Job 15:16

16 how much less mortals, who are vile and corrupt, who drink up evil like water!

Job 15:16 in Other Translations

King James Version (KJV)
16 How much more abominable and filthy is man, which drinketh iniquity like water?
English Standard Version (ESV)
16 how much less one who is abominable and corrupt, a man who drinks injustice like water!
New Living Translation (NLT)
16 How much less pure is a corrupt and sinful person with a thirst for wickedness!
The Message Bible (MSG)
16 So how much less we humans, smelly and foul, who lap up evil like water?
American Standard Version (ASV)
16 How much less one that is abominable and corrupt, A man that drinketh iniquity like water!
GOD'S WORD Translation (GW)
16 how much less will he trust the one who is disgusting and corrupt, the one who drinks wickedness like water.
Holman Christian Standard Bible (CSB)
16 how much less one who is revolting and corrupt, who drinks injustice like water?
New International Reader's Version (NIRV)
16 So he'll certainly find fault with human beings. After all, they are evil and sinful. They drink up evil as if it were water.

Job 15:16 Meaning and Commentary

Job 15:16

How much more abominable and filthy [is] man
In his natural, corrupt, and unregenerate estate; man, as a creature, was not abominable, but becoming sinful he is; he is so in himself, cast out to the loathing of his person, being full of wounds, bruises, and putrefying sores, yea, like a dead corrupted carcass, for he is dead in trespasses and sins, ( Ephesians 2:1 ) ; and he appears to be corrupt by the abominable works done by him, as all the works of the flesh are; yea, he is abominable to himself, when made sensible of his state and case; he then abhors himself, and repents of his sins, he loathes his sins, and himself for them; and must be much more so in the sight of God, who is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity, as man is nothing else than a mass of sin, and therefore must be "filthy"; for sin is of a defiling nature, it defiles the body and all its members, and the soul with all its powers and faculties: man is naturally and originally filthy, being conceived in sin, and shapen in iniquity; nor can a clean thing be brought out of an unclean; he is internally and universally unclean, his heart is a sink of sin, desperately wicked, and wickedness itself; his mind and conscience are defiled, and there is no place clean; and this appears outwardly in his actions, in his life and conversation, which is filthy also: for if the ploughing of the wicked is sin, and the righteousnesses of men are filthy rags, how impure must the immoral actions of wicked men be? man is so impure, that nothing but the blood of Christ can purify his heart, and purge his conscience from dead works, and make white his outward conversation garment:

which drinketh iniquity like water;
it is as natural to him to commit iniquity as it is for a man to drink water when he is thirsty, and he does it with equal gust, delight, and pleasure; as cold water is delightful to a thirsty soul, so is sin to a sinner, a sweet morsel he holds in his mouth; various lusts are various pleasures, though these pleasures are but for a season: sin, like water, is easy to be come at, it is near at hand, it easily besets men, and is all around them, and they easily give into it; everyone turns to his wicked course as readily as the horse rushes into the battle; and the phrase may be expressive of the abundance of sin committed, like large draughts of water greedily taken down by a man athirst, and repeated again and again; moreover, as water drank enters into men, and is taken down as an harmless thing, yet often proves very hurtful and pernicious to them when drank while they are hot, and occasions disorders, which issue in death; so sin, though it may seem harmless, and be pleasing and refreshing, going down like water, yet it works like poison, and is the gall of asps within a man, and ends in eternal death, if grace prevents not. This is the conclusion and application of the whole to man, arguing from the greater to the lesser, and so proving the impurity and imperfection of man, and that he cannot be clean and righteous before God of himself.

Job 15:16 In-Context

14 “What are mortals, that they could be pure, or those born of woman, that they could be righteous?
15 If God places no trust in his holy ones, if even the heavens are not pure in his eyes,
16 how much less mortals, who are vile and corrupt, who drink up evil like water!
17 “Listen to me and I will explain to you; let me tell you what I have seen,
18 what the wise have declared, hiding nothing received from their ancestors

Cross References 3

  • 1. S Leviticus 5:2; S Job 4:19; Psalms 14:1
  • 2. Job 20:12
  • 3. Job 12:4; Job 34:7; Proverbs 19:28
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