends, namely, to escape detection. know not--shun.
Job 24:17 Verse 17
They shrink from the "morning" light, as much as other men do from the blackest darkness ("the shadow of death"). if one know--that is, recognize them. Rather, "They know well (are familiar with) the terrors of," &c. [Umbreit]. Or, as Maurer, "They know the terrors of (this) darkness," namely, of morning, the light, which is as terrible to them as darkness ("the shadow of death") is to other men. 18-21. In these verses Job quotes the opinions of his adversaries ironically; he quoted them so before (Job 21:7-21). In Job 24:22-24, he states his own observation as the opposite. You say, "The sinner is swift, that is, swiftly passes away (as a thing floating) on the surface of the waters" (Ec 11:1; Ho 10:7). is cursed--by those who witness their "swift" destruction. beholdeth not--"turneth not to"; figuratively, for He cannot enjoy his pleasant possessions (Job 20:17; 15:33). the way of the vineyards--including his fields, fertile as vineyards; opposite to "the way of the desert."
Job 24:19 Verse 19
Arabian image; melted snow, as contrasted with the living fountain, quickly dries up in the sunburnt sand, not leaving a trace behind (Job 6:16-18). The Hebrew is terse and elliptical to express the swift and utter destruction of the godless; (so) "the grave--they have sinned!"
Job 24:20 Verse 20
The womb--The very mother that bare him, and who is the last to "forget" the child that sucked her (Isa 49:15), shall dismiss him from her memory (Job 18:17; Pr 10:7). The worm shall suck, that is, "feed sweetly" on him as a delicate morsel (Job 21:33). wickedness--that is, the wicked; abstract for concrete (as Job 5:16). as a tree--utterly (Job 19:10); Umbreit better, "as a staff." A broken staff is the emblem of irreparable ruin (Isa 14:5; Ho 4:12).
Job 24:21 Verse 21
The reason given by the friends why the sinner deserves such a fate. barren--without sons, who might have protected her. widow--without a husband to support her. 22-25. Reply of Job to the opinion of the friends. Experience proves the contrary. Translate: "But He (God) prolongeth the life of (literally, draweth out at length; Ps 36:10, Margin) the mighty with His (God's) power. He (the wicked) riseth up (from his sick bed) although he had given up hope of (literally, when he no longer believed in) life" (De 28:66).
Job 24:23 Verse 23
Literally, "He (God omitted, as often; Job 3:20; Ec 9:9; reverentially) giveth to him (the wicked, to be) in safety, or security." yet--Job means, How strange that God should so favor them, and yet have His eyes all the time open to their wicked ways (Pr 15:3; Ps 73:4)!
Job 24:24 Verse 24
Job repeats what he said (Job 21:13), that sinners die in exalted positions, not the painful and lingering death we might expect, but a quick and easy death. Join "for a while" with "are gone," not as English Version. Translate: "A moment--and they are no more! They are brought low, as all (others) gather up their feet to die" (so the Hebrew of "are taken out of the way"). A natural death (Ge 49:33). ears of corn--in a ripe and full age, not prematurely (Job 5:26).
Job 24:25 Verse 25
(So Job 9:24).
Matthew Henry Concise Commentary
Pastoral and devotional reflections focused on spiritual formation and application.
Job 24:1-12 Verses 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. xxi. Here he shows that many who live in open defiance of all the laws of justice, succeed in wicked practices; and we do not see them reckoned with in this world. He notices those that do wrong under pretence of law and authority; and robbers, those that do wrong by force. He says, "God layeth not folly to them;" that is, he does not at once send his judgments, nor make them examples, and so manifest their folly to all the world. But he that gets riches, and not by right, at his end shall be a fool, Jer 17:11.
Job 24:13-17 Verses 13-17
See what care and pains wicked men take to compass their wicked designs; let it shame our negligence and slothfulness in doing good. See what pains those take, who make provision for the flesh to fulfil the lusts of it: pains to compass, and then to hide that which will end in death and hell at last. Less pains would mortify and crucify the flesh, and be life and heaven at last. Shame came in with sin, and everlasting shame is at the end of it. See the misery of sinners; they are exposed to continual frights: yet see their folly; they are afraid of coming under the eye of men, but have no dread of God's eye, which is always upon them: they are not afraid of doing things which they are afraid of being known to do.
Job 24:18-25 Verses 18-25
Sometimes how gradual is the decay, how quiet the departure of a wicked person, how is he honoured, and how soon are all his cruelties and oppressions forgotten! They are taken off with other men, as the harvestman gathers the ears of corn as they come to hand. There will often appear much to resemble the wrong view of Providence Job takes in this chapter. But we are taught by the word of inspiration, that these notions are formed in ignorance, from partial views. The providence of God, in the affairs of men, is in every thing a just and wise providence. Let us apply this whenever the Lord may try us. He cannot do wrong. The unequalled sorrows of the Son of God when on earth, unless looked at in this view, perplex the mind. But when we behold him, as the sinner's Surety, bearing the curse, we can explain why he should endure that wrath which was due to sin, that Divine justice might be satisfied, and his people saved.