
Text -- Job 26:6 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 26:6 - -- Is in his presence, and under his providence. Hell itself, that place of utter darkness, is not hid from his sight.
Is in his presence, and under his providence. Hell itself, that place of utter darkness, is not hid from his sight.
Clarke -> Job 26:6
Clarke: Job 26:6 - -- Hell is naked before him - Sheol, the place of the dead, or of separate spirits, is always in his view. And there is no covering to Abaddon - the pl...
Hell is naked before him - Sheol, the place of the dead, or of separate spirits, is always in his view. And there is no covering to Abaddon - the place of the destroyer, where destruction reigns, and where those dwell who are eternally separated from God. The ancients thought that hell or Tartarus was a vast space in the center, or at the very bottom of the earth. So Virgil, Aen. lib. vi., ver. 577: -
Tum Tartarus ips
Bis patet in praeceps tantum, tenditque sub umbras
Quantus ad aethereum coeli suspectus Olympu
Hic genus antiquum terrae, Titania pubes
Fulmine dejecti, fundo volvuntur in imo
"Full twice as deep the dungeon of the fiends
The huge Tartarean gloomy gulf, descend
Below these regions, as these regions li
From the bright realms of yon ethereal sky
Here roar the Titan race, th’ enormous birth
The ancient offspring of the teeming earth
Pierced by the burning bolts of old they fell
And still roll bellowing in the depths of hell.
Pitt
And some have supposed that there is an allusion to this opinion in the above passage, as well as in several others in the Old Testament; but it is not likely that the sacred writers would countenance an opinion that certainly has nothing in fact or philosophy to support it. Yet still a poet may avail himself of popular opinions.
Defender: Job 26:6 - -- Hell (Hebrew sheol), the place of departed spirits deep within the earth, is invisible to man, but easily seen by God (Psa 139:8).
Hell (Hebrew

Defender: Job 26:6 - -- Destruction (Hebrew abaddon) seems to be a special compartment of sheol, possibly imprisoning the demonic spirits who will be unleashed on the world d...
Destruction (Hebrew
TSK -> Job 26:6

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 26:6
Barnes: Job 26:6 - -- Hell - Hebrew שׁאול she 'ôl , Sheol; Greek ᾅδης Hadēs Hades. The reference is to the abode of departed spirits ...
Hell - Hebrew
Is naked before him - That is, be looks directly upon that world. It is hidden from us, but not from him. He sees all its inhabitants, knows all their employments, and sways a scepter over them all.
And destruction - Hebrew
Hath no covering - There is nothing to conceal it from God. He looks down even on that dark nether world, and sees and knows all that is there. There is a passage somewhat similar to this in Homer, quoted by Longinus as one of unrivaled sublimity, but which by no means surpasses this. It occurs in the Iliad, xx. 61-66:
Deep in the dismal regions of the dead
Th’ infernal monarch reared his horrid head,
Leaped from his throne, lest Neptune’ s arm should lay
His dark dominions open to the day,
And pour in light on Pluto’ s drear abodes,
Abhorred by men, and dreadful e’ en to gods.
Pope
Poole -> Job 26:6
Poole: Job 26:6 - -- Hell as this word is frequently used, as Job 11:8 Isa 57:9 , &c. And so it seems to be explained by the following word,
destruction i.e. the place ...
Hell as this word is frequently used, as Job 11:8 Isa 57:9 , &c. And so it seems to be explained by the following word,
destruction i.e. the place of destruction, which interpreters generally understand of hell, or the place of the damned. Others, the grave , the most secret and obscure places and things. Is naked before him , i.e. it is in his presence, and under his providence. So far am I from imagining that God cannot see through a dark cloud, as you traduced me, Job 22:13 , that I very well know that even hell itself, that place of utter darkness, is not hid from his sight.
Destruction i.e. the place of destruction, as it is also used, Pro 15:11 , by a metonymy of the adjunct.
Hath no covering to wit, such as to keep it out of his sight.
Haydock -> Job 26:6
Haydock: Job 26:6 - -- Hell. The grave. ---
Destruction. Hebrew abaddon. (Haydock) ---
St. John (Apocalypse ix. 11.) styles the bottomless abyss; (Calmet) or its an...
Hell. The grave. ---
Destruction. Hebrew abaddon. (Haydock) ---
St. John (Apocalypse ix. 11.) styles the bottomless abyss; (Calmet) or its angel, (Haydock) Abaddon, or Apollyon. It may here be called destruction, (Calmet) as all its victims are lost for ever to every thing that is good. The obscurity of the grave, and even that of hell, can hide nothing from God.
Gill -> Job 26:6
Gill: Job 26:6 - -- Hell is naked before him,.... Which may be taken either for the place of the damned, as it sometimes is; and then the sense is, that though it is hid...
Hell is naked before him,.... Which may be taken either for the place of the damned, as it sometimes is; and then the sense is, that though it is hidden from men, and they know not where it is, or who are in it, and what is done and suffered there; yet it is all known to God: he knows the place thereof, for it is made, ordained, and prepared by him; he knows who are there, even all the wicked dead, and all the nations that forget God, being cast there by him; he knows the torments they endure, for the smoke of them continually ascends before him; and he knows all their malice and envy, their enmity to him, and blasphemy of him; for thither are they gone down with their weapons of war, and have laid their swords under their heads, Eze 32:27; or for Hades, the invisible world of spirits, or state of the dead, as the Septuagint version renders the word; though that is unseen to men, it is naked and open to the eye of God; or for the grave, in which the bodies of men are laid; which is the frequent sense of the word used, Psa 88:11; and though this is a land of darkness, and where the light is as darkness, yet God can look into it; and the dust of men therein is carefully observed and preserved by him, and will be raised again at the last day; who has the keys of death and hell, or the grave, and can open it at his pleasure, and cause it to give up the dead that are therein:
and destruction hath no covering; and may design the same as before, either hell, the place of the damned, where men are destroyed soul and body with an everlasting destruction; or the grave, which the Targum calls the house of destruction, as it sometimes is, the pit of destruction and corruption; because bodies cast into it corrupt and putrefy, and are destroyed in it; and there is nothing to cover either the one or the other from the all seeing eye of God; see Psa 139:7; as hell is supposed to be under the earth, and the grave is in it, Job is as yet on things below, and from hence rises to those above, in the following words.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 26:6 The line has “and there is no covering for destruction.” “Destruction” here is another name for Sheol: אֲב...
Geneva Bible -> Job 26:6
Geneva Bible: Job 26:6 Hell [is] ( e ) naked before him, and ( f ) destruction hath no covering.
( e ) There is nothing hidden in the bottom of the earth but he sees it.
(...

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 26:5-7
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 26:5-7 - --
5 - The shades are put to pain
Deep under the waters and their inhabitants.
6 Sheôl is naked before him,
And the abyss hath no covering.
7 He s...
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...
