collapse all  

Text -- Job 37:1-22 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
37:1 At this also my heart pounds and leaps from its place. 37:2 Listen carefully to the thunder of his voice, to the rumbling that proceeds from his mouth. 37:3 Under the whole heaven he lets it go, even his lightning to the far corners of the earth. 37:4 After that a voice roars; he thunders with an exalted voice, and he does not hold back his lightning bolts when his voice is heard. 37:5 God thunders with his voice in marvelous ways; he does great things beyond our understanding. 37:6 For to the snow he says, ‘Fall to earth,’ and to the torrential rains, ‘Pour down.’ 37:7 He causes everyone to stop working, so that all people may know his work. 37:8 The wild animals go to their lairs, and in their dens they remain. 37:9 A tempest blows out from its chamber, icy cold from the driving winds. 37:10 The breath of God produces ice, and the breadth of the waters freeze solid. 37:11 He loads the clouds with moisture; he scatters his lightning through the clouds. 37:12 The clouds go round in circles, wheeling about according to his plans, to carry out all that he commands them over the face of the whole inhabited world. 37:13 Whether it is for punishment for his land, or whether it is for mercy, he causes it to find its mark. 37:14 “Pay attention to this, Job! Stand still and consider the wonders God works. 37:15 Do you know how God commands them, how he makes lightning flash in his storm cloud? 37:16 Do you know about the balancing of the clouds, that wondrous activity of him who is perfect in knowledge? 37:17 You, whose garments are hot when the earth is still because of the south wind, 37:18 will you, with him, spread out the clouds, solid as a mirror of molten metal? 37:19 Tell us what we should say to him. We cannot prepare a case because of the darkness. 37:20 Should he be informed that I want to speak? If a man speaks, surely he would be swallowed up! 37:21 But now, the sun cannot be looked at– it is bright in the skies– after a wind passed and swept the clouds away. 37:22 From the north he comes in golden splendor; around God is awesome majesty.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Job a man whose story is told in the book of Job,a man from the land of Uz in Edom


Dictionary Themes and Topics: WORLD, COSMOLOGICAL | WINDS | Tale | THUNDER | SOUTH | SKY | RAINFALL IN JERUSALEM IN INCHES | God | Gizonite | FROST | Elihu | END | EARTH, CORNERS OF THE | DEN | DELUGE OF NOAH | COMPREHEND | CLOUD | BALANCINGS | ASTRONOMY, III | ASTRONOMY, II | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

Other
Critics Ask

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Job 37:2 - -- It is probable that while Elihu was speaking it thundered, and that tempest was begun, wherewith God ushered in his speech. And this might occasion hi...

It is probable that while Elihu was speaking it thundered, and that tempest was begun, wherewith God ushered in his speech. And this might occasion his return to that subject of which he had discoursed before.

Wesley: Job 37:2 - -- The thunder is called God's voice. Because by it God speaks to the children of men, to fear before him.

The thunder is called God's voice. Because by it God speaks to the children of men, to fear before him.

Wesley: Job 37:2 - -- That is produced by God's word or command, which is often signified by his mouth.

That is produced by God's word or command, which is often signified by his mouth.

Wesley: Job 37:3 - -- His voice: which he guideth like an arrow to the mark, that it may do that work for which he sends it.

His voice: which he guideth like an arrow to the mark, that it may do that work for which he sends it.

Wesley: Job 37:4 - -- After the lightning, which is seen before the thunder is hard.

After the lightning, which is seen before the thunder is hard.

Wesley: Job 37:4 - -- The lightnings spoken of in the beginning of the verse.

The lightnings spoken of in the beginning of the verse.

Wesley: Job 37:6 - -- Those storms of rain which come with great force and irresistible violence.

Those storms of rain which come with great force and irresistible violence.

Wesley: Job 37:7 - -- By these snows and rains he drives men out of the fields, and seals or binds up their hands from their work.

By these snows and rains he drives men out of the fields, and seals or binds up their hands from their work.

Wesley: Job 37:7 - -- They may seriously contemplate on these, and other great and glorious works of God.

They may seriously contemplate on these, and other great and glorious works of God.

Wesley: Job 37:9 - -- Freezing winds.

