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Contemporary English Version

Job 21:33

the earth welcomes them home, while crowds mourn.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Death;   Wicked (People);  

Dictionaries:

- Charles Buck Theological Dictionary - Greatness of God;   Hypocrisy;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Job, the Book of;   Suffering;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Argob;   Wealth;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Argob (2);   Clod;   Job, Book of;  

Parallel Translations

Christian Standard Bible®
The dirt on his grave is sweet to him.Everyone follows behind him,and those who go before him are without number.
Hebrew Names Version
The clods of the valley shall be sweet to him. All men shall draw after him, As there were innumerable before him.
King James Version
The clods of the valley shall be sweet unto him, and every man shall draw after him, as there are innumerable before him.
English Standard Version
The clods of the valley are sweet to him; all mankind follows after him, and those who go before him are innumerable.
New Century Version
The dirt in the valley seems sweet to them. Everybody follows after them, and many people go before them.
New English Translation
The clods of the torrent valley are sweet to him; behind him everybody follows in procession, and before him goes a countless throng.
Amplified Bible
"The [dirt] clods of the valley are sweet to him [and gently cover him], Moreover, all men will follow after him [to a grave], While countless ones go before him.
New American Standard Bible
"The clods of the valley will gently cover him; Moreover, all mankind will follow after him, While countless others go before him.
World English Bible
The clods of the valley shall be sweet to him. All men shall draw after him, As there were innumerable before him.
Geneva Bible (1587)
The slimie valley shalbe sweete vnto him, and euery man shal draw after him, as before him there were innumerable.
Legacy Standard Bible
The clods of the valley will gently cover him;Moreover, all men will draw up after him,While countless ones go before him.
Berean Standard Bible
The clods of the valley are sweet to him; everyone follows behind him, and those before him are without number.
Complete Jewish Bible
the clods of the valley are sweet to him; so everyone follows his example, just as before him were countless others.
Darby Translation
The clods of the valley are sweet unto him; and every man followeth suit after him, as there were innumerable before him.
Easy-to-Read Version
So even the soil in the valley will be pleasant for them, and thousands of people will join their funeral procession.
George Lamsa Translation
The depths of the valley shall swallow him, and many shall be drawn in after him, even as there are innumerable ahead of him.
Good News Translation
thousands join the funeral procession, and even the earth lies gently on their bodies.
Lexham English Bible
The clods of the valley are sweet to him; everyone will follow after him, and before him they are innumerable.
Literal Translation
And the clods of the valley shall be sweet to him; and every man shall draw after him; and there is not any number before him.
Miles Coverdale Bible (1535)
The shal he be fayne to be buried amoge the stones by the broke syde. All men must folowe him, & there are innumerable gone before him.
American Standard Version
The clods of the valley shall be sweet unto him, And all men shall draw after him, As there were innumerable before him.
Bible in Basic English
The earth of the valley covering his bones is sweet to him, and all men come after him, as there were unnumbered before him.
JPS Old Testament (1917)
The clods of the valley are sweet unto him, and all men draw after him, as there were innumerable before him.
King James Version (1611)
The cloudes of the valley shalbe sweete vnto him, and euery man shall draw after him, as there are innumerable before him.
Bishop's Bible (1568)
Then shal the slymie valley be sweet vnto him, all men also must folowe him, as there are innumerable gone before him.
Brenton's Septuagint (LXX)
The stones of the valley have been sweet to him, and every man shall depart after him, and there are innumerable ones before him.
English Revised Version
The clods of the valley shall be sweet unto him, and all men shall draw after him, as there were innumerable before him.
Wycliffe Bible (1395)
He was swete to the `stoonys, ether filthis, of helle; and drawith ech man aftir hym, and vnnoumbrable men bifor him.
Update Bible Version
The clods of the valley shall be sweet to him, And all of man shall draw after him, As there were innumerable before him.
Webster's Bible Translation
The clods of the valley will be sweet to him, and every man will draw after him, as [there are] innumerable before him.
New King James Version
The clods of the valley shall be sweet to him; Everyone shall follow him, As countless have gone before him.
New Living Translation
A great funeral procession goes to the cemetery. Many pay their respects as the body is laid to rest, and the earth gives sweet repose.
New Life Bible
The earth of the valley will be sweet to him. All men will follow after him, and those who go before him are too many to number.
New Revised Standard
The clods of the valley are sweet to them; everyone will follow after, and those who went before are innumerable.
J.B. Rotherham Emphasized Bible
Pleasant to him are the mounds of the torrent-bed, - and, after him, doth every man march, as, before him, there were without number.
Douay-Rheims Bible
He hath been acceptable to the gravel of Cocytus, and he shall draw every man after him, and there are innumerable before him.
Revised Standard Version
The clods of the valley are sweet to him; all men follow after him, and those who go before him are innumerable.
Young's Literal Translation
Sweet to him have been the clods of the valley, And after him every man he draweth, And before him there is no numbering.
New American Standard Bible (1995)
"The clods of the valley will gently cover him; Moreover, all men will follow after him, While countless ones go before him.

