
Text -- Job 41:31 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Job 41:31 - -- To swell, and foam, and froth by his strong and vehement motion, as any liquor does when it is boiled in a pot, especially boiling ointment.
To swell, and foam, and froth by his strong and vehement motion, as any liquor does when it is boiled in a pot, especially boiling ointment.

Wesley: Job 41:31 - -- The great river Nile, is called a sea, both in scripture, as Isa 11:15, and in other authors, as Euphrates is called the sea of Babylon, Isa 21:1; Jer...
Whenever he moves.

JFB: Job 41:31 - -- The vessel in which it is mixed. Appropriate to the crocodile, which emits a musky smell.
The vessel in which it is mixed. Appropriate to the crocodile, which emits a musky smell.
Clarke -> Job 41:31
Clarke: Job 41:31 - -- He maketh the deep to boil like a pot - This is occasioned by strongly agitating the waters at or near the bottom; and the froth which arises to the...
He maketh the deep to boil like a pot - This is occasioned by strongly agitating the waters at or near the bottom; and the froth which arises to the top from this agitation may have the appearance of ointment. But several travelers say that the crocodile has a very strong scent of musk, and that he even imparts this smell to the water through which he passes, and therefore the text may be taken literally. This property of the crocodile has been noticed by several writers.
TSK -> Job 41:31

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Job 41:31
Barnes: Job 41:31 - -- He maketh the deep to boil like a pot - In his rapid motion through it. The word "deep"( מצולה me tsôlâh ) may refer to any deep ...
He maketh the deep to boil like a pot - In his rapid motion through it. The word "deep"(
He maketh the sea - The word "sea"(
Like a pot of ointment - When it is mixed, or stirred together. Bochart supposes that there is an allusion here to the smell of musk, which it is said the crocodile has, and by which the waters through which he passes seem to be perfumed. But the allusion seems rather to be merely to the fact that the deep is agitated by him when he passes through it, as if it were stirred from the bottom like a pot of ointment.
Poole -> Job 41:31
Poole: Job 41:31 - -- The deep the deep waters, or the sea, which is called the deep , Psa 107:24 Jon 2:3 , as it is explained in the next clause.
To boil like a pot to...
The deep the deep waters, or the sea, which is called the deep , Psa 107:24 Jon 2:3 , as it is explained in the next clause.
To boil like a pot to swell, and foam, and froth by his strong and vehement motion, as any liquor doth when it is boiled in a pot.
The sea either the great sea, the proper place of the whale, Psa 104:25 ; or the great river Nilus, which is called a sea , both in Scripture, as Isa 11:15 , and in other authors, (of which see my Latin Synopsis,) as Euphrates is called the sea of Babylon , Isa 21:1 Jer 51:36 ; or lakes or pools, which are most frequently called seas, both in the Old and New Testament, as every one knows. And in such lakes the crocodiles are no less than in Nilus, as it is attested by Herodotus, and Strabo, and others.
Like a pot of ointment: this clause seems to be added very emphatically, to intimate that this leviathan causeth not only a vehement commotion, but also a great fragrancy in the sea or waters where it is; which, though it was not observed by the ancients, yet is unanimously affirmed by later authors upon their own knowledge and experience, that it casts a perfume like musk; of which see the names and words of the authors in my Latin Synopsis.
Gill -> Job 41:31
Gill: Job 41:31 - -- He maketh the deep to boil k like a pot,.... Which is all in a from through the violent agitation and motion of the waves, caused by its tossing and t...
He maketh the deep to boil k like a pot,.... Which is all in a from through the violent agitation and motion of the waves, caused by its tossing and tumbling about; which better suits with the whale than the crocodile, whose motion in the water is not so vehement;
he maketh the sea like a pot of ointment; this also seems to make against the crocodile, which is a river fish, and is chiefly in the Nile. Lakes indeed are sometimes called seas, in which crocodiles are found; yea, they are also said to be in the seas, Eze 32:2; and Pliny l speaks of them as common to the land, river, and sea; and the Nile is in the Alcoran m called the sea, and its ancient name was "Oceames" with the Egyptians, that is, in Greek, "ocean", as Diodorus Siculus n affirms; and so it is thought to be the Egyptian sea in Isa 11:15. It is observed that they leave a sweet scent behind them; thus Peter Martyr o, in his account of the voyages of Columbus in the West Indies, says, they sometimes met with crocodiles, which, when they fled or took water, they left a very sweet savour behind them, sweeter than musk or castoreum. But this does not come up to the expression here of making the sea like a pot of ointment; but the sperm of the whale comes much nearer to it, which is of a fat oily nature, and like ointment, and which the whale sometimes throws out in great abundance, so that the sea is covered with it; whole pails full may be taken out of the water; it swims upon the sea like fat; abundance of it is seen in calm weather, so that it makes the sea all foul and slimy p: and there are a sort of birds called "mallemuck", which fly in great numbers and feed upon it q. I cannot but remark what the bishop of Bergen observes r of the sea serpent, that its excrements float on the water in summertime like fat slime.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Job 41:31
NET Notes: Job 41:31 The idea is either that the sea is stirred up like the foam from beating the ingredients together, or it is the musk-smell that is the point of compar...
Geneva Bible -> Job 41:31
Geneva Bible: Job 41:31 He maketh the deep to ( k ) boil like a pot: he maketh the sea like a pot of ointment.
( k ) Either he makes the sea to seem like it is boiling by hi...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Job 41:1-34
MHCC -> Job 41:1-34
MHCC: Job 41:1-34 - --The description of the Leviathan, is yet further to convince Job of his own weakness, and of God's almighty power. Whether this Leviathan be a whale o...
Matthew Henry -> Job 41:11-34
Matthew Henry: Job 41:11-34 - -- God, having in the foregoing verses shown Job how unable he was to deal with the leviathan, here sets forth his own power in that massy mighty creat...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Job 41:30-34
Keil-Delitzsch: Job 41:30-34 - --
30 His under parts are the sharpest shards,
He spreadeth a threshing sledge upon the mire.
31 He maketh the deep foam like a caldron,
He maketh t...
Constable: Job 38:1--42:7 - --G. The Cycle of Speeches between Job and God chs. 38:1-42:6
Finally God spoke to Job and gave revelation...

Constable: Job 40:6--42:1 - --3. God's second speech 40:6-41:34
This second divine discourse is similar to, yet different from...
