-
Verse Job 26:5. _DEAD THINGS ARE FORMED FROM UNDER THE WATERS_] This
verse, as it stands in our version, seems to convey no meaning; and
the Hebrew is obscure; הרפאים, _harephaim_, "the Rephaim,"
cer...
-
DEAD THINGS - Job here commences his description of God, to show that
his views of his majesty and glory were in no way inferior to those
which had been expressed by Bildad, and that what Bildad had s...
-
CHAPTER 26JOB'S REPLY
_ 1. A sarcastic beginning (Job 26:1)_
2. Job also knows and can speak of the greatness of God (Job 26:5)
Job 26:1. You have helped me greatly, Bildad, me, who am without
power...
-
CONCLUSION OF BILDAD'S SPEECH. Bildad pursues the theme of the
greatness of God, begun in Job 25:2.
The giants (Deuteronomy 2:11) tremble at God (Job 26:5). Rephaim ...
-
DEAD THINGS ARE FORMED FROM UNDER THE WATERS. The Ellipsis must be
supplied thus: "[The place where] the Rephaim stay [which is] beneath
the waters, and the things that are therein. "This place thus a...
-
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, i...
-
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 t...
-
DEAD THINGS ARE FORMED FROM UNDER THE WATERS— _Shall the Rephaim be
brought forth from under the waters; and their inhabitants,_ or _their
neighbours?_ It follows, Job 26:6, _Sheol is naked before him...
-
2. No mysteries are hidden from God. (Job 26:5-14)
(Some would attribute this section to Bildad.)
a. There is no close connection between it and the preceding verses.
TEXT 26:5-14
5 THEY THAT ARE DE...
-
_DEAD THINGS ARE FORMED FROM UNDER THE WATERS, AND THE INHABITANTS
THEREOF._ As before, in Job 9:1; Job 12:1, Job had shown himself not
inferior to the friends in ability to describe God's greatness,...
-
JOB'S EIGHTH SPEECH (JOB 26, 27)
1-4. Job taunts Bildad with the worthlessness of his remarks as a
solution of the problem.
2, 3, 4 are spoken ironically....
-
THE INHABITANTS] probably sea-monsters. The Babylonians believed in a
judgment in Sheol under the ocean....
-
JOB, A SERVANT OF GOD
Job
_KEITH SIMONS_
Words in boxes (except for words in brackets) are from the Bible.
This commentary has been through Advanced Checking.
CHAPTER 26
JOB REPLIES TO BILDAD’S...
-
Job described hell. Elsewhere, Job was not sure whether hell exists
(Job 3:13-14; Job 21:22-26). But in these verses, Job was not
explaining his own ideas. Instead, he was speaking by the power of the...
-
DEAD THINGS ARE FORMED. — The Hebrew word is _the Rephaim,_ who were
among the aboriginal inhabitants of the south of Palestine and the
neighbourhood of the Dead Sea, and it is used to express the dea...
-
הָ רְפָאִ֥ים יְחֹולָ֑לוּ מִ תַּ֥חַת
מַ֝֗יִם ו
-
XXII.
THE OUTSKIRTS OF HIS WAYS
Job 26:1; Job 27:1
Job SPEAKS
BEGINNING his reply Job is full of scorn and sarcasm.
"How hast thou helped one without power!
How hast thou saved the strengthless...
-
“THE OUTSKIRTS OF HIS WAYS”
Job 26:1
Job taunts Bildad with his reply as having imparted no help or
thought. He then proceeds, Job 26:5, to give a description of God's
power as manifested in Hades, i...
-
We come next to Job's answer. The reply to Bildad occupies but one
chapter, which is characterized from beginning to end by scorn for the
man who had no more to say. In a series of fierce exclamations...
-
(d) Dead [things] are formed from under the waters, and the
inhabitants thereof.
(d) Job begins to declare the force of God's power and providence in
the mines and metals in the deep places of the ea...
-
CHAPTER XXVI.
