the Week of Proper 19 / Ordinary 24
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THE MESSAGE
Job 18:12
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- AmericanParallel Translations
His strength is depleted;disaster lies ready for him to stumble.
His strength shall be famished, Calamity shall be ready at his side.
His strength shall be hungerbitten, and destruction shall be ready at his side.
His strength is famished, and calamity is ready for his stumbling.
Hunger takes away their strength, and disaster is at their side.
Calamity is hungry for him, and misfortune is ready at his side.
"The strength [of the wicked] is famished and weakened, And disaster is ready at his side [if he stops].
"His strength is famished, And disaster is ready at his side.
His strength shall be famished, Calamity shall be ready at his side.
His strength shalbe famine: and destruction shalbe readie at his side.
His vigor is famished,And disaster is ready at his side.
His strength is depleted, and calamity is ready at his side.
Starving, they run, only to meet disaster,
"Trouble is hungry for him, calamity ready for his fall;
His strength is hunger-bitten, and calamity is ready at his side.
Disaster is hungry for them. Ruin stands close by, waiting for them to fall.
Let famine be his grief, let destruction be ready for his posterity.
They used to be rich, but now they go hungry; disaster stands and waits at their side.
His wealth will become hunger, and disaster is ready for his stumbling.
His strength shall be hunger-bitten, and calamity shall be ready at his side.
Honger shalbe his substaunce, and my?fortune shall hange vpon him.
His strength shall be hunger-bitten, And calamity shall be ready at his side.
His strength is made feeble for need of food, and destruction is waiting for his falling footstep.
His trouble shall be ravenous, and calamity shall be ready for his fall.
His strength shalbe hunger-bitten, and destruction shall be ready at his side.
Hunger shalbe his strength, and destruction shalbe redye at his side.
vex him with distressing hunger: and a signal destruction has been prepared for him.
His strength shall be hunger-bitten and calamity shall be ready for his halting.
His strengthe be maad feble bi hungur; and pouert asaile hise ribbis.
His strength shall be hunger-bitten, And calamity shall be ready at his side.
His strength shall be hunger-bitten, and destruction [shall be] ready at his side.
His strength is starved, And destruction is ready at his side.
Hunger depletes their strength, and calamity waits for them to stumble.
His strength leaves him because trouble is waiting for him at every side.
Their strength is consumed by hunger, and calamity is ready for their stumbling.
Let his strength be famished, and, calamity, be ready at his side;
Let his strength be wasted with famine, and let hunger invade his ribs.
His strength is hunger-bitten, and calamity is ready for his stumbling.
Hungry is his sorrow, And calamity is ready at his side.
"His strength is famished, And calamity is ready at his side.
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
hungerbitten: Job 15:23, Job 15:24, 1 Samuel 2:5, 1 Samuel 2:36, Psalms 34:10, Psalms 109:10
destruction: Psalms 7:12-14, 1 Thessalonians 5:3, 2 Peter 2:3
Reciprocal: Job 18:15 - dwell Luke 9:7 - Herod
Cross-References
Abraham fell flat on his face. And then he laughed, thinking, "Can a hundred-year-old man father a son? And can Sarah, at ninety years, have a baby?"
Abraham hurried into the tent to Sarah. He said, "Hurry. Get three cups of our best flour; knead it and make bread."
Then Abraham ran to the cattle pen and picked out a nice plump calf and gave it to the servant who lost no time getting it ready. Then he got curds and milk, brought them with the calf that had been roasted, set the meal before the men, and stood there under the tree while they ate.
Abraham and Sarah were old by this time, very old. Sarah was far past the age for having babies. Sarah laughed within herself, "An old woman like me? Get pregnant? With this old man of a husband?"
God said to Abraham, "Why did Sarah laugh saying, ‘Me? Have a baby? An old woman like me?' Is anything too hard for God ? I'll be back about this time next year and Sarah will have a baby."
God continued, "The cries of the victims in Sodom and Gomorrah are deafening; the sin of those cities is immense. I'm going down to see for myself, see if what they're doing is as bad as it sounds. Then I'll know."
Cultivate Inner Beauty The same goes for you wives: Be good wives to your husbands, responsive to their needs. There are husbands who, indifferent as they are to any words about God, will be captivated by your life of holy beauty. What matters is not your outer appearance—the styling of your hair, the jewelry you wear, the cut of your clothes—but your inner disposition. Cultivate inner beauty, the gentle, gracious kind that God delights in. The holy women of old were beautiful before God that way, and were good, loyal wives to their husbands. Sarah, for instance, taking care of Abraham, would address him as "my dear husband." You'll be true daughters of Sarah if you do the same, unanxious and unintimidated.
Gill's Notes on the Bible
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" w; 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, &c. which is threatening, or any mortal wound or stab there, such as Joab gave Amass under the fifth rib.
u רעב "fames", Beza. w לצלעו "costae ejus", Montanus, Vatablus, Grotius, Schultens.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
His strength shall be hungerbitten - Shall be exhausted by hunger or famine.
And destruction shall be ready at his side - Hebrew “Shall be fitted” נכוּן nākûn “to his side.” Some have supposed that this refers to some disease, like the pleurisy, that would adhere closely to his side. So Jerome understands it. Schultens has quoted some passages from Arabic poets, in which calamities are represented as “breaking the side.” Bildad refers probably, to some heavy judgments that would crush a man; such that the ribs, or the human frame, could not bear; and the meaning is, that a wicked man would be certainly crushed by misfortune.