A citation from the library
Catholic 1274 · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Job 9:24 (Commentary on Job)

Thomas Aquinas, on Job 9:24

Thomas Aquinas · 1225–1274
Job 9:24 · Douay-Rheims
“The earth is given into the hand of the wicked, he covereth the face of the judges thereof: and if it be not he, who is it then?”
On this verse:
“If it is unfitting that the punishments of the innocent please God in themselves and yet the innocent are frequently found to be punished on earth, another conclusion which is equally unfitting seems to follow, i.e. that punishments of that sort do not proceed from divine judgment, but from the malice of some evil ruler who has power over the earth and punishes the innocent. So he continues, "The earth is given into the hands of the wicked," as if to say: If the punishments of the innocent who are still punished on earth are not pleasing to God in themselves, it is necessary to conclude that God has committed the rule of the earth to some evil person, from whose iniquity, judgment is perverted on earth so that the innocent may be punished. He expresses this when he says, "He covers the face of his judges," i.e. he obscures their reason either with concupiscence, hate or love, so that they do not follow the truth of judgment in judging. "If it is not he," i.e. the wicked man to whom the earth has been committed who causes the punishment of the innocent, "then who is it?" i.e. who is the cause of the punishment. For supposing your position that sin alone is the cause of the present punishments, God cannot be the cause of this as he has already demonstrated. He expresses this when he says, "The earth is given into the hands of the wicked." This is certainly true in a sense inasmuch as materialistic men remain under the power of the devil, as one text says, "He who commits sin is the slave of sin." (John 8:34) However, it is strictly speaking false. For the dominion of the earth is not absolutely given over to the devil, so that he can do what he likes freely on it. Whatever he is permitted to do proceeds from divine disposition which dispenses everything from a reasonable cause. So the very fact that the innocent are punished does not absolutely depend on the evil intention of the devil but also on the wisdom of God who permits it. Therefore, if sin is not the cause of the punishment of the innocent, it is insufficient to reduce it to the malice of the devil, but one must also find some reasonable explanation for God permitting it. So he clearly shows this saying, "If it is not he, then who is it?" as if to say: If the evil will of the devil is not the sufficient cause of the punishment of the innocent, one must investigate another cause.”

Imported from an open dataset — not yet checked against the printed edition.

Read Job 9:24 in context →