Contextual Overview

27 My friends, I know that you are plotting against me. 28 You ask, "Where is the home of that important person who does so much evil?" 29 Everyone, near and far, agrees 30 that those who do wrong never suffer disaster, when God becomes angry. 31 No one points out their sin or punishes them. 32 Then at their funerals, they are highly praised; 33 the earth welcomes them home, while crowds mourn. 34 But empty, meaningless words are the comfort you offer me.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

sweet: Job 3:17, Job 3:18

every man: Job 30:23, Genesis 3:19, Ecclesiastes 1:4, Ecclesiastes 8:8, Ecclesiastes 12:7, Hebrews 9:27

Reciprocal: Job 6:10 - Then Job 7:21 - sleep Job 17:14 - corruption Ecclesiastes 8:10 - so

Cross-References

Genesis 4:26
Later, Seth had a son and named him Enosh. About this time people started worshiping the Lord .
Genesis 12:8
Abram traveled to the hill country east of Bethel and camped between Bethel and Ai, where he built another altar and worshiped the Lord .
Genesis 26:23
Isaac went on to Beersheba,
Genesis 26:25
Isaac built an altar there and worshiped the Lord . Then he set up camp, and his servants started digging a well.
Genesis 26:33
So Isaac named the well Shibah, and the town is still called Beersheba.
Deuteronomy 16:21
Moses said to Israel: When you build the altar for offering sacrifices to the Lord your God, don't set up a sacred pole for the worship of the goddess Asherah.
Deuteronomy 33:27
The eternal God is our hiding place; he carries us in his arms. When God tells you to destroy your enemies, he will make them run.
Judges 3:7
The Israelites sinned against the Lord by forgetting him and worshiping idols of Baal and Astarte.
Psalms 90:2
You have always been God— long before the birth of the mountains, even before you created the earth and the world.
Isaiah 40:28
Don't you know? Haven't you heard? The Lord is the eternal God, Creator of the earth. He never gets weary or tired; his wisdom cannot be measured.

Gill's Notes on the Bible

The clods of the valley shall be sweet unto him,.... Where he lies interred, alluding to places of interment at the bottom of hills, and mountains, and under rocks, in plains and vales, see

Genesis 35:8; and by this strong figure is signified, that the dead wicked man, lying in the clods of the valley in his grave, is in great repose, and in the utmost ease and quiet, feels no pains of body, nor has any uneasiness of mind concerning what befalls his posterity after his death, Job 14:21;

and every man shall draw after him, as [there are] innumerable before him; which either respects the pomp at his funeral procession, vast numbers being drawn and gathered together to gaze at it, as is common at grand funerals; and particularly, it may describe the multitude that go before the corpse, as well as those that follow after it; but rather as he is before represented as brought to his grave, and laid there, this clause is added, to denote the universality of death, it being common to all; thousands and ten thousands, even a number which no man can number, have gone before him by death into another world, as every man that comes after him must; and so this may prevent an objection to the grandeur of a wicked man, that after all he dies; but then death is no other than what is common to all men, to the vast multitudes that have gone before, and will be the case of all that come after, to the end of the world.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

