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Job 18:9

The trap shall take him by the heel, and a snare shall lay hold of him.
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George Leo Haydock

AD 1849
Thirst: the greedy hunter. (Calmet) Hebrew, "the robber. "(Haydock)

Gregory The Dialogist

AD 604
13. n that the end shall be made fast in sin. And because the enemy of mankind, when he binds up in sin the life of each individual, eagerly pants after his death, it is rightly added; And thirst shall burn furiously against him. 14. For our old enemy, when he ensnares the life in sin, thirsts that he may drink the death of the sinner. Which however may also be understood in another sense. For the evil mind when it sees that it has been brought into sin, seeks with a certain superficialness of thought to escape out of the snares of sin; but fearing either the threats or reproaches of men, it chooses rather to die for ever, than to undergo a little of adversity for a season, whence it abandons itself wholly to evil ways, in which it perceives itself to be already once bound. And so he whose life is bound fast in sin even to the end, has his ‘heel held by the gin.’ But forasmuch as in the same degree that he minds that he is tied and bound with evil habits, he is in despair of hi...

Olympiodorus of Alexandria

AD 570
Bildad says these things using the metaphor of the birds or the animals that are captured in the hunt. In fact, as they can no longer escape after falling into snares and nets, so the impious are caught by inevitable calamities that overwhelm them. And what is worse, after all their schemes have been overturned and reversed, their riches are taken away from them not by the powerful but by people of the lowest class. - "Commentary on Job 18.7–9"

Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation - 2 Peter 1:20

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