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Text -- Job 38:1-34 (NET)

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VI. The Divine Speeches (38:1-42:6)

The Lord’s First Speech
38:1 Then the Lord answered Job out of the whirlwind: 38:2 “Who is this who darkens counsel with words without knowledge? 38:3 Get ready for a difficult task like a man; I will question you and you will inform me!
God’s questions to Job
38:4 “Where were you when I laid the foundation of the earth? Tell me, if you possess understanding! 38:5 Who set its measurements– if you know– or who stretched a measuring line across it? 38:6 On what were its bases set, or who laid its cornerstone38:7 when the morning stars sang in chorus, and all the sons of God shouted for joy? 38:8 “Who shut up the sea with doors when it burst forth, coming out of the womb, 38:9 when I made the storm clouds its garment, and thick darkness its swaddling band, 38:10 when I prescribed its limits, and set in place its bolts and doors, 38:11 when I said, ‘To here you may come and no farther, here your proud waves will be confined’? 38:12 Have you ever in your life commanded the morning, or made the dawn know its place, 38:13 that it might seize the corners of the earth, and shake the wicked out of it? 38:14 The earth takes shape like clay under a seal; its features are dyed like a garment. 38:15 Then from the wicked the light is withheld, and the arm raised in violence is broken. 38:16 Have you gone to the springs that fill the sea, or walked about in the recesses of the deep? 38:17 Have the gates of death been revealed to you? Have you seen the gates of deepest darkness? 38:18 Have you considered the vast expanses of the earth? Tell me, if you know it all! 38:19 “In what direction does light reside, and darkness, where is its place, 38:20 that you may take them to their borders and perceive the pathways to their homes? 38:21 You know, for you were born before them; and the number of your days is great! 38:22 Have you entered the storehouse of the snow, or seen the armory of the hail, 38:23 which I reserve for the time of trouble, for the day of war and battle? 38:24 In what direction is lightning dispersed, or the east winds scattered over the earth? 38:25 Who carves out a channel for the heavy rains, and a path for the rumble of thunder, 38:26 to cause it to rain on an uninhabited land, a desert where there are no human beings, 38:27 to satisfy a devastated and desolate land, and to cause it to sprout with vegetation? 38:28 Does the rain have a father, or who has fathered the drops of the dew? 38:29 From whose womb does the ice emerge, and the frost from the sky, who gives birth to it, 38:30 when the waters become hard like stone, when the surface of the deep is frozen solid? 38:31 Can you tie the bands of the Pleiades, or release the cords of Orion? 38:32 Can you lead out the constellations in their seasons, or guide the Bear with its cubs? 38:33 Do you know the laws of the heavens, or can you set up their rule over the earth? 38:34 Can you raise your voice to the clouds so that a flood of water covers you?
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Bear a constellation
 · Job a man whose story is told in the book of Job,a man from the land of Uz in Edom
 · Mazzaroth a constellation (NIV,NASB margin)
 · Orion a constellation of stars
 · Pleiades a constellation of stars


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Ignorance | Job | BARUCH, BOOK OF | JOB, BOOK OF | Readings, Select | God | Euthanasia | Blessing | Condescension of God | Meteorology and Celestial Phenomena | Land, Land Masses | Astronomy | TEXT OF THE OLD TESTAMENT | Angel | Orion | Mankind | Pleiades | Mazzaroth | Dayspring | Clay | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 38:1 This is not the storm described by Elihu – in fact, the Lord ignores Elihu. The storm is a common accompaniment for a theophany (see Ezek 1:4; N...

NET Notes: Job 38:2 The referent of “counsel” here is not the debate between Job and the friends, but the purposes of God (see Ps 33:10; Prov 19:21; Isa 19:17...

NET Notes: Job 38:3 Heb “Gird up your loins.” This idiom basically describes taking the hem of the long garment or robe and pulling it up between the legs and...

NET Notes: Job 38:4 The verb is the imperative; it has no object “me” in the text.

NET Notes: Job 38:5 The particle כּ (ki) is taken here for a conditional clause, “if you know” (see GKC 498 §159.dd). Others take it as ̶...

NET Notes: Job 38:6 The world was conceived of as having bases and pillars, but these poetic descriptions should not be pressed too far (e.g., see Ps 24:2, which may be w...

NET Notes: Job 38:7 See Job 1:6.

NET Notes: Job 38:8 The line uses two expressions, first the temporal clause with גִּיחַ (giakh, “when it burst forth”) an...

NET Notes: Job 38:9 This noun is found only here. The verb is in Ezek 16:4, and a related noun is in Ezek 30:21.

NET Notes: Job 38:10 Dhorme suggested reversing the two verbs, making this the first, and then “shatter” for the second colon.

NET Notes: Job 38:11 The MT literally says, “here he will put on the pride of your waves.” The verb has no expressed subject and so is made a passive voice. Bu...

NET Notes: Job 38:12 The verb is the Piel of יָדַע (yada’, “to know”) with a double accusative.

NET Notes: Job 38:13 The poetic image is that darkness or night is like a blanket that covers the earth, and at dawn it is taken by the edges and shaken out. Since the wic...

NET Notes: Job 38:14 The MT reads “they stand up like a garment” (NASB, NIV) or “its features stand out like a garment” (ESV). The reference could ...

NET Notes: Job 38:15 What is active at night, the violence symbolized by the raised arm, is broken with the dawn. G. R. Driver thought the whole verse referred to stars, a...

NET Notes: Job 38:16 Heb “the springs of the sea.” The words “that fill” are supplied in the translation to clarify the meaning of the phrase.

NET Notes: Job 38:17 Some still retain the traditional phrase “shadow of death” in the English translation (cf. NIV). The reference is to the entrance to Sheol...

NET Notes: Job 38:19 The interrogative with דֶרֶךְ (derekh) means “in what road” or “in what direction.”

NET Notes: Job 38:20 The suffixes are singular (“that you may take it to its border…to its home”), referring to either the light or the darkness. Because...

NET Notes: Job 38:21 The imperfect verb after the adverb אָז (’az, “then”) functions as a preterite: “you were born.” The l...

NET Notes: Job 38:22 The same Hebrew term (אוֹצָר, ’otsar), has been translated “storehouse” in the first line and &#...

NET Notes: Job 38:23 The terms translated war and battle are different Hebrew words, but both may be translated “war” or “battle” depending on the ...

NET Notes: Job 38:24 Because the parallel with “light” and “east wind” is not tight, Hoffmann proposed ‘ed instead, “mist.” This ...

NET Notes: Job 38:26 Heb “a desert, no man in it.”

NET Notes: Job 38:27 Heb “to cause to sprout a source of vegetation.” The word מֹצָא (motsa’) is rendered “mine”...

NET Notes: Job 38:29 Or “heavens.” The Hebrew term שָׁמַיִם (shamayim) may be translated “heaven(s)”...

NET Notes: Job 38:30 Several suggest that the verb is not from חָבָא (khava’, “to hide”) but from a homonym, “to cong...

NET Notes: Job 38:31 This word is found here and in 1 Sam 15:32. Dhorme suggests, with others, that there has been a metathesis (a reversal of consonants), and it is the s...

NET Notes: Job 38:32 See Job 9:9.

NET Notes: Job 38:34 The LXX has “answer you,” and some editors have adopted this. However, the reading of the MT makes better sense in the verse.

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