Job 30:9

9 But now I am turned into the song of them, and I am made a proverb to them.

Job 30:9 Meaning and Commentary

Job 30:9

And now am I their song
The subject of their song, of whom they sung ballads about the streets, in public places, and at their festivals and merriments, as Christ the antitype of Job was the song of the drunkard, ( Psalms 69:12 ) ; see ( Lamentations 3:14 ) ; or the meaning may be, they rejoiced in his afflictions and calamities, and made themselves merry with them, which was cruel and inhuman, as David's enemies did in his, and those abject, mean, base people, like those that derided Job: and so the Edomites rejoiced over the children of Judah, in the day of their destruction, and as the inhabitants of Popish countries will rejoice over the witnesses when slain, and make merry, ( Psalms 35:15 Psalms 35:16 ) ( Obadiah 1:12 ) ( Revelation 11:9 Revelation 11:10 ) ;

yea, I am their byword:
all their talk was about him continually, and at every turn would use his name proverbially for an hypocrite, or a wicked man; and thus Christ, of whom Job was a type, became a proverb in the mouth of the Jews, ( Psalms 69:11 ) ; and as the Jews themselves now are with others, ( Jeremiah 24:9 ) .

Job 30:9 In-Context

7 Which were glad among such things (And they were happy there), and they areckoned (it) as delights to be under bushes.
8 These were the sons of fools, and of unnoble men, and utterly appearing not on [the] earth. (They were the sons of fools, and of unnoble men, and were soon driven out of the land.)
9 But now I am turned into the song of them, and I am made a proverb to them.
10 They hold me abominable, and they flee far from me, and dread not to spit on my face (and do not fear to spit in my face).
11 For God hath opened his arrow case, and he hath tormented me, and he hath put a bridle into my mouth.
Copyright © 2001 by Terence P. Noble. For personal use only.