
Text -- Job 26:7 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 26:7 - -- The northern part of the heavens, which is put for the whole visible heaven, because Job and his friends lived in a northern climate.
The northern part of the heavens, which is put for the whole visible heaven, because Job and his friends lived in a northern climate.

Upon no props or pillars, but his own power and providence.
JFB -> Job 26:7
JFB: Job 26:7 - -- Hint of the true theory of the earth. Its suspension in empty space is stated in the second clause. The north in particular is specified in the first,...
Hint of the true theory of the earth. Its suspension in empty space is stated in the second clause. The north in particular is specified in the first, being believed to be the highest part of the earth (Isa 14:13). The northern hemisphere or vault of heaven is included; often compared to a stretched-out canopy (Psa 104:2). The chambers of the south are mentioned (Job 9:9), that is, the southern hemisphere, consistently with the earth's globular form.
Clarke: Job 26:7 - -- He stretcheth out the north over the empty place - על תהו al tohu , to the hollow waste. The same word as is used, Gen 1:2, The earth was with...
He stretcheth out the north over the empty place -

Clarke: Job 26:7 - -- Hangeth the earth upon nothing - The Chaldee says: "He lays the earth upon the waters, nothing sustaining it."
Hangeth the earth upon nothing - The Chaldee says: "He lays the earth upon the waters, nothing sustaining it."
Defender: Job 26:7 - -- The "empty place" (Hebrew tohu) probably refers to the just-created earth, which was initially "without form" (Gen 1:2)(same word, tohu). As earth rec...
The "empty place" (Hebrew

Defender: Job 26:7 - -- Not only was the earth rotating, but it also began orbiting in space, suspended from the sun by "nothing" except the mysterious force of gravity, acti...
Not only was the earth rotating, but it also began orbiting in space, suspended from the sun by "nothing" except the mysterious force of gravity, acting at a distance. This verse was written at least 3500 years before Isaac Newton identified and described this force."
TSK -> Job 26:7
TSK: Job 26:7 - -- Job 9:8; Gen 1:1, Gen 1:2; Psa 24:2, Psa 104:2-5; Pro 8:23-27; Isa 40:22, Isa 40:26, Isa 42:5

