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Verse Takeaways
1
A Surprisingly Peaceful End
Job uses a powerful image: just as drought and heat make snowmelt vanish, so the grave (Sheol) consumes sinners. Commentators like Albert Barnes emphasize that this simile depicts a quiet, gradual, and peaceful death, not a violent one. This supports Job's argument that the wicked often do not suffer a dramatic, punishing end in this life, contrary to what his friends claim.
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Job
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5
18th Century
Theologian
Drought and heat consume the snow-waters—Margin, “violently take” (see the notes at Job 6:17). The word rendered “consume,” and in …
19th Century
Bishop
So does the grave those who have sinned. —Job had already spoken of the sudden death of the wicked as a blessing ([Reference Job 9…
19th Century
Preacher
He beholdeth not the way of the vineyards. Drought and heat consume the snow waters: so doth the grave those which have sinned. The womb shall …
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17th Century
Pastor
Drought and heat consume the snow waters
Melt the snow into water, and dry up that, which is done easily, quickly, a…
17th Century
Minister
Sometimes, how gradual is the decay, how quiet the departure of a wicked person, how honoured he is, and how soon all his cruelties and oppressions…