
Text -- Job 26:11 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 26:11 - -- Perhaps the mountains which by their height and strength seem to reach and support the heavens.
Perhaps the mountains which by their height and strength seem to reach and support the heavens.

Wesley: Job 26:11 - -- When God reproveth not them, but men by them, manifesting his displeasure by thunders, or earthquakes.
When God reproveth not them, but men by them, manifesting his displeasure by thunders, or earthquakes.
Poetically for the mountains which seem to bear up the sky (Psa 104:32).
Clarke -> Job 26:11
Clarke: Job 26:11 - -- The pillars of heaven tremble - This is probably a poetical description either of thunder, or of an earthquake: -
"He shakes creation with his nod
E...
The pillars of heaven tremble - This is probably a poetical description either of thunder, or of an earthquake: -
"He shakes creation with his nod
Earth, sea, and heaven, confess him God.
But there may be an allusion to the high mountains, which were anciently esteemed by the common people as the pillars on which the heavens rested; and when these were shaken with earthquakes, it might be said the pillars of heaven tremble. Mount Atlas was supposed to be one of those pillars, and this gave rise to the fable of Atlas being a man who bore the heavens on his shoulders. The Greek and Roman poets frequently use this image. Thus Silius Italicus, lib. i., ver. 202: -
Atlas subducto tracturus vertice coelum
Sidera nubiferum fulcit caput, aethereasqu
Erigit aeternum compages ardua cervix
Canet barba gelu, frontemque immanibus umbri
Pinea silva premit; vastant cava tempora vent
Nimbosoque ruunt spumantia flumina rictu
"Atlas’ broad shoulders prop th’ incumbent skies
Around his cloud-girt head the stars arise
His towering neck supports th’ ethereal way
And o’ er his brow black woods their gloom display
Hoar is his beard; winds round his temples roar
And from his jaws the rushing torrents pour.
J. B. C.
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TSK -> Job 26:11

