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Even young children despise me. If I arise, they speak against me.
Verse Takeaways
1
The Ultimate Humiliation
Commentators explain that in a society where age commanded respect, being despised by children was the ultimate humiliation. Job, who was once honored by elders (Job 29:8), now finds that even the youngest and lowliest members of society mock him when he stands, signifying a complete and devastating loss of his social standing.
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Book Overview
Job
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5
18th Century
Presbyterian
Yes, young children – Margin, or “the wicked.” This difference between the text and the margin arises from the ambiguity of the original w…
19th Century
Baptist
There is no skin on the teeth, or hardly any, and, therefore, Job means that there was next to nothing of him left, like the skin of his teeth.
17th Century
Reformed Baptist
Yea, young children despised me Having related what he met with within doors from those in his own house, the strangers and pr…
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How sorrowful are Job's complaints! What is the fire of hell but the wrath of God? Seared consciences will feel it in the afterlife, but do not fea…
13th Century
Catholic
In the previous discourse, it seems Bildad intended two things. First, he intended to refute Job for his stupidity, pride, and anger ([Reference Jo…