Freezing winds.

Wesley: Job 37:10 - -- The waters which had freely spread themselves before, are congealed and bound up in crystal fetters.

The waters which had freely spread themselves before, are congealed and bound up in crystal fetters.

Wesley: Job 37:11 - -- The earth. They spend themselves and are exhausted watering the earth, until they are weary.

The earth. They spend themselves and are exhausted watering the earth, until they are weary.

Wesley: Job 37:11 - -- Them with much water, and making them to go long journeys to water remote parts, and at last to empty themselves there: all which things make men wear...

Them with much water, and making them to go long journeys to water remote parts, and at last to empty themselves there: all which things make men weary; and therefore are here said to make the clouds weary by a common figure.

Wesley: Job 37:11 - -- As for the white and lightsome clouds, he scatters and dissolves them by the wind or sun.

As for the white and lightsome clouds, he scatters and dissolves them by the wind or sun.

Wesley: Job 37:12 - -- The clouds are carried about to this or that place. Not by chance (though nothing seems to be more casual than the motions of the clouds) but by his o...

The clouds are carried about to this or that place. Not by chance (though nothing seems to be more casual than the motions of the clouds) but by his order and governance.

Wesley: Job 37:13 - -- To scourge or correct men by immoderate showers.

To scourge or correct men by immoderate showers.

Wesley: Job 37:13 - -- The whole earth, which is said to be the Lord's, Psa 24:1, Psa 50:12, and so this may denote a general judgment by excessive rains inflicted upon the ...

The whole earth, which is said to be the Lord's, Psa 24:1, Psa 50:12, and so this may denote a general judgment by excessive rains inflicted upon the earth, and all its inhabitants, even the universal deluge, which came in great measure out of the clouds.

Wesley: Job 37:13 - -- For the benefit of mankind and for the cooling of the air and improving the fruits of the earth.

For the benefit of mankind and for the cooling of the air and improving the fruits of the earth.

Wesley: Job 37:14 - -- If there be so much matter of wonder in the most obvious works of God, how wonderful must his secret counsels be?

If there be so much matter of wonder in the most obvious works of God, how wonderful must his secret counsels be?

Wesley: Job 37:15 - -- The things before mentioned, the clouds, rain, snow, and other meteors.

The things before mentioned, the clouds, rain, snow, and other meteors.

Wesley: Job 37:15 - -- Probably the rainbow, seated in a cloud, which may well be called God's cloud, because therein God puts his bow, Gen 9:13.

Probably the rainbow, seated in a cloud, which may well be called God's cloud, because therein God puts his bow, Gen 9:13.

Wesley: Job 37:16 - -- How God doth as it were weigh the clouds in balances, so that although they are full of water, yet they are kept up by the thin air.

How God doth as it were weigh the clouds in balances, so that although they are full of water, yet they are kept up by the thin air.

Wesley: Job 37:17 - -- The air about the earth.

The air about the earth.

Wesley: Job 37:17 - -- By the sun's coming into the southern parts, which makes the air quiet and warm.

By the sun's coming into the southern parts, which makes the air quiet and warm.

Wesley: Job 37:18 - -- Wast thou his assistant in spreading out the sky like a canopy over the earth? Strong - Which though it be very thin and transparent, yet is also firm...

Wast thou his assistant in spreading out the sky like a canopy over the earth? Strong - Which though it be very thin and transparent, yet is also firm and compact and steadfast.

Wesley: Job 37:18 - -- Made of brass and steel, as the manner then was. Smooth and polished, without the least flaw. In this, as in a glass, we may behold the glory of God a...

Made of brass and steel, as the manner then was. Smooth and polished, without the least flaw. In this, as in a glass, we may behold the glory of God and the wisdom of his handy - work.

Wesley: Job 37:19 - -- If thou canst.

If thou canst.

Wesley: Job 37:19 - -- Of these things.

Of these things.

Wesley: Job 37:19 - -- To maintain discourse with him, both because of the darkness of the matter, God's counsels being a great depth; and because of the darkness of our min...

To maintain discourse with him, both because of the darkness of the matter, God's counsels being a great depth; and because of the darkness of our minds.

