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Text -- Job 28:1-10 (NET)

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III. Job’s Search for Wisdom (28:1-28)

No Known Road to Wisdom
28:1 “Surely there is a mine for silver, and a place where gold is refined. 28:2 Iron is taken from the ground, and rock is poured out as copper. 28:3 Man puts an end to the darkness; he searches the farthest recesses for the ore in the deepest darkness. darkness. 28:4 Far from where people live he sinks a shaft, in places travelers have long forgotten, far from other people he dangles and sways. 28:5 The earth, from which food comes, is overturned below as though by fire; 28:6 a place whose stones are sapphires and which contains dust of gold; 28:7 a hidden path no bird of prey knows– no falcon’s eye has spotted it. 28:8 Proud beasts have not set foot on it, and no lion has passed along it. 28:9 On the flinty rock man has set to work with his hand; he has overturned mountains at their bases. 28:10 He has cut out channels through the rocks; his eyes have spotted every precious thing.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Philosophy | EUNICE | Job | JOB, BOOK OF | MINE; MINING | ETHICS, III | Readings, Select | Mine | BARUCH, BOOK OF | MINES, MINING | Science | Vulture | KITE | Land, Land Masses | Geology | Civil Engineering | Lion | RIVER | God | Bronze | more
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Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 28:1 The verb יָזֹקּוּ (yazoqqu) translated “refined,” comes from זָקַ&...

NET Notes: Job 28:2 The verb יָצוּק (yatsuq) is usually translated as a passive participle “is smelted” (from י’...

NET Notes: Job 28:3 The verse ends with “the stone of darkness and deep darkness.” The genitive would be location, describing the place where the stones are f...

NET Notes: Job 28:4 This is a description of the mining procedures. Dangling suspended from a rope would be a necessary part of the job of going up and down the shafts.

NET Notes: Job 28:5 The verse has been properly understood, on the whole, as comparing the earth above and all its produce with the upheaval down below.

NET Notes: Job 28:6 H. H. Rowley (Job [NCBC], 181) suggests that if it is lapis lazuli, then the dust of gold would refer to the particles of iron pyrite found in lapis l...

NET Notes: Job 28:7 The kind of bird mentioned here is debated. The LXX has “vulture,” and so some commentaries follow that. The emphasis on the sight favors ...

NET Notes: Job 28:8 Heb “the sons of pride.” In Job 41:26 the expression refers to carnivorous wild beasts.

NET Notes: Job 28:9 The Hebrew מִשֹּׁרֶשׁ (mishoresh) means “from/at [their] root [or base].” In m...

NET Notes: Job 28:10 Heb “his eye sees.”

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