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Job 18:16

His roots shall be dried up beneath, and above shall his branch be cut off.
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Ephrem The Syrian

AD 373
These words mean that the punishment of the impious will be similar to the massacre of the Sodomites. “Their roots dry beneath, and their branches wither above” so that nothing useful to the impious may remain anywhere, beneath or above the ground. - "Commentary on Job 18.15–16"

George Leo Haydock

AD 1849
Harvest. Hebrew also, "branch "(Calmet) his family, (Menochius) and all on which he trusted. (Calmet) All must be destroyed, root and branch.

Gregory The Dialogist

AD 604
24. For what do we understand by the title of ‘roots,’ which are set out of sight, and bring forth a shoot into open view, but the thoughts, which, while they are not seen in the heart, produce visible works? And hence by the title of a ‘crop’ there is denoted the same visible practice, which is thus produced from a hidden root. And whereas every bad man first dries up in the imaginings of temptation and afterwards dies off from good deeds, it is rightly said by Bildad, Let his roots be dried up beneath, and above let his crop be spoiled, in that, whereas the wicked man sets his thoughts in things below, and neglects to seek the delights of everlasting greenness, what is this but that he lets his ‘roots be dried beneath?’ Whose ‘crop too is spoiled above,’ in that all his practice is counted as nothing in the view of the judgment above, even if it seem good in the eyes of man. Thus the ‘roots’ are at the bottom, and the ‘crop’ above, in that we first send out good thoughts here, t...

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

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