Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Job 18:3
Wherefore are we counted as beasts, [and] reputed vile in your sight?
3. and reputed vile ] lit. and are unclean. Bildad describes what Job’s treatment of his friends suggests to him as Job’s idea of them. The reference is to the passages, ch. Job 17:4; Job 17:10, and the words “clean of hands” ch. Job 17:9, which Job had used of himself and other unjustly persecuted men, cf. Psa 73:22.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Wherefore are we counted as beasts? – Why are we treated in your remarks as if we had no sense, and were unworthy of sound argument in reply to what we say? It is possible that there may be reference here to what Job said Job 12:7 – that even the beasts could give them information about God. But the general idea is, that Job had not treated their views with the attention which they deserved, but had regarded them as unworthy of notice.
And reputed vile – The word used here ( tamah) means to be unclean, or polluted; and the idea is, that Job regarded them as worthless or impious.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Verse 3. Counted as beasts] Thou treatest us as if we had neither reason nor understanding.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
As beasts, i.e. ignorant, blockish, and stupid men, Job 17:4,10.
Vile, Heb. polluted, or unclean, i.e. not fit to be conversed or discoursed with; or contemptible, as such things are.
In your sight; either,
1. To your faces, or in your own hearing. Or,
2. In thy sight or judgment, O Job; so he speaks of Job in the plural number, as he did Job 18:2.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
3. beastsalluding to what Jobsaid (Job 12:7; so Isa1:3).
vilerather from aHebrew root, “to stop up.” “Stubborn,”answering to the stupidity implied in the parallel first clause[UMBREIT]. Why should wegive occasion by your empty speeches for our being mutually reputed,in the sight of Job and one another, as unintelligent? (Job 17:4;Job 17:10).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Wherefore are we counted as beasts,…. This seems to refer to
Job 12:7; where Job sends them to the beasts, to get knowledge and instruction; and therefore it was concluded he reckoned them as such, and put them on a level with them, yea, made them inferior to them; or to Job 17:4; where they are represented as destitute of wisdom and understanding, and therefore it is supposed were counted by Job no other than as beasts. Man, by the fall, is indeed become like them, and some are more brutish than they, and all are brutish as to spiritual knowledge and understanding; and those that are most sensible of themselves are ready to acknowledge their ignorance, that they are more brutish than any, and especially are as a beast before God; and particularly with respect to knowledge of the methods of Providence, in regard to his dealings with the righteous and wicked; see Ps 73:22; and which was the case in controversy between Job and his friends; but yet self-sufficient persons do not care to have their understandings in anything called in question, but like the Pharisees say, “are we blind also?” Joh 9:40; and take it very hard that they should be reckoned like beasts, void of understanding, when they are the people, and wisdom will die with them:
[and] reputed vile in your sight? as wicked and profligate persons, the most abandoned of mankind, such as are justly despised by good men, see Ps 15:4; or “unclean” h, filthy, polluted, and defiled, as all men are by nature, and as they are in all the powers and faculties of their souls; nor can they make themselves clean, their hearts or their hands; nothing short of the grace of God, and blood of Christ, can cleanse from sin; yet self-righteous persons think themselves clean and pure when they are not washed from their sins, and take it ill of others to be reputed unclean persons: or “shut” i, stopped up, as the hearts of men are from God and Christ, and the true knowledge of them, and divine things, until opened by him who has the key of the house of David, and opens, and no man shuts; or “hidden” k, referring to Job 17:4; having a covering over their hearts, and a vail over the eyes of their understandings, so that the things of Providence were hid from them, as sometimes the things of grace are from the wise and prudent; but to be thought that this was their case is resented by Bildad.
h “immundi”, Drusius, Piscator, Michaelis; so Broughton. i “Clausi sumu”, Montanus; “obturati sumus”, Hebraei, in Mercer. k So the Targum.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
(3) Wherefore are we counted as beasts.Referring to Jobs words (Job. 13:4, &c., Job. 16:2, &c.). In this chapter there is a marked increase in his harshness and violence. It has, however, a certain resemblance to Job 8, inasmuch as Bildad works out a simile here, as he did there; and in Job. 18:16 the two similes touch. In Job. 18:2, which resembles Job. 8:2, we must supply, as the Authorised Version does, Will it be ere? or the negative, Will ye not make? &c., or else we must render, How long [will ye speak thus]? Make an end of words, &c. The plural is used because Job is regarded as the representative of a class, or else as we use the plural instead of the singular in addressing a person.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
3. As beasts Only by implication, Job 12:7-8; Job 17:4.
Vile Stupid.
Job 18:3. Wherefore are we counted as beasts? &c. This refers to the 10th verse in the former chapter, where Job had, indeed, treated them very freely.
Job 18:3 Wherefore are we counted as beasts, [and] reputed vile in your sight?
Ver. 3. Wherefore are we counted as beasts, &c. ] Here he taxeth Job with pride and arrogance; grounding upon those words of his taken at the worst, Job 12:7 ; Job 17:4 ; Job 17:10 , and not considering his case, that he was full of pain, which maketh wise men touchy (as oppression maketh them mad, Ecc 7:7 ), and that they had sorely provoked him by their bitter taunts and scurrilous invectives, which called for so sharp a currycomb. Pessime autem habet hypocrisin, si contemnatur, Hypocrisy loves not to be sighted, saith Brentius here. And Gregory upon this text saith, that in Bildad heretics are set forth, who stomach it much that the faithful take upon them to reprove them, as carried away by error; as if the knowledge of the truth resided in themselves only, and all others had no more understanding than beasts. “This people which know not the law are cursed,” say those Pharisees, Joh 7:49 . “Ye know nothing at all,” saith Caiaphas to his assessors, Joh 11:49 . The Gnostics and Illuminates referred to themselves as being the only knowing men. But if Bildad had been right, he would neither have so far misconstrued Job’s words nor yet have been behind to fool himself, as Asaph in a similar case did, Psa 73:22 , where he useth the plural of the words here used in the singular, calling himself, Behemoth, id est, magnam et crassam bestiam, a great and a gross beast.
And reputed vile in your sight? Wherefore . . . ? Figure of speech Erotesis. App-6.
vile: or, stupid.
your sight. Septuagint and Syriac read “thine eyes”.
Wherefore: Job 12:7, Job 12:8, Job 17:4, Job 17:10, Psa 73:22, Ecc 3:18, Rom 12:10
Reciprocal: Deu 25:3 – vile unto thee
Job 18:3-4. Wherefore are we counted as beasts? That is, ignorant and stupid men, Job 17:4; Job 17:10; and reputed vile in your sight Hebrew, , nitmeinu, polluted or unclean; that is, not fit to be conversed with, or contemptible, as such things are. He teareth himself in his anger
That is, Job does, as if he had said, O thou that tearest thyself, thou complainest of us for vexing thee with our speeches, when, in truth, thou art thy own greatest tormentor. Shall the earth be forsaken for thee? Shall God, for thy sake, or to prevent thy complaints and clamours, give over the government of the earth and men and things in it, and suffer all things to fall out by chance and promiscuously, to good and bad men, without any regard to his truth, wisdom, or justice? And shall the rock be removed out of its place? Shall the counsels of God, which are more firm and immoveable than rocks, and the whole course of his providence, be altered to comply with thy fancies or humours?
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments