Job 8:10-20

10 Those people will teach you and tell you and speak about what they know.
11 Papyrus plants cannot grow where there is no swamp, and reeds cannot grow tall without water.
12 While they are still growing and not yet cut, they will dry up quicker than grass.
13 That is what will happen to those who forget God; the hope of the wicked will be gone.
14 What they hope in is easily broken; what they trust is like a spider's web.
15 They lean on the spider's web, but it breaks. They grab it, but it does not hold up.
16 They are like well-watered plants in the sunshine that spread their roots all through the garden.
17 They wrap their roots around a pile of rocks and look for a place among the stones.
18 But if a plant is torn from its place, then that place rejects it and says, 'I never saw you.'
19 Now joy has gone away; other plants grow up from the same dirt.
20 "Surely God does not reject the innocent or give strength to those who do evil.

Job 8:10-20 Meaning and Commentary

INTRODUCTION TO JOB 8

In this chapter Bildad enters the discussion with Job; proceeding upon the same lines as Eliphaz, he reproves him for his long and loud talk, Job 8:1,2; asserts the justice of God in his providence, of which the taking away of Job's children by death for their transgression was an instance and proof, Job 8:3,4; and suggests, that if Job, who had not sinned so heinously as they had, and therefore was spared, would make his submission to God, and ask forgiveness of him, and behave for the future with purity and uprightness, he need not doubt but God would immediately appear and exert himself on his behalf, and bless him and his with prosperity and plenty, Job 8:5-7; for this was his ordinary way of dealing with the children of men, for the truth of which he refers him to the records of former times, and to the sentiments of ancient men, who lived longer, and were more knowing than he and his friends, on whose opinion he does not desire him to rely, Job 8:8-10; and then by various similes used by the ancients, or taken from them by Bildad, or which were of his own inventing and framing, are set forth the short lived enjoyments, and vain hope and confidence, of hypocrites and wicked men; as by the sudden withering of rushes and flags of themselves, that grow in mire and water, even in their greenness, before they are cut down, or cropped by any hand, Job 8:11-13; and by the spider's web, which cannot stand and endure when leaned upon and held, Job 8:14,15; and by a flourishing tree destroyed, and seen no more, Job 8:16-19; and the chapter is concluded with an observation and maxim, that he and the rest of his friends set out upon, and were tenacious of; that God did not afflict good men in any severe manner, but filled them with joy and gladness; and that he would not long help and prosper wicked men, but bring them and their dwelling place to nought; and this being the case of Job, he suggests that he was such an one, Job 8:20-22.

Scripture taken from the New Century Version. Copyright © 1987, 1988, 1991 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.