
Text -- Job 26:8 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Job 26:8
Clarke -> Job 26:8
Clarke: Job 26:8 - -- He bindeth up the waters - Drives the aqueous particles together, which were raised by evaporation, so that, being condensed, they form clouds which...
He bindeth up the waters - Drives the aqueous particles together, which were raised by evaporation, so that, being condensed, they form clouds which float in the atmosphere, till, meeting with strong currents of wind, or by the agency of the electric fluid, they are farther condensed; and then, becoming too heavy to be sustained in the air, fall down in the form of rain, when, in this poetic language, the cloud is rent under them.
Defender -> Job 26:8
Defender: Job 26:8 - -- Only in recent centuries has this "balancing of the clouds" (Job 37:16) been explained. It refers to strong updrafts of air providing the force necess...
Only in recent centuries has this "balancing of the clouds" (Job 37:16) been explained. It refers to strong updrafts of air providing the force necessary to keep the water droplets in the clouds from falling to earth."
TSK -> Job 26:8
TSK: Job 26:8 - -- bindeth up : Job 36:29, Job 38:9, Job 38:37; Gen 1:6, Gen 1:7; Psa 135:7; Pro 30:4; Jer 10:13
thick clouds : Job 37:11-16; Psa 18:10, Psa 18:11
and th...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 26:8
Barnes: Job 26:8 - -- He bindeth up the waters in his thick clouds - That is, he seems to do it, or to collect the waters in the clouds, as in bottles or vessels. Th...
He bindeth up the waters in his thick clouds - That is, he seems to do it, or to collect the waters in the clouds, as in bottles or vessels. The clouds appear to hold the waters, as if bound up, until he is pleased to send them drop by drop upon the earth.
And the cloud is not rent under them - The wonder which Job here expresses is, that so large a quantity of water as is poured down from the clouds, should be held suspended in the air without seeming to rend the cloud, and falling all at once. His image is that of a bottle, or vessel, filled with water, suspended in the air, and which is not rent. What were the views which he had of the clouds, of course it is impossible now to say. If he regarded them as they are, as vapors, or if he considered them to be a more solid substance, capable of holding water, there was equal ground for wonder. In the former case, his amazement would have arisen from the fact, that so light, fragile, and evanescent a substance as vapor should contain so large a quantity of water; in the latter case, his wonder would have been that such a substance should distil its contents drop by drop. There is equal reason for admiring the wisdom of God in the production of rain, now that the cause is understood. The clouds are collections of vapors. They contain moisture, or vapor, which ascends from the earth, and which is held in suspension when in small particles in the clouds; as, when a room is swept, the small particles of dust will be seen to float in the room. When these small particles are attracted, and form masses as large as drops, the air will no longer sustain them, and they fall to the earth. Man never could have devised a way for causing rain; and the mode in which it is provided that large quantities of water shall be borne from one place to another in the air, and made to fall when it is needed, by which the vapors that ascend from the ocean shall not be suffered to fall again into the ocean, but shall be carried on to the land, is adapted to excite our admiration of the wisdom of God now, no less than it was in the time of Job.
Poole -> Job 26:8
Poole: Job 26:8 - -- This also is a miraculous work of God, considering the nature of these waters, which are fluid and heavy, and pressing downward, especially being of...
This also is a miraculous work of God, considering the nature of these waters, which are fluid and heavy, and pressing downward, especially being ofttimes there in great abundance; and withal, the quality of the clouds, which are thin and loose bodies of the same nature with fogs and mists upon the face of the earth, and therefore of themselves utterly unable to bear that weight, and to keep up those waters from falling suddenly and violently upon the earth.
Haydock -> Job 26:8
Clouds, as in a vessel or garment, Proverbs xxx. 4.
Gill -> Job 26:8
Gill: Job 26:8 - -- He bindeth up the waters in his thick clouds,.... The clouds are of his making; when he utters his voice, or gives the word of command, there is a mul...
He bindeth up the waters in his thick clouds,.... The clouds are of his making; when he utters his voice, or gives the word of command, there is a multitude of waters in the heavens; and the vapours he exhales from the ends of the earth and forms them into clouds, and they are his chariots, in which he rides up and down in the heavens, and waters his gardens and plantations on earth; see Jer 10:13; which may be said to be thick in comparison of the air, in which they are; otherwise they are but thin, and the thinner they are, the greater wonder it is that the waters, and such a heavy body of them, should be bound up in them, as there often is; and which is bound up, held, and retained therein, as anything bound up in a sack or bag, or in a garment, or the skirt of a man's coat; see Pro 30:4; and what is still more marvellous:
and the cloud is not rent under them; under the waters, and through the weight of them; which, if it was, would fall in vast water spouts, and were such to fall upon the earth, as it may be supposed they did at the general deluge, they would destroy man and beast, and wash off and wash away the things of the earth: but God has so ordered it in his infinite wisdom, and by his almighty power, that clouds should not be thus rent, but fall in small drops and gentle showers, as if they passed through a sieve or colander, whereby the earth is refreshed, and made fruitful; see Job 36:26.

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 26:8-10
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 26:8-10 - --
8 He bindeth up the waters in His clouds,
Without the clouds being rent under their burden.
9 He enshroudeth the face of His throne,
Spreading Hi...
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...