_ With them. The less and greater fishes, (Menochius) or rather the
giants and others who were buried in the waters of the deluge, and are
confined in the dungeons of hell. The poets sp...
-
(5) В¶ Dead things are formed from under the waters, and the
inhabitants thereof. (6) Hell is naked before him, and destruction
hath no covering. (7) He stretcheth out the north over the empty
place,...
-
THE FOLLOWING COMMENTARY COVERS CHAPTER S 4 THROUGH 31.
As to the friends of Job, they do not call for any extended remarks.
They urge the doctrine that God's earthly government is a full measure
and...
-
DEAD [THINGS] ARE FORMED FROM UNDER THE WATERS,.... It is difficult to
say what things are here meant; it may be understood of "lifeless"
things, as Mr. Broughton renders it; things that never had any...
-
Dead [things] are formed from under the waters, and the inhabitants
thereof.
Ver. 5. _Dead things are formed from under the waters_] Here Job's
tongue, like a silver bell, begins to sound out the gre...
-
_Dead things_, &c. That is, according to several interpreters, those
seeds which are sown and die in the earth quicken again and grow. Or,
as R. Levi rather thinks, an allusion is made to those _veget...
-
A Description Of God's Surpassing Glory.
Job now, in order to refute Bildad more thoroughly, shows his
understanding of the almighty power of God both in the creation and in
the government of the wor...
-
Dead things are formed from under the waters and the inhabitants
thereof, the giant shades or phantoms of the dead whirl and writhe in
the underworld, shaking with every manifestation of the divine
ma...
-
BILDAD'S WORDS FUTILE IN JOB'S CASE
(vv.1-4)
Job begins a reply that continues through six Chapter s, and his
friends are totally silenced. His language is amazing, specially
considering the length...
-
AND THE INHABITANTS:
Or, with the inhabitants...
-
"In contrast to his friend's limited exaltation of God (Job 25:3-5),
Job majestically sweeps beyond. Even those in Sheol (figuratively
beneath the waters, or earth, Philippians 2:10) are naked before...
-
5-14 Many striking instances are here given of the wisdom and power
of God, in the creation and preservation of the world. If we look
about us, to the earth and waters here below, we see his almighty...
-
Job having censured Bildad's discourse concerning God's dominion and
power, as insignificant and impertinent to their question, he here
proceedeth to show how little he needed his information in that...
-
Job 26:5 dead H7496 tremble H2342 (H8787) waters H4325 inhabiting
H7931 (H8802)
Dead things - Job 41
-
CONTENTS: Job's answer to Bildad. His faith in God.
CHARACTERS: God, Job, friends.
CONCLUSION: God is infinite and incomprehensible; man's capacities to
understand Him and all His ways are weak, the...
-
Job 26:5. _Dead things,_ הרפאים _ha-raphaim,_ the raphaim _are
formed from under the waters._ SCHULTENS reads, _Manes orcinorum
intremiscunt, de subter aquis, et la habitatores eorum._ The manes of
th...
-
_But Job answered and said._
THE TRANSCENDENT GREATNESS OF GOD
I. God appears incomprehensibly great in that portion of the universe
that is brought under human observation.
1. In connection with t...
-
_JOB’S REPLY TO BILDAD_
Job, more alive to Bildad’s want of sympathy than to the excellence
of his sentiments in regard to the Divine perfections, speaks somewhat
petulantly,—certainly with irony and...
-
EXPOSITION
The long discourse of Job now begins, which forms the central and most
solid mass of the book. It continues through six chapters (Job
26-31.). In it Job, after hastily brushing aside Bildad...
-
So Job answers now this little saying of Bildad. It's his third and
final answer to Job, and it's really nothing.
Job answered and said, How have you helped him that is without power?
how can you save...
-
Ezekiel 29:3; Genesis 6:4; Job 41:1; Psalms 104:25; Psalms 104:26...
-
Dead things — Job having censured Bildad's discourse, proceeds to
shew how little he needed his information in that point. Here he shews
that the power and providences of God reaches not only to the t...