Wesley: Job 37:20 - -- I send a challenge to God, or a message that I am ready to debate with him concerning his proceedings? Speak - If a man should be so bold to enter the...

I send a challenge to God, or a message that I am ready to debate with him concerning his proceedings? Speak - If a man should be so bold to enter the lists with God.

Wesley: Job 37:20 - -- With the sense of his infinite majesty.

With the sense of his infinite majesty.

Wesley: Job 37:21 - -- The sun; which is emphatically called light, and here the bright light: which men cannot behold or gaze on, when the sky is very clear: and therefore ...

The sun; which is emphatically called light, and here the bright light: which men cannot behold or gaze on, when the sky is very clear: and therefore it is not strange if we cannot see God, or discern his counsels and ways.

Wesley: Job 37:21 - -- The sky by driving away those clouds which darkened it.

The sky by driving away those clouds which darkened it.

Wesley: Job 37:22 - -- From the northern winds which scatter the clouds, and clear the sky. Elihu concludes with some short, but great sayings, concerning the glory of God. ...

From the northern winds which scatter the clouds, and clear the sky. Elihu concludes with some short, but great sayings, concerning the glory of God. He speaks abruptly and in haste, because it should seem, he perceived God was approaching, and presumed he was about to take the work into his own hands.

JFB: Job 37:1 - -- (Job 37:1-24)

(Job 37:1-24)

JFB: Job 37:1 - -- When I hear the thundering of the Divine Majesty. Perhaps the storm already had begun, out of which God was to address Job (Job 38:1).

When I hear the thundering of the Divine Majesty. Perhaps the storm already had begun, out of which God was to address Job (Job 38:1).

JFB: Job 37:2 - -- The thunder (noise), &c., and then you will feel that there is good reason to tremble.

The thunder (noise), &c., and then you will feel that there is good reason to tremble.

JFB: Job 37:2 - -- Muttering of the thunder.

Muttering of the thunder.

JFB: Job 37:3 - -- However zigzag the lightning's course; or, rather, it applies to the pealing roll of the thunder. God's all-embracing power.

However zigzag the lightning's course; or, rather, it applies to the pealing roll of the thunder. God's all-embracing power.

JFB: Job 37:3 - -- Literally, "wings," "skirts," the habitable earth being often compared to an extended garment (Job 38:13; Isa 11:12).

Literally, "wings," "skirts," the habitable earth being often compared to an extended garment (Job 38:13; Isa 11:12).

JFB: Job 37:4 - -- The thunderclap follows at an interval after the flash.

The thunderclap follows at an interval after the flash.

JFB: Job 37:4 - -- He will not hold back the lightnings (Job 37:3), when the thunder is heard [MAURER]. Rather, take "them" as the usual concomitants of thunder, namely,...

He will not hold back the lightnings (Job 37:3), when the thunder is heard [MAURER]. Rather, take "them" as the usual concomitants of thunder, namely, rain and hail [UMBREIT] (Job 40:9).

JFB: Job 37:5 - -- (Job 36:26; Psa 65:6; Psa 139:14). The sublimity of the description lies in this, that God is everywhere in the storm, directing it whither He will [B...

(Job 36:26; Psa 65:6; Psa 139:14). The sublimity of the description lies in this, that God is everywhere in the storm, directing it whither He will [BARNES]. See Psa 29:1-11, where, as here, the "voice" of God is repeated with grand effect. The thunder in Arabia is sublimely terrible.

JFB: Job 37:6 - -- More forcible than "fall," as UMBREIT translates Gen 1:3.

More forcible than "fall," as UMBREIT translates Gen 1:3.

JFB: Job 37:6 - -- He saith, Be on the earth. The shower increasing from "small" to "great," is expressed by the plural "showers" (Margin), following the singular "showe...

He saith, Be on the earth. The shower increasing from "small" to "great," is expressed by the plural "showers" (Margin), following the singular "shower." Winter rain (Son 2:11).

JFB: Job 37:7 - -- In winter God stops man's out-of-doors activity.

In winter God stops man's out-of-doors activity.

JFB: Job 37:7 - -- Closeth up (Job 9:7). Man's "hands" are then tied up.

Closeth up (Job 9:7). Man's "hands" are then tied up.

