Job rivals Bildad in magnifying the greatness of God
Bildad in his short speech magnified the greatness of God, and His
purity, before which even the heavens are not clean. Job had heard all
this before, it did not touch the enigma of his life and of
providence. Hence, _first_, he pours out the ful... [ Continue Reading ]
_how savest thou_?] Rather, how HAST THOU SAVED? i. e. succoured.... [ Continue Reading ]
Job sarcastically expresses his admiration of Bildad's speech, and
gratitude for the help it has been to him.... [ Continue Reading ]
_plentifully declared the thing as it is_ Rather, PLENTIFULLY, or,
abundantly, DECLARED KNOWLEDGE, or, wisdom. The word is that which
occurs in ch. Job 5:12; see notes. "Him that is without power," "that
hath no wisdom" &c., is of course Job himself; and he expresses his
admiration of the contributi... [ Continue Reading ]
_to whom hast thou uttered words_?] Job refers to himself and asks,
Who is it that thou hast spoken such things to? The same feeling of
conscious superiority to his friends and disdain of the instructions
they were giving him reappears here, which came out already in ch. Job
12:4. It is the same fee... [ Continue Reading ]
God's presence and power in the underworld. Job 26:5 reads according
to the pointing,
The Shades tremble
Underneath the waters and their inhabitants.
The "Shades" (Heb. _Refáim_, the flaccid) are the departed persons,
whose place of concourse is Sheol. Comp. Isaiah 14:9, where "the dead"
are the... [ Continue Reading ]
That Job has no need to be instructed regarding the greatness of God
he now shews, by entering upon an exhibition of its operations in
every sphere of that which exists, Hades, the Earth and Heaven, in
which he far outstrips the feeble effort of Bildad.... [ Continue Reading ]
_Hell_ is in Heb. _Sheol_, the place where deceased persons
congregate, the world beneath. It is not a place of pain, though a
dark and dreary abode, ch. Job 10:21-22. Those there are the dead, who
still subsist, though they do not live. "Destruction," Heb. _abaddon_,
is a synonym for Sheol, ch. Job... [ Continue Reading ]
It may be doubtful whether "the north" refers to the northern part of
the earth or to the northern heavens. In favour of the latter
reference is the fact that the expression "stretch out," often said in
regard to the heavens (e.g. ch. Job 9:8), is not elsewhere used with
reference to the earth, and... [ Continue Reading ]
God's power and greatness in heaven and earth.... [ Continue Reading ]
The wonder of the clouds, floating reservoirs of water, which do not
burst under the weight of waters which they contain. Men bind up water
in skins or bottles, God binds up the rain floods in the thin, gauzy
texture of the changing cloud, which yet by His power does not rend
under its burden of wat... [ Continue Reading ]
_he holdeth back_ Or, HE SHUTTETH UP, or, enshrouds. The "face of his
throne" is perhaps the outside of it, or that view which it would
present if seen; and the meaning is that He enshrouds His throne so
that it is not seen by those below. The idea cannot be that this is an
occasional phenomenon, as... [ Continue Reading ]
The verse reads,
He hath drawn as a circle a bound upon the face of the waters,
At the confines of light and darkness.
The second clause is literally; _even to the confines of light
with_(or, by) _darkness_, i. e. as far as where the utmost bound of
light borders with darkness. The idea seems to... [ Continue Reading ]
The "pillars" of the heavens, if the conception be not wholly ideal,
may be the lofty mountains on which the heavens seem to rest, and
which, as they are lost in the clouds, are spoken of as belonging to
heaven. At God's rebuke, when His voice of thunder rolls, or when
earthquakes shake the earth, t... [ Continue Reading ]
These verses probably read,
12. He quelleth the sea with his power,
And by his understanding he smiteth through Rahab.
13. By his breath the heavens are bright,
His hand pierceth the fleeing serpent.
Others for "quelleth" or stilleth, prefer the meaning "stirreth up."
Comp. Isaiah 51:15; Jeremi... [ Continue Reading ]
_by his spirit he hath garnished_ Rather as above. The reference is to
the clearing away of storm clouds, that darken the heavens, by the
breath of God.
_hath formed_ Rather as above, PIERCETH. The words express the half
poetical, half mythological conception that the darkening in storm or
in eclip... [ Continue Reading ]
The verse reads,
Lo these are the outskirts of his ways;
And how small a whisper is that which we hear of him!
But the thunder of his power who can understand?
The power of God is illustrated in the mighty works described in Job
26:5. Yet what we see of Him in these is but the ends, the outskirt... [ Continue Reading ]