Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Job 13:28
And he, as a rotten thing, consumeth, as a garment that is moth eaten.
28. And he as a rotten thing ] Or, one who as a rotten thing. Job no more speaks of himself in the first person, but in the third, because he thinks of himself as one of the human race in general, which is feeble and short-lived.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
And he, as a rotten thing, consumeth – Noyes renders this, And I, like an abandoned thing, shall waste away. Dr. Good translates it, Well may he dissolve as corrupttion. Rosenmuller supposes that Job refers to himself by the word hu’ – he, and that having spoken of himself in the previous verses, he now changes the mode of speech, and speaks in the third person. In illustration of this, he refers to a passage in Euripides, Alcestes, verse 690. The Vulgate renders it in the first person, Qui quasi putredo consumendus sum. The design seems to be, to represent himself as an object not worthy such consent surveillance on the part of God. God set his mark upon him; watched him with a close vigilance and a steady eye – and yet he was watching one who was turning fast to corruption, and who would soon be gone. He regarded it as unworthy of God, to be so attentive in watching over so worthless an object. This is closely connected with the following chapter, and there should have been no interruption here. The allusion to himself as feeble and decaying, leads him into the beautiful description in the following chapter of the state of man in general. The connection is something like this: – I am afflicted and tried in various ways. My feet are in the stocks; my way is hedged up. I am weak, frail, and dying. But so it is with man universally. My condition is like that of the man at large, for
Man, the offspring of a woman,
Is short-lived, and is full of trouble.
As a rotten thing, – keraqab. The word raqab means rottenness, or caries of bones; Pro 12:4; Pro 14:30; Hos 5:12. Here it means anything that is going to decay, and the comparison is that of man to anything that is thus constantly decaying, and that will soon be wholly gone.
Consumeth. – Or rather decays, ybalah. The word balah is applied to that which falls away or decays, which is worn out and waxes old – as a garment; Deu 8:4; Isa 50:9; Isa 51:6.
As a garment that is moth-eaten – As a garment the moth consumes it. Hebrew On the word moth, and the sentiment here expressed, see the notes at Job 4:19.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Job 13:28
And he, as a rotten thing, consumeth, as a garment that is moth-eaten.
Rotten establishments
A revival of commercial confidence cannot be expected so long as rotten trading establishments continue to deceive the world. The cause of bad trade is that we have neglected personal religion, and have been almost eaten up by a selfish cancer. There would never be either a failure or a panic if all commercial men made the Lord Jesus their secret but active partner in every business transaction. We are apt to consider a defect in our character to be nothing more than as a spot of rust on a bright fender by the kitchen fire. It is really the fruit of a spiritual dry rot, which while we appear pious and respectable in outside show, is eating away the inner strength of true manhood. When love and benevolence fade it is on account of a rotten thing which consumeth the good actions of a Christian, as a moth consumes a garment. Years ago, our Christian light shone brightly–some of us were the life of religious meetings, the pioneer in saving the lost, the foremost in every good work. Once some of us felt that we had something to live for, but a stupor has come over us, and we have lost all anxiety to fulfil our destiny. Inquire into the private history of those who exhibit feebleness and decay in their Christian life, in the hope that we may discover our evils and obtain a remedy. Consider private prayer. The cause of neglect may be an indulged sin. Look at the motives of your actions. Look into the shop window of your religion. A word to those who are outwardly respectable, but are inwardly bound by a secret chain to some evil thing. It is of your own will that you are bound to your sin. You might escape, if you would. Have you chained yourself to sin? (W. Bird.)
Struggles of conscience
I. A little by way of consolation. We desire to comfort you who wish to feel more and more your sins. The best of men have prayed this prayer of the text before you. Remember that you never prayed like this years ago when you were a careless sinner. Then you did not want to know your guilt. Moreover, it is very probable that you do already feel your guilt, and what you are asking for you already have in measure realised.
II. A few words of instruction. See how God will answer such prayers. Sometimes by allowing a man to fall into more and more gross sin. Or by opening the eyes of the soul; not so much by providence, as by the mysterious agency of the Holy Spirit. How can we get to know our sins and the need of the Saviour?
1. Hear a personal ministry.
2. Study much the law of God.
3. Go to Calvary.
III. A few sentences by way of discrimination. Discriminate between the work of the Holy Spirit and the work of the devil. It is the work of the Spirit to make thee feel thyself a sinner, but it never was His work to make thee feel that Christ could forget thee. Satan always, works by trying to counterfeit the work of the Spirit. Then take care thou dost not try to make a righteousness out of thy feelings.
