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Text -- Job 39:1-30 (NET)

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Context
39:1 “Are you acquainted with the way the mountain goats give birth? Do you watch as the wild deer give birth to their young? 39:2 Do you count the months they must fulfill, and do you know the time they give birth? 39:3 They crouch, they bear their young, they bring forth the offspring they have carried. 39:4 Their young grow strong, and grow up in the open; they go off, and do not return to them. 39:5 Who let the wild donkey go free? Who released the bonds of the donkey, 39:6 to whom I appointed the steppe for its home, the salt wastes as its dwelling place? 39:7 It scorns the tumult in the town; it does not hear the shouts of a driver. 39:8 It ranges the hills as its pasture, and searches after every green plant. 39:9 Is the wild ox willing to be your servant? Will it spend the night at your feeding trough? 39:10 Can you bind the wild ox to a furrow with its rope, will it till the valleys, following after you? 39:11 Will you rely on it because its strength is great? Will you commit your labor to it? 39:12 Can you count on it to bring in your grain, and gather the grain to your threshing floor? 39:13 “The wings of the ostrich flap with joy, but are they the pinions and plumage of a stork? 39:14 For she leaves her eggs on the ground, and lets them be warmed on the soil. 39:15 She forgets that a foot might crush them, or that a wild animal might trample them. 39:16 She is harsh with her young, as if they were not hers; she is unconcerned about the uselessness of her labor. 39:17 For God deprived her of wisdom, and did not impart understanding to her. 39:18 But as soon as she springs up, up, she laughs at the horse and its rider. 39:19 “Do you give the horse its strength? Do you clothe its neck with a mane? 39:20 Do you make it leap like a locust? Its proud neighing is terrifying! 39:21 It paws the ground in the valley, exulting mightily, it goes out to meet the weapons. 39:22 It laughs at fear and is not dismayed; it does not shy away from the sword. 39:23 On it the quiver rattles; the lance and javelin flash. 39:24 In excitement and impatience it consumes the ground; it cannot stand still when the trumpet is blown. 39:25 At the sound of the trumpet, it says, ‘Aha!’ And from a distance it catches the scent of battle, the thunderous shouting of commanders, and the battle cries. 39:26 “Is it by your understanding that the hawk soars, and spreads its wings toward the south? 39:27 Is it at your command that the eagle soars, and builds its nest on high? 39:28 It lives on a rock and spends the night there, on a rocky crag and a fortress. 39:29 From there it spots its prey, its eyes gaze intently from a distance. 39:30 And its young ones devour the blood, and where the dead carcasses are, there it is.”
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Eagle | Job | Ignorance | God | Animals | Condescension of God | Readings, Select | Horse | OSTRICH | Birds | Unicorn | Ostriches | ASS | WILD OX | Hawk | GOAT | Peacock | HARROW | Trumpet | LABOR | more
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Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 39:1 Or “ibex.”

NET Notes: Job 39:2 Here the infinitive is again a substantive: “the time of their giving birth.”

NET Notes: Job 39:3 Heb “they cast forth their labor pains.” This word usually means “birth pangs” but here can mean what caused the pains (metony...

NET Notes: Job 39:4 The idea is that of the open countryside. The Aramaism is found only here.

NET Notes: Job 39:7 The animal is happier in open countryside than in a busy town, and on its own rather than being driven by a herdsman.

NET Notes: Job 39:10 Some commentators think that the addition of the “wild ox” here is a copyist’s error, making the stich too long. They therefore dele...

NET Notes: Job 39:11 Heb “leave.”

NET Notes: Job 39:12 Simply, the MT has “and your threshing floor gather.” The “threshing floor” has to be an adverbial accusative of place.

NET Notes: Job 39:13 The point of this statement would be that the ostrich cannot compare to the stork. But there are many other proposals for this line – just about...

NET Notes: Job 39:14 The meaning may have the connotation of “lays; places,” rather than simply abandoning (see M. Dahood, “The Root ’zb II in Job,...

NET Notes: Job 39:15 Heb “an animal of the field.”

NET Notes: Job 39:16 This verb, “to deal harshly; to harden; to treat cruelly,” is used for hardening the heart elsewhere (see Isa 63:17).

NET Notes: Job 39:18 The colon poses a slight problem here. The literal meaning of the Hebrew verb translated “springs up” (i.e., “lifts herself on high&...

NET Notes: Job 39:19 The second half of the verse contains this hapax legomenon, which is usually connected with the word רַעְמָה...

NET Notes: Job 39:20 The word could mean “snorting” as well (see Jer 8:16). It comes from the root “to blow.” If the horse is running and breathing...

NET Notes: Job 39:21 Or “in strength.”

NET Notes: Job 39:23 This may be the scimitar (see G. Molin, “What is a kidon?” JSS 1 [1956]: 334-37).

NET Notes: Job 39:24 The use of אָמַן (’aman) in the Hiphil in this place is unique. Such a form would normally mean “to believe....

NET Notes: Job 39:26 This word occurs only here. It is connected to “pinions” in v. 13. Dhorme suggests “clad with feathers,” but the line suggests...

NET Notes: Job 39:27 Heb “your mouth.”

NET Notes: Job 39:28 The word could be taken as the predicate, but because of the conjunction it seems to be adding another description of the place of its nest.

NET Notes: Job 39:29 Heb “food.”

NET Notes: Job 39:30 The word חֲלָלִים (khalalim) designates someone who is fatally wounded, literally the “pierced o...

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