Job 18

Job 18

Bildad is enraged by Job's words and demands that Job stop treating them as foolish. Bildad delivers a terrifying description of the fate of the wicked, suggesting that Job's calamities perfectly match this description. He portrays the wicked man as one who is entangled in a hidden trap, whose light is extinguished, whose children scatter, and whose memory is erased from the earth. Bildad concludes that this awful fate is clearly the dwelling of the unrighteous, subtly suggesting that Job must be among them.

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