The clods of the valley shall be sweet unto him - That is, he shall lie as calmly as others in the grave. The language here is taken from that delusion of which we all partake when we reflect on death. We think of “ourselves” in the grave, and it is almost impossible to divest our minds of the idea, that we shall be conscious there, and be capable of understanding our condition. The idea here is, that the person who was thus buried, might be sensible of the quiet of his abode, and enjoy, in some measure, the honors of the beautiful or splendid tomb, in which he was buried, and the anxious care of his friends. So we “think” of our friends, though we do not often “express” it. The dear child that is placed in the dark vault, or that is covered up in the ground - we feel as if we could not have him there. We insensibly shudder, as if “he” might be conscious of the darkness and chilliness, and “a part” of our trial arises from this delusion. So felt the American savage - expressing the emotions of the heart, which, in other cases, are often concealed. “At the bottom of a grave, the melting snows had left a little water; and the sight of it chilled and saddened his imagination. ‘You have no compassion for my poor brother’ - such was the reproach of an Algonquin - ‘the air is pleasant, and the sun so cheering, and yet you do not remove the snow from the grave, to warm him a little,’ and he knew no contentment until it was done.” - Bancroft’s History, U. S. iii. 294, 295. The same feeling is expressed by Fingal over the grave of Gaul:

Prepare, ye children of musical strings,

The bed of Gaul, and his sun-beam by him;

Where may be seen his resting place from afar

Which branches high overshadow,

Under the wing of the oak of greenest flourish,

Of quickest growth, and most durable form,

Which will shoot forth its leaves to the breeze of the shower,

While the heath around is still withered.

Its leaves, from the extremity of the land,

Shall be seen by the birds in Summer;

And each bird shall perch, as it arrives,

On a sprig of its verdant branch;

Gaul in this mist shall hear the cheerful note,

While the virgins are singing of Evirchoma.

Thus, also, Knolles (History of the Turks, p. 332) remarks of the Sultan Muted II, that “after his death, his son raised the siege, and returned back to Adrianople. He caused the dead to be buried with great solemnity in the Western suburbs of Broosa, in a chapel without a roof, in accordance with the express desire of the Sultan, in order that the mercy and blessing of God might descend on him, that the sun and the moon might shine on his grave, and the rain and the dew of heaven fall upon it.” Rosenmuller’s Alte u. neue Morgenland, “in loc.” The word “clods” here, is rendered “stones” by Prof. Lee, but the more general interpretation is that of “sods,” or “clods.” The word is used only here, and in Job 38:38, where it is also rendered clods. The word “valley” (נחל nachal) means usually a stream, brook, or rivulet, and then a valley where such a brook runs. Notes Job 6:15. It is not improbable that such valleys were chosen as burial places, from the custom of planting shrubs and flowers around a grave, because they would flourish best there. The valley of Jehoshaphat, near Jerusalem, was long occupied as a burial place.

And every man shall draw after him - Some suppose that this means, that he shall share the common lot of mortals - that innumerable multitudes have gone there before him - and that succeeding generations shall follow to the same place appointed for all the living. “Noyes.” Others, however, suppose that this refers to a funeral procession and that the meaning is, that all the world is drawn out after him, and that an innumerable multitude precedes him when he is buried. Others, again, suppose it means, that his example shall attract many to follow and adopt his practices, as many have done before him in imitating similar characters. “Lee.” It is clear, that there is some notion of honor, respect, or pomp in the language; and it seems to me more likely that the meaning is, that he would draw out every body to go to the place where he was buried, that they might look on it, and thus honor him. What multitudes would go to look on the grave of Alexander the Great! How many have gone to look on the place where Caesar fell! How many have gone, and will go, to look on the place where Nelson or Napoleon is buried! This, I think, is the idea here, that the man who should thus die, would draw great numbers to the place where he was buried, and that before him, or in his presence, there was an innumerable multitude, so greatly would he be honored.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Job 21:33. The clods of the valley shall be sweet unto him — Perhaps there is an allusion here to the Asiatic mode of interment for princes, saints, and nobles: a well-watered valley was chosen for the tomb, where a perpetual spring might be secured. This was intended to be the emblem of a resurrection, or of a future life; and to conceal as much as possible the disgrace of the rotting carcass.

Every man shall draw after him — There seem to be two allusions intended here:

1. To death, the common lot of all. Millions have gone before him to the tomb; and כל אדם col adam, all men, shall follow him: all past generations have died, all succeeding generations shall die also.

2. To pompous funeral processions; multitudes preceding, and multitudes following, the corpse.


 
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