Job 30 - Dummelow's Commentary on the Bible

Bible Comments
  • Job 30:1-31 open_in_new

    Job's Present Misery

    Job bitterly contrasts his present with his past condition, as described in Job 29. It must be borne in mind that Job was now outcast and beggared.

    1-8. Job complains that he is insulted by abject outcasts, the class of broken men who are expelled from respectable tribes and live by thieving. They are common E. of Jordan in the nomadic regions.

    2b. RV 'Men in whom ripe age' (or vigour) 'is perished.'

  • Job 30:3 open_in_new

    Solitary] RV 'gaunt.'

    Flying, etc.] render, 'Fugitives in the desert on the eve of want and ruin.'

  • Job 30:4 open_in_new

    Render, 'They pluck salt-wort' (a plant sometimes eaten by the abjectly poor) 'among the bushes, and the roots of the white broom to warm them.' This broom is a distinctive shrub of the southern desert hills: cp. 1 Kings 19:4; RM.

  • Job 30:7 open_in_new

    Render, 'They snore under bushes and huddle under thorny shrubs.'

    8b. RY 'They were scourged out of the land.'

    9-14. A description of a poor old man mobbed and worried by the rabble. Or possibly 11-15 refers to God as assailing him with troops of afflictions. The Heb. is very obscure.

  • Job 30:11 open_in_new

    RV renders, 'For he hath loosed his cord, and afflicted me, and they have cast off the bridle before me.' RM gives another reading, 'my cord (or bowstring).' Perhaps 'loosed my bowstring' is the best of these alternatives: cp. Job 29:20. Conder suggests,' For they spy the (tent) door and insult me, and stretch out a headstall before my face.' This was an insult and one which is still customary. The headstall means that the man is regarded as an ass.

  • Job 30:12 open_in_new

    Conder suggests, 'The brood (of boys) stand upon my right hand (an insult, for the place of honour was on the right hand). They trip up my feet and jostle me on the dangerous paths.' They no longer make room for him. The last clause is more usually regarded as a metaphor from a siege; so RV 'And they cast up against me their ways of destruction.'

  • Job 30:15 open_in_new

    My soul] RV 'my honour.'

    16-31. Job laments his misery of mind and body, and the severity of God.

  • Job 30:22 open_in_new

    Figurative of the storm of God's anger. Dissolvest my substance] RV' dissolvest me in the tempest.'

  • Job 30:23 open_in_new

    House appointed] RM 'house of meeting.' Job is convinced that his sufferings can only end in death.

  • Job 30:24 open_in_new

    Render, 'Doth not a sinking man stretch out his hand, and cry out in his calamity?'

    27a. Figurative of his agitated condition.

    27b. Prevented me] RV 'are come upon me.'

    28a. RM 'I go blackened, but not by the sun'; the result perhaps of his disease: see Job 30:30.

    28b. RV 'I stand up in the assembly and cry for help.'

  • Job 30:31 open_in_new

    Organ] RV 'pipe.' Job's happiness is turned to sorrow.

    These Chapter s form a section by themselves, in which Job reviews his life. He first of all draws a picture of his past prosperous career, when he was happy and respected (Job 29). With this he contrasts his present condition, when men he once despised now hold him in contempt, and he is in pain and sorrow and disgrace (Job 30). Finally, he reasserts his innocence of wickedness in any form (Job 31).