JFB: Job 37:7 - -- In antithesis to man's own work ("hand") which at other times engages men so as to make them liable to forget their dependence on God. UMBREIT more li...

In antithesis to man's own work ("hand") which at other times engages men so as to make them liable to forget their dependence on God. UMBREIT more literally translates, That all men whom He has made (literally, "of His making") may be brought to acknowledgment."

JFB: Job 37:8 - -- Rest in their lairs. It is beautifully ordered that during the cold, when they could not obtain food, many lie torpid, a state wherein they need no fo...

Rest in their lairs. It is beautifully ordered that during the cold, when they could not obtain food, many lie torpid, a state wherein they need no food. The desolation of the fields, at God's bidding, is poetically graphic.

JFB: Job 37:9 - -- Literally, "chambers"; connected with the south (Job 9:9). The whirlwinds are poetically regarded as pent up by God in His southern chambers, whence H...

Literally, "chambers"; connected with the south (Job 9:9). The whirlwinds are poetically regarded as pent up by God in His southern chambers, whence He sends them forth (so Job 38:22; Psa 135:7). As to the southern whirlwinds (see Isa 21:1; Zec 9:14), they drive before them burning sands; chiefly from February to May.

JFB: Job 37:9 - -- Literally, "scattering"; the north wind scatters the clouds.

Literally, "scattering"; the north wind scatters the clouds.

JFB: Job 37:10 - -- Poetically, for the ice-producing north wind.

Poetically, for the ice-producing north wind.

JFB: Job 37:10 - -- Rather, "ice."

Rather, "ice."

JFB: Job 37:10 - -- Physically accurate; frost compresses or contracts the expanded liquid into a congealed mass (Job 38:29-30; Psa 147:17-18).

Physically accurate; frost compresses or contracts the expanded liquid into a congealed mass (Job 38:29-30; Psa 147:17-18).

JFB: Job 37:11-13 - -- How the thunderclouds are dispersed, or else employed by God, either for correction or mercy.

How the thunderclouds are dispersed, or else employed by God, either for correction or mercy.

JFB: Job 37:11-13 - -- By loading it with water.

By loading it with water.

JFB: Job 37:11-13 - -- Burdeneth it, so that it falls in rain; thus "wearieth" answers to the parallel "scattereth" (compare, see on Job 37:9); a clear sky resulting alike f...

Burdeneth it, so that it falls in rain; thus "wearieth" answers to the parallel "scattereth" (compare, see on Job 37:9); a clear sky resulting alike from both.

JFB: Job 37:11-13 - -- Literally, "cloud of his light," that is, of His lightning. UMBREIT for "watering," &c., translates; "Brightness drives away the clouds, His light sca...

Literally, "cloud of his light," that is, of His lightning. UMBREIT for "watering," &c., translates; "Brightness drives away the clouds, His light scattereth the thick clouds"; the parallelism is thus good, but the Hebrew hardly sanctions it.

JFB: Job 37:12 - -- The cloud of lightning.

The cloud of lightning.

JFB: Job 37:12 - -- Guidance (Psa 148:8); literally, "steering"; the clouds obey God's guidance, as the ship does the helmsman. So the lightning (see on Job 36:31-32); ne...

Guidance (Psa 148:8); literally, "steering"; the clouds obey God's guidance, as the ship does the helmsman. So the lightning (see on Job 36:31-32); neither is haphazard in its movements.

JFB: Job 37:12 - -- The clouds, implied in the collective singular "it."

The clouds, implied in the collective singular "it."

JFB: Job 37:12 - -- In the face of the earth's circle.

In the face of the earth's circle.

JFB: Job 37:13 - -- Literally, "He maketh it (the rain-cloud) find place," whether for correction, if (it be destined) for His land (that is, for the part inhabited by ma...

Literally, "He maketh it (the rain-cloud) find place," whether for correction, if (it be destined) for His land (that is, for the part inhabited by man, with whom God deals, as opposed to the parts uninhabited, on which rain is at other times appointed to fall, Job 38:26-27) or for mercy. "If it be destined for His land" is a parenthetical supposition [MAURER]. In English Version, this clause spoils the even balance of the antithesis between the "rod" (Margin) and "mercy" (Psa 68:9; Gen. 7:1-24).

