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Job 30

Cambridge

Ch. 30. The contrasted picture of Job’s present abject condition The chapter forms a contrast to ch. 29; and as in that picture of Job’s past felicity the brightest part was the high respect he enjoyed among men, sitting a prince in the midst of them, so in this the darkest part is the contumely and indignity he now suffers from the basest and most abject of mankind. Ch. 29 ended with a reference to his former high place among men, and the present chapter starts with the antithesis to this, the contempt in which the base-born races now hold him. The subjects touched upon in the chapter are the same as those in ch. 29, though they are pursued in the reverse order. First, Job 30:1-8, a picture of the base and miserable race of men who now hold him in contempt. Second, Job 30:9-15, description of the indignities to which he is subjected at their hands. Third, Job 30:16-23, account of the condition to which he is reduced; his despondency of mind, his gnawing pains, and the terrible severity of God under which he suffers. Fourth, Job 30:24-31, a final contrast between his present unpitied, joyless condition and former days, when he himself was full of compassion for them in trouble and when his life was filled with music and gladness.

Job 30:1

  1. younger than I] Comp. what was said of the demeanour of the youths in former days, ch. Job 30:8. would have disdained to have set] Or, I disdained to set.

Job 30:2

  1. The verse refers to the fathers (Job 30:1), and gives the reason why Job did not employ them, or consider them worthy of a treatment equal to that of his dogs—they were enfeebled and fallen into premature decay. Yet the children of these miserable people now have him in derision. In the East the “dogs of the flock” have only one use, viz. to guard the flock and the encampment from attacks by night.

Job 30:3-8

3–8. Description of this wretched class of outcasts. The tenses should all be put in the present. The race of people referred to appears to be the same as that in ch. 24.

Job 30:4

  1. by the bushes] i. e. beside or among the bushes. The “mallows” or “salt-wort” which they pluck as food is found among the bushes, which cover it from the heat and drought, and under the shadow of which it thrives. juniper roots] Or, roots of the broom.

Job 30:5-6

5–6. Such creatures when they approach civilized dwellings are driven forth and pursued with cries as men do a thief. They are driven forth from among men, They cry after them as after a thief, And they must dwell in the clefts of the valleys, &c. The word “cliffs” in the ordinary texts here is either a misprint for “clifts” or clefts, or is used in that sense.

Job 30:7

  1. they brayed] Rather, they bray. were gathered] Better, are gathered, or perhaps rather, stretch themselves, i. e. fling themselves down. Their cries are like those of the wild ass seeking for food (ch. Job 6:5), and they throw themselves down like wild beasts under the bushes in the desert.

Job 30:8

  1. The verse reads in close connexion with Job 30:7, Children of fools, yea children of base men, They are scourged out of the land. Children of “base men,” lit. of no name, i. e. base born, they are beaten or “crushed” out of the land.

Job 30:9-10

9–10. Job’s treatment now at the hands of these outcasts. With “spit in my face” comp. ch. Job 17:6. In ch. 24. Job referred to this miserable race With compassion; they had often no doubt excited his pity, and he saw in their lot and in the injustice and cruelties which they suffered at the hands of more prosperous men a strange mystery of providence. Now he speaks of their conduct to himself with resentment; for it was no requital of any injury he had ever done them. Yet though they might mistake Job’s individual feeling to them, he was one of the class that had robbed them and that continued the robbery and oppression, and they avenged their wrongs on him with a malicious delight in the calamities that had overtaken him.

Job 30:11-14

11–14. Further description of the outrageous insults of these base outcasts.

Job 30:12

  1. This verse reads, Upon the right hand riseth up a (low) brood, They push away my feet, And they cast up against me their ways of destruction. By “pushing away” his feet, appears to be meant thrusting him away from place to place. The last clause refers to the practice of besiegers casting up a “mount” or raised way on which to approach the beleaguered town and carry destruction to it; such “mounts” are here called “their ways of destruction.”

Job 30:13

  1. They mar my path] Or, they break up my path. The reference can hardly be to the path or way leading to the besieged place (Job 30:12), so that the approach of succour is cut off; if the figure be continued the path must rather be the way of escape. Perhaps the figure is departed from in this clause, and the words may be taken more generally as meaning the path of his life, which they make it impossible to go in. set forward my calamity] i. e. help on my downfall—aggravate my afflictions and advance the issue of them. they have no helper] Or, they who have no helper. The phrase “to have no helper” means to be one shunned and despised of all. Yet Such persons now persecute him with injurious insult. The words are an involuntary exclamation. The phrase might mean: against whom there is no helper; i. e. none to rescue Job from them, or to interfere in his behalf against them.

Job 30:14

  1. The verse reads, They come in as through a wide breach, Amidst the crash they roll themselves upon me. The figure is that of a stormed fastness. The “crash” is that of the falling walls.

