Job 24:5-15

5 And they have departed like asses in the field, having gone forth on my account according to their own order: his bread is sweet to little ones.
6 They have reaped a field that was not their own before the time: the poor have laboured in the vineyards of the ungodly without pay and without food.
7 They have caused many naked to sleep without clothes, and they have taken away the covering of their body.
8 They are wet with the drops of the mountains: they have embraced the rock, because they had no shelter.
9 They have snatched the fatherless from the breast, and have afflicted the outcast.
10 And they have wrongfully caused to sleep without clothing, and taken away the morsel of the hungry.
11 They have unrighteously laid wait in narrow places, and have not known the righteous way.
12 Who have cast forth poor from the city and their own houses, and the soul of the children has groaned aloud.
13 Why then has he not visited these? forasmuch as they were upon the earth, and took no notice, and they knew not the way of righteousness, neither have they walked in their paths?
14 But having known their works, he delivered them into darkness: and in the night one will be as a thief:
15 and the eye of the adulterer has watched the darkness, saying, Eye shall not perceive me, and he puts a covering on his face.

Job 24:5-15 Meaning and Commentary

INTRODUCTION TO JOB 24

This chapter contains the second part of Job's answer to the last discourse of Eliphaz, in which he shows that wicked men, those of the worst characters, prosper in the world, and go through it with impunity; he lays down this as a certain truth, that though no time is hid from God, yet they that are most familiar with him, and know most of him, do not see, and cannot observe, any days of his for judging and punishing wicked men in, this life, Job 24:1; and instances in men guilty of injustice, violence, oppression, cruelty, and inhumanity, to their neighbours, and yet God lays not folly to them, or charges them with sin, and punishes them for it, Job 24:2-12; and in persons that commit the most atrocious crimes in secret, such as murderers, adulterers, and thieves, Job 24:13-17; he allows that there is a curse upon their portion, and that the grave shall consume them, and they shall be remembered no more, Job 24:18-20; and because of their ill treatment of others, though they may be in safety and prosperity, and be exalted for a while, they shall be brought low and cut off by death, but generally speaking are not punished in this life, Job 24:21-24; and concludes with the greatest assurance of being in the right, and having truth on his side, Job 24:25.

The Brenton translation of the Septuagint is in the public domain.