Job 18:12

12 The hungry grave is ready to gobble them up for supper,

Job 18:12 Meaning and Commentary

Job 18:12

His strength shall be hungerbitten
Or "shall be famine" {u}, or hunger, that is, shall be weakened by it; famine is a sore evil, and greatly weakens thee natural strength of men; want of food will soon bring down the strength of the strongest man, when the stay and the staff, the sustenance and support of man's nature is taken from him: many of the Jewish writers, by "his strength", understand his children, who are, as Jacob said of Reuben, his might, and the beginning of his strength, ( Genesis 49:3 ) ; and when grown up are his protection and defence; and for these to be distressed with hunger, or destroyed by famine, is a sore judgment; so the Targum paraphrases it, his firstborn son; Jarchi interprets it, his son; and Ben Gersom, his seed or offspring:

and destruction [shall be] ready at his side;
or "to his rib" F23; that is, his wife, as the Targum and Jarchi explain it, the Jews calling a man's wife his rib, because the woman was originally made out of one of the ribs of man; and if this could be thought to be the sense of the word here, and what is given by them of the former clause, both make up a complete account of the destruction of a wicked man's family, his wife and children: but rather it signifies some calamity, distress, and trouble at hand, ready prepared for wicked men, just going to be inflicted on them; for God has stores of vengeance for them, and has made ready his bow, and prepared instruments and arrows of death and destruction for them, as well as there is everlasting fire prepared, and blackness of darkness reserved for them in the world to come; for it can hardly be thought that this should be understood literally of any disease in the side, as the pleurisy which is threatening, or any mortal wound or stab there, such as Joab gave Amass under the fifth rib.


FOOTNOTES:

F21 (ber) "fames", Beza.
F23 (welul) "costae ejus", Montanus, Vatablus, Grotius, Schultens.

Job 18:12 In-Context

10 They trip on ropes they've hidden, and fall into pits they've dug themselves.
11 Terrors come at them from all sides. They run helter-skelter.
12 The hungry grave is ready to gobble them up for supper,
13 To lay them out for a gourmet meal, a treat for ravenous Death.
14 They are snatched from their home sweet home and marched straight to the death house.
Published by permission. Originally published by NavPress in English as THE MESSAGE: The Bible in Contemporary Language copyright 2002 by Eugene Peterson. All rights reserved.