Job 30:15

  1. Terrors are turned against me, They chase away my honour like the wind; And my welfare is passed away as a cloud. He is assailed by terrors. The words “like the wind” mean, like as the wind chases away (the chaff, &c.). On the figure of the dissolving cloud comp. Job 7:9. The expression “terrors” indicates that, though Job is here speaking of his injurious treatment at the hands of this rabble, it is not merely the external ignominy that fills his mind; it is the deeper moral problem which such abasement raises. Such expressions, however, have suggested to several writers that what Job describes in Job 30:11-15 is not the outrageous insults of the base-born outcasts referred to in Job 30:1-10, but his afflictions, under the figure of an assailing army sent against him from God, comp. ch. Job 16:12-14, Job 19:12. The passage is difficult, but upon the whole this view is less natural.

Job 30:16

  1. The condition of despondency to which Job was reduced.

Job 30:17

  1. His tormenting pains. In the night season my bones are pierced (and fall) off from me, And my gnawing pains take no rest. The first clause refers to his tormenting pains, severest in the night, under which his bones seem pierced and his limbs to be wrenched from him. “My gnawing pains” is lit. my gnawers.

Job 30:18

  1. The verse is obscure. the great force of my disease] Or, by his great power; i. e. God’s power, put forth in Job’s afflictions. my garment changed] lit. disguised or disfigured. it bindeth me] The meaning may be: it clingeth to me like the neck of my inner garment. The reference is supposed to be to his emaciated condition; his outer garment hangs on him disfigured, clinging to him like the neck or opening of the close-fitting inner tunic. The connexion and the phrase “by His great power,” i. e. the power that causes intolerable agonies, might suggest that the reference in the verse is to Job’s writhing under his pains till the clothes are twisted tightly about him.

Job 30:19-23

19–23. God’s great severity.

Job 30:20

  1. This verse reads, I cry unto thee and thou dost not hear me, I stand up, and thou lookest at me. The second clause describes Job’s importunity in his appeal, but the only reply is that God “looketh” at him, i. e. with silent indifference, or in stern severity.

Job 30:22

  1. dissolvest my substance] Rather, dissolvest me in the tempest; lit. in the roar of the storm. He is carried away and dissolved or dissipated, that is, destroyed in the whirlwind.

Job 30:23

  1. This verse explains Job 30:22 and supports it. Job knows that his afflictions can end in nothing but his death. house appointed for] Or, house of meeting for all living, i. e. the, grave, or Sheol, the place of the dead.

Job 30:24

  1. This obscure verse may mean, Yet doth not one stretch out the hand in his fall? When he is destroyed doth he not because of this utter a cry? The word fall is lit. heap, i. e. ruin. The verse, so interpreted means, Does not one stretch out his hand for help in his downfall? does he not when being destroyed, or, in his misfortune, utter a cry? Job explains how in his misery he cries unto God, it is the instinct of mankind. The following verse, referring to Job’s compassion when he saw others in trouble, suggests that he naturally looked for the same compassion to himself. The word cry (second clause), if referred to a different root, might mean riches (so ch. Job 36:19), and the verse would mean, surely one stretches not out his hand against a heap (of ruins), or, hath he riches from another’s (lit. his, or its) destruction?

Job characterizes himself as a heap of ruins, and, appealing to the Almighty, argues that against such a thing one does not stretch out a hostile hand; neither does one derive advantage to himself from another’s calamity. This sense fits into Job 30:25 very well—Job, so far from increasing misfortune which he saw, commiserated and helped it.

Job 30:25

  1. The compassion which Job seeks in his affliction it was his practice and nature to bestow.

Job 30:26

  1. This being his feeling towards those in trouble he looked that his own prosperity would continue; his afflictions were unexpected.

Job 30:27-30

27–30. Further details of his sufferings in his time of affliction. The tenses should be put in the present.

Job 30:28

  1. I went mourning] Better perhaps, I go blackened, not by the sun. The reference is to his appearance from his disease: he is black, but his blackness is not due to the sun, comp. Son 1:6.

Job 30:29

  1. The verse expands the words “I cry” in Job 30:28, I am a brother to the jackals, And a companion to the ostriches. The mournful howl of the jackals is elsewhere referred to, Micah 1:8; the ostrich also sends forth a weird, melancholy cry, particularly by night; hence in ch. Job 39:13 the female ostrich receives the name of “wailer.”

Job 30:30

  1. is black upon me] Or, is black and falls from me. The “heat” in his bones refers to his burning pains.

Job 30:31

  1. The joyous music of his former life is turned into wailing. The “organ” is the pipe, ch. Job 21:12; comp. Lamentations 5:15.

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