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 26:11
Barnes: Job 26:11 - -- The pillars of Heaven tremble - That is, the mountains, which seem to bear up the heavens. So, among the ancients. Mount Atlas was represented ...
The pillars of Heaven tremble - That is, the mountains, which seem to bear up the heavens. So, among the ancients. Mount Atlas was represented as one of the pillars of heaven. Virgil speaks of "Atlas whose brawny back supports the skies."And Hesiod, ver. 785, advances the same notion:
"Atlas, so hard necessity ordains,
Great, the ponderous vault of stars sustains
Not far from the Hesperides he stands,
Nor from the load retracts his head or hands."
The word "reproof"in this verse refers to the language of God, as if spoken in anger to rebuke the mountains or the earth. Perhaps the reference is to thunder, to storms, and to winds, which seem to be the voice of God; compare Psa 29:3-8. Similar descriptions of the majesty and glory of God abound in the Scriptures, where he speaks to the earth, the mountains, the hills, and they tremble. Thus, in Psa 104:32;
He looketh on the earth, and it trembleth;
He toucheth the hills, and they smoke.
So in Hab 3:10 :
The mountains saw thee, and they trembled;
The overflowing of the water passed by;
The deep uttered his voice, and lift up his hands on high.
So in Nah 1:5, "The mountains quake at him, and the hills melt, and the earth is burnt at his presence."
Poole -> Job 26:11
Poole: Job 26:11 - -- The pillars of heaven either,
1. Those mountains which by their height and strength may seem to reach and support the heavens, as the poets said of ...
The pillars of heaven either,
1. Those mountains which by their height and strength may seem to reach and support the heavens, as the poets said of Atlas; for this is a poetical book, and there are many poetical expressions in it. These tremble sometimes by force of earthquakes, or by God’ s glorious appearance in them, as Sinai did. Or,
2. Holy angels; but they are not subject either to trembling, or to God’ s rebuke. Or,
3. The heavenly bodies, as the sun, and moon, and stars, which as they may seem in some sort to support, so they do certainly adorn the heavens; and we know pillars are oft made, not to support, but only for ornament; as the two famous pillars of the temple, Jachin and Boaz, 1Ki 7:21 . And these ofttimes seem to tremble and be astonished, as in eclipses or tempests, and terrible works of God in the air, by which they are frequently said to be affected and changed, because they seem so to us; and many things are spoken in Scripture according to appearance: see Isa 13:10 24:23 Joe 2:10,31 Mt 24:29 , &c.
At his reproof either,
1. When God rebuketh them: for God is sometimes said in Scripture to rebuke the lifeless creatures; which is to be understood figuratively of the tokens of God’ s anger in them. Or,
2. When God reproveth not them, but men by them, manifesting his displeasure against sinful men by thunders, or earthquakes, or prodigious works.
Haydock -> Job 26:11
Haydock: Job 26:11 - -- Heaven. The mountains are so styled by Pindar; and the poets represent them supporting the heavens. Totum ferre potest humeris minitantibus orbem....
Heaven. The mountains are so styled by Pindar; and the poets represent them supporting the heavens. Totum ferre potest humeris minitantibus orbem. (Petronius) ---
Yet others understand that power which keeps all things together, (Calmet) or the angels, to whose rule the ancients attributed the celestial bodies. (St. Gregory; Ven. Bede, &c.)
Gill -> Job 26:11
Gill: Job 26:11 - -- The pillars of heaven tremble,.... Which may be understood either of the air, the lower part of the heavens, which may be thought to be the foundation...
The pillars of heaven tremble,.... Which may be understood either of the air, the lower part of the heavens, which may be thought to be the foundation, prop, and support of them, and is sometimes called the firmament, and "the firmament of his power", Psa 150:1; and which seems to tremble when there are thunder and lightnings, and coruscations in it; or else the mountains, which, reaching up to the heavens, look as if they were the pillars and support of them; and are indeed said to be the foundations of heaven, which move and shake and tremble at the presence and power of God, and at any expressions of his wrath and anger, and particularly through earthquakes and storms, and tempests of thunder and lightning; see 2Sa 22:8, which are meant by what follows:
and are astonished at his reproof; his voice of thunder, which is sometimes awful and terrible, astonishing and surprising; and, to set forth the greatness of it, inanimate creatures are represented as trembling, and astonished at it; see Psa 104:7; some interpret this figuratively of angels, who they suppose are employed in the direction of the heavens, and the motion of the heavenly bodies; and who they think are the same which in the New Testament are called "the powers of heaven said to be shaken", Mat 24:29; and to be the seraphim that covered their faces upon a glorious display of the majesty of God, and when the posts of the door of the temple moved at the voice of him that cried, Isa 6:1; but if a figurative sense may be admitted of, the principal persons in the church, sometimes signified by heaven in Scripture, may be thought of; as ministers of the word, who are pillars in the house of God; yea, every true member of the church of God is made a pillar in it; and these tremble, and are astonished oftentimes when the Lord rebukes them by afflictions, though it is in love and kindness to them, Pro 9:1.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 26:11 The idea here is that when the earth quakes, or when there is thunder in the heavens, these all represent God’s rebuke, for they create terror.
Geneva Bible -> Job 26:11
Geneva Bible: Job 26:11 The ( k ) pillars of heaven tremble and are astonished at his reproof.
( k ) Not that heaven has pillars to uphold it, but he speaks by a similitude ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 26:1-14
TSK Synopsis: Job 26:1-14 - --1 Job, reproving the uncharitable spirit of Bildad,5 acknowledges the power of God to be infinite and unsearchable.
MHCC -> Job 26:5-14
MHCC: Job 26:5-14 - --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 eart...
Matthew Henry -> Job 26:5-14
Matthew Henry: Job 26:5-14 - -- The truth received a great deal of light from the dispute between Job and his friends concerning those points about which they differed; but now the...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 26:11-13
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 26:11-13 - --
11 The pillars of heaven tremble
And are astonished at His threatening.
12 By His power He rouseth up the sea,
And by His understanding He breake...
Constable: Job 22:1--27:23 - --D. The Third cycle of Speeches between Job and His Three Friends chs. 22-27
In round one of the debate J...

Constable: Job 26:1--27:23 - --4. Job's third reply to Bildad chs. 26-27
Job's long speech here contrasts strikingly with Bilda...