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 26:7
Barnes: Job 26:7 - -- He stretcheth out the north - This whole passage is particularly interesting as giving a view of the cosmology which prevailed in those early t...
He stretcheth out the north - This whole passage is particularly interesting as giving a view of the cosmology which prevailed in those early times. Indeed, as has been already remarked, this poem, apart from every other consideration, is of great value for disclosing to us the prevailing views on the subject of astronomy, geography, and many of the arts, at a much earlier period than we have an account of them elsewhere. The word north here denotes the heavens as they appear to revolve around the pole, and which seem to be stretched out as a curtain. The heavens are often represented as a veil, an expanse, a curtain, or a tent; see Isa 34:4, note; Isa 40:22, note.
Over the empty place -
And hangeth the earth upon nothing. - It has nothing to support it. So Milton:
"And earth self-balaneed from her center hung."
There is no certain evidence here that Job was acquainted with the globular form of the earth, and with its diurnal and annual revolutions. But it is clear that he regarded it as not resting on any foundation or support; as lying on the vacant air, and kept there by the power of God. The Chaldee paraphrasist, in order to explain this, as that Paraphrase often does, adds the word waters. "He hangeth the earth
Terraque ut in media mundi regionne quieseat
Evallescere paullatim, et decrescere, pondus
Convenit; atque aliam naturam subter habere,
Et ineunte aevo conjunctam atque uniter aptam
Partibus aeriis mundi, quibus insita vivit
Propterea, non est oneri, neque deprimit auras;
Ut sua quoique homini nullo sunt pondere membra,
Nec caput est oneri collo, nec denique totum
Corporus in pedibus pondus sentimus inesse.
v. 535.
In this passage the sense is, that the earth is self-sustained; that it is no burden, or that no one part is burdensome to another - as in man the limbs are not burdensome, the head is not heavy, nor the whole frame burdensome to the feet. So, again, Lucretius says, ii. 602:
Hanc, veteres Grajum docti cecinere poetae,
Aeris in spatio magnam pendere -
Tellurem, neque posse in terra sistere terram.
- "In ether poised she hangs,
Unpropt by earth beneath."
So Ovid says:
Ponderibus librata suis.
Self-poised and self balanced.
And again, Fastor, vi. 269:
Terra pilae similis, nullo fulcimine nixa,
Aere subjecto tam grave pendet onus.
From passages like this occurring occasionally in the Classical writers, it is evident that the true figure of the earth had early engaged the attention of people, and that occasionally the truth on this subject was before their minds, though it was neither worked into a system nor sustained then by suffient evidence to make it an article of established belief The description here given is appropriate now; and had Job understood all that is now known of astronomy, his language would have been appropriate to express just conceptions of the greatness and majesty of God. It is proof of amazing power and greatness that he has thus "hung"the earth, the planets, the vast sun himself, upon nothing, and that by his own power he sustains and governs all.
Poole -> Job 26:7
Poole: Job 26:7 - -- The north i.e. the northern pole, or part of the heavens, which he particularly mentions, and puts for the whole visible heaven, because Job and his ...
The north i.e. the northern pole, or part of the heavens, which he particularly mentions, and puts for the whole visible heaven, because Job and his friends lived in a northern climate, and were acquainted only with that part of the heavens, the southern pole and parts near it being wholly unknown to them. The heavens are oft and fitly said to be spread or stretched out like a curtain or tent, to which they are resembled.
The empty place to wit, the air, so called, not philosophically, as if it were wholly empty; but popularly, because it seems to be so, and is generally void of solid and visible bodies.
Upon nothing upon its own centre, which is but an imaginary thing, and in truth nothing; or upon no props or pillars, but his own power and providence; which is justly celebrated as a wonderful work of God, both in Scripture and in heathen authors.
Haydock -> Job 26:7
Haydock: Job 26:7 - -- North pole, which alone was visible in Idumea, and continued unmoved, while all the stars performed their revolutions. (Calmet) ---
Nothing. Terra...
North pole, which alone was visible in Idumea, and continued unmoved, while all the stars performed their revolutions. (Calmet) ---
Nothing. Terra, pilæ similis, nullo fulcimine nixa. (Ovid, Fast, vi.) (Calmet) ---
All tends to the centre, (Menochius) by the laws of attraction. (Newton, &c.) (Haydock)
Gill -> Job 26:7
Gill: Job 26:7 - -- He stretcheth out the north over the empty place,.... The northern hemisphere, which is the chief and best known, at least it was in the time of Job, ...
He stretcheth out the north over the empty place,.... The northern hemisphere, which is the chief and best known, at least it was in the time of Job, when the southern hemisphere might not be known at all; though, if our version of Job 9:9 is right, Job seems to have had knowledge of it. Scheuchzer u thinks the thick air farthest north is meant, which expands itself everywhere, and is of great use to the whole earth. But if the northern hemisphere is meant, as a learned man w expresses it, it
"was not only principal as to Job's respect, and the position of Arabia, but because this hemisphere is absolutely so indeed, it is principal to the whole; for as the heavens and the earth are divided by the middle line, the northern half hath a strange share of excellency; we have more earth, more men, more stars, more day (the same also Sephorno, a Jewish commentator on the place, observes); and, which is more than all this, the north pole is more magnetic than the south:''
though the whole celestial sphere may be intended, the principal being put for the whole; even that whole expansion, or firmament of heaven, which has its name from being stretched out like a curtain, or canopy, over the earth; which was done when the earth was "tohu", empty of inhabitants, both men and beasts, and was without form and void, and had no beauty in it, or anything growing on it; see Gen 1:2;
and hangeth the earth upon nothing; as a ball in the air x, poised with its own weight y, or kept in this form and manner by the centre of gravity, and so some Jewish writers z interpret "nothing" of the centre of the earth, and which is nothing but "ens rationis", a figment and imagination of the mind; or rather the earth is held together, and in the position it is, by its own magnetic virtue, it being a loadstone itself; and as the above learned writer observes,
"the globe consisteth by a magnetic dependency, from which the parts cannot possibly start aside; but which, howsoever thus strongly seated on its centre and poles, is yet said to hang upon nothing; because the Creator in the beginning thus placed it within the "tohu", as it now also hangeth in the air; which itself also is nothing as to any regard of base or sustentation.''
In short, what the foundations are on which it is laid, or the pillars by which it is sustained, cannot be said, except the mighty power and providence of God. The word used seems to come from a root, which in the Syriac and Chaldee languages signifies to "bind and restrain"; and may design the expanse or atmosphere, so called from its binding and compressing nature,

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Job 26:7 Buttenwieser suggests that Job had outgrown the idea of the earth on pillars, and was beginning to see it was suspended in space. But in v. 11 he will...
Geneva Bible -> Job 26:7
Geneva Bible: Job 26:7 He stretcheth out the ( g ) north over the empty place, [and] hangeth the earth upon nothing.
( g ) He causes the whole earth to turn about the North...

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...
