Commentaries:
Jamieson, Fausset, and Brown
she-asses—prized on account of their milk, and for riding (Judges 5:10). Houses and lands are not mentioned among the emir's wealth, as nomadic tribes dwell in movable tents and live chiefly by pasture, the right to the soil not being appropriated by individuals. The "five hundred yoke of oxen" imply, however, that Job tilled the soil. He seems also to have had a dwelling in a town, in which respect he differed from the patriarchs. Camels are well called "ships of the desert," especially valuable for caravans, as being able to lay in a store of water that suffices them for days, and to sustain life on a very few thistles or thorns.
household— (Genesis 26:14). The other rendering which the Hebrew admits, "husbandry," is not so probable.
men of the east—denoting in Scripture those living east of Palestine; as the people of North Arabia-Deserta (Judges 6:3; Ezekiel 25:4).
Other Jamieson, Fausset, and Brown entries containing Job 1:3:
Genesis 29:1
Job 1:1
Job 1:17
Job 16:12
Job 39:19
Ecclesiastes 2:7
Ecclesiastes 2:9
Jeremiah 49:28
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