IV. A last point by way of exhortation. It is a very great sin not to feel your guilt, and not to mourn over it, but then it is one of the sins that Jesus Christ atoned on the tree. Come to Jesus, because it is He only who can give you that heart for which you seek; and because He can soften thy heart, and thou canst never soften it thyself. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
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Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 28. And he, as a rotten thing] I am like a vessel made of skin; rotten, because of old age, or like a garment corroded by the moth. So the Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic understood it. The word he may refer to himself.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
He; either,
1. Man, or Job, supposed to be Gods adversary in this contest. So he speaks of himself in the third person, as is usual in this and other sacred books. So the sense is, he, i.e. this poor frail creature, this carcass or body of mine, which possibly he pointed at with his finger,
consumeth or pineth away, &c. So he mentions here the effect of Gods severe proceedings against him, to wit, his consumption and utter destruction, which was making haste towards him. Or,
2. God, of whom he hitherto spoke in the second person, and now in the third person; such changes of persons being very frequent in poetical writings, such as this is. So he continueth the former discourse; and as before he mentioned Gods severe inquiry into his ways, and sentence against him, so here he describes the consequence and dreadful execution of it upon him; he, i.e. God, consumeth (for the verb is active) me as rottenness consumeth that in which it is, or as a rotten thing is consumed, and as a moth which eateth a garment.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
28. Job speaks of himself in thethird person, thus forming the transition to the general lotof man (Job 14:1; Psa 39:11;Hos 5:12).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And he as a rotten thing consumeth,…. This by some Jewish writers z is referred to and connected with the driven leaf and dry stubble Job compares himself to, Job 13:25; and so the sense is, that his body, which, for its frailty and weakness, is compared to such things, is like any rotten thing, a rotten tree, as Ben Melech; or any thing else that is rotten, that is consuming and wasting away, as Job’s body was, being clothed with worms and clods of dust:
as a garment that is moth eaten; a woollen garment, which gathers dust, out of which motifs arise; for dust, in wool and woollen garments produces moths, as Aristotle a and Pliny b observe; and a garment eaten by them, slowly, gradually, and insensibly, yet certainly, decays, falls to pieces, becomes useless, and not to be recovered; such was Job’s body, labouring under the diseases it did, and was every day more and more decaying, crumbling into dust, and just ready to drop into the grave; so that there was no need, and it might seem cruel, to lay greater and heavier afflictions on it: some interpreters make this “he” to be God himself who sometimes is as rottenness and a moth to men, in their persons, families, and estates; see Ho 5:12.
z R. Levi, Ben Gersom, & Bar Tzemach. a Hist. Animal. l. 5. c. 32. b Nat. Hist. l. 11. c. 35.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
28. Rotten thing Rottenness. Such as caries, or decay, in wood. The most destructive agencies work in silence. “A moth does mischief, and makes no sound; so the minds of the wicked, in that they neglect to take account of their losses, lose their soundness, as it were, without knowing it. For they lose innocency from the heart, truth from the lips, continency from the flesh, and, as time holds on, life from their age.” ST. GREGORY, Moralia.
And he Thus speaking of himself in the third person, Job paves the way to the sad estate of man as man, which forms the subject of the next chapter.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
REFLECTIONS
READER! let you and I pause over this view of Job’s confidence, and ask our own hearts whether, in our approaches now in ordinances, and looking forward to our appearance shortly before the judgment seat, when we shall stand before the throne, we have this well grounded assurance of acceptance in JESUS.
It is a grand question, and of all others the most important to be rightly known. Some are for postponing this enquiry, as if it could not be fully known until the last day. But let those who know not the scripture, neither the power of GOD, be content so to defer it. Let you and I see whether the knowledge is not attainable now, and under the conviction that it is, bring the blessed effects of it into present possession and enjoyment, that we may be the patient followers of them who now, through faith and patience, inherit the promises.
The LORD hath said he will be sanctified by all them that draw nigh unto him. Hence, when the HOLY GHOST is about to convince a sinner of sin, he sets up a tribunal in his very heart, and the work of grace begins in making the poor sinner to know and feel a sensibleness of his own lost and utterly undone estate, as it stands before GOD. Thus breaking up the fallow ground of the heart for the seed of righteousness, the HOLY GHOST next brings the convinced sinner acquainted with the person and work of the LORD JESUS CHRIST: and so powerfully convinceth him of the suitableness and all-sufficiency of JESUS for salvation, as to incline the sinner’s whole soul to the belief, and to the cordial and hearty acceptance of redemption in this blessed way of GOD’S own appointing. And when these blessed works are wrought in the poor sinner’s soul, like Job, he hastens to plead the whole before the throne. Reader! is this your privilege, your happiness, your confidence? If so, these precious things speaks for themselves. It is by these things, men live, and in this is the life of the soul. Oh! for grace thus to bring the LORD JESUS, and his finished work, in the arms of our faith in all our approaches to a mercy-seat in ordinances here below, in prayer, in communion, and in all our intercourse with GOD, while this side Jordan; and when we pass the river of death, this will be our sure and safe pleading against all the accusations of Satan, the fears of our own conscience, the terrors of GOD’S broken law, and the just judgments of Almighty GOD. Yes! blessed JESUS, I will now and forever say, Thou hast answered, and thou wilt answer for me, O LORD, my GOD!
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Job 13:28 And he, as a rotten thing, consumeth, as a garment that is moth eaten.
Ver. 28. And he, as a rotten thing, consumeth ] Heb. Waxeth old. He, that is, this poor man, this silly wretch, as David speaketh of himself, Psa 34:6 . Or this body of mine, as Job 19:26 ; Job pointing to it, as it is like he did there; and Paul, 1Co 15:53-54 . “As a rotten thing” (Heb. as rottenness), “consumeth.” When a thing once rotteth, as an apple, flesh, &c., it soon perisheth. Such is man, under pressing afflictions especially.
And as a garment that is moth eaten
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
He, &c. = they (my feet) waste away.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
And he: Job 30:17-19, Job 30:29, Job 30:30, Num 12:12
as a garment: Job 4:19, Psa 39:11, Hos 5:12
Reciprocal: Job 6:11 – What Job 33:21 – His flesh Isa 50:9 – they all Isa 51:8 – the moth Jam 5:2 – your garments
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Job 13:28. And he, as a rotten thing That is, man, as some commentators suppose, thinking that Job speaks of himself in the third person, and that the sense is, this poor frail creature, this carcass, or body of mine; consumeth Or wasteth away, and is destroyed; as a garment eaten by moths Others, however, interpret the words thus: He, that is, God, consumeth me (understanding the verb , jiblee, actively) as rottenness consumeth that in which it is, or, as a rotten thing is consumed, &c. Houbigants translation of the verse is, So that I am become like a thing consumed with rottenness; like a garment eaten up by the moth.