Job 31:12

"For that would be a heinous crime. Yes, it would be an iniquity to be punished by the judges,"

Key Reflection

In this verse, Job acknowledges that committing adultery is not just a personal sin but also a grave offense against societal norms and justice, warranting punishment by the judges. Such a crime defies divine order and invites severe consequences, both from human and divine perspectives.

From the Scholars: Barnes' Notes

For it is a fire that consumeth to destruction -This may mean that such an offence would be a crime that would provoke God to send destruction, like a consuming fire upon the offender (Rosenmuller and Noyes), or more likely it is designed to be descriptive of the nature of the sin itself. According to this, the meaning is, that indulgence in this sin tends wholly to ruin and destroy a man. It is like a consuming fire, which sweeps away everything before it. It is destructive to the body, the morals, the soul. Accordingly, it may be remarked that there is no one vice which pours such desolation through the soul as licentiousness. See Rush on the Diseases of the Mind.

More from Job 31

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