Job 6:16

16 From melting ice and snow cascading out of the mountains,

Job 6:16 Meaning and Commentary

Job 6:16

Which are blackish by reason of the ice
When frozen over, they look of a blackish colour, and is what is called a black frost; and these either describe Job and his domestics, as some F8 think whom Eliphaz and his two friends compared to the above streams water passed away from, or passed by and neglected, and showed no friendship to; who were in black, mournful and rueful circumstances, through the severe hand of God upon them. The word is rendered, "those which mourn", ( Job 5:11 ) ; or rather the friends of Job compared to foul and troubled waters frozen over which cannot be so well discerned, or which were black through being frozen, and which describes the inward frame of their minds the foulness of their spirits the blackness of their hearts, though they outwardly appeared otherwise, as follows:

[and] wherein the snow is hid;
or "on whom the snow" falling, and lying on heaps, "hides" F9, or covers; so Job's friends, according to this account, were, though black within as a black frost yet white without as snow; they appeared, in their looks and words at first as candid, kind, and generous, but proved the reverse.


FOOTNOTES:

F8 So Michaelis.
F9 (glv Mlety wmyle) "super quibus accumulatur nix", Beza, "tegit se, q. d. multa nive teguntur", Drusius; "the frost is hidden by the snow", so Sephorno; or rather "the black and frozen waters".

Job 6:16 In-Context

14 "When desperate people give up on God Almighty, their friends, at least, should stick with them.
15 But my brothers are fickle as a gulch in the desert - one day they're gushing with water
16 From melting ice and snow cascading out of the mountains,
17 But by midsummer they're dry, gullies baked dry in the sun.
18 Travelers who spot them and go out of their way for a drink, end up in a waterless gulch and die of thirst.
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.