JFB: Job 37:14 - -- (Psa 111:2).

JFB: Job 37:15 - -- Rather, "how."

Rather, "how."

JFB: Job 37:15 - -- Lays His charge on these "wonders" (Job 37:14) to arise.

Lays His charge on these "wonders" (Job 37:14) to arise.

JFB: Job 37:15 - -- Lightning.

Lightning.

JFB: Job 37:15 - -- Flash. How is it that light arises from the dark thundercloud?

Flash. How is it that light arises from the dark thundercloud?

JFB: Job 37:16 - -- Hebrew, "Hast thou understanding of the balancings," &c., how the clouds are poised in the air, so that their watery gravity does not bring them to th...

Hebrew, "Hast thou understanding of the balancings," &c., how the clouds are poised in the air, so that their watery gravity does not bring them to the earth? The condensed moisture, descending by gravity, meets a warmer temperature, which dissipates it into vapor (the tendency of which is to ascend) and so counteracts the descending force.

JFB: Job 37:16 - -- God; not here in the sense that Elihu uses it of himself (Job 36:4).

God; not here in the sense that Elihu uses it of himself (Job 36:4).

JFB: Job 37:16 - -- How, &c.

How, &c.

JFB: Job 37:17 - -- That is, dost thou know how thy body grows warm, so as to affect thy garments with heat?

That is, dost thou know how thy body grows warm, so as to affect thy garments with heat?

JFB: Job 37:17 - -- Literally, "region of the south." "When He maketh still (and sultry) the earth (that is, the atmosphere) by (during) the south wind" (Son 4:16).

Literally, "region of the south." "When He maketh still (and sultry) the earth (that is, the atmosphere) by (during) the south wind" (Son 4:16).

JFB: Job 37:18 - -- Like as He does (Job 40:15).

Like as He does (Job 40:15).

JFB: Job 37:18 - -- Given expanse to.

Given expanse to.

JFB: Job 37:18 - -- Firm; whence the term "firmament" ("expansion," Gen 1:6, Margin; Isa 44:24).

Firm; whence the term "firmament" ("expansion," Gen 1:6, Margin; Isa 44:24).

JFB: Job 37:18 - -- Image of the bright smiling sky. Mirrors were then formed of molten polished metal, not glass.

Image of the bright smiling sky. Mirrors were then formed of molten polished metal, not glass.

JFB: Job 37:19 - -- Men cannot explain God's wonders; we ought, therefore, to be dumb and not contend with God. If Job thinks we ought, "let him teach us, what we shall s...

Men cannot explain God's wonders; we ought, therefore, to be dumb and not contend with God. If Job thinks we ought, "let him teach us, what we shall say."

JFB: Job 37:19 - -- Frame.

Frame.

JFB: Job 37:19 - -- Of mind; ignorance. "The eyes are bewilderingly blinded, when turned in bold controversy with God towards the sunny heavens" (Job 37:18) [UMBREIT].

Of mind; ignorance. "The eyes are bewilderingly blinded, when turned in bold controversy with God towards the sunny heavens" (Job 37:18) [UMBREIT].

JFB: Job 37:20 - -- What I a mortal say against God's dealings is not worthy of being told HIM. In opposition to Job's wish to "speak" before God (Job 13:3, Job 13:18-22)...

What I a mortal say against God's dealings is not worthy of being told HIM. In opposition to Job's wish to "speak" before God (Job 13:3, Job 13:18-22).

JFB: Job 37:20 - -- The parallelism more favors UMBREIT, "Durst a man speak (before Him, complaining) that he is (without cause) being destroyed?"

The parallelism more favors UMBREIT, "Durst a man speak (before Him, complaining) that he is (without cause) being destroyed?"

JFB: Job 37:21 - -- That is, cleareth the air of clouds. When the "bright light" of the sun, previously not seen through "clouds," suddenly shines out from behind them, o...

That is, cleareth the air of clouds. When the "bright light" of the sun, previously not seen through "clouds," suddenly shines out from behind them, owing to the wind clearing them away, the effect is dazzling to the eye; so if God's majesty, now hidden, were suddenly revealed in all its brightness, it would spread darkness over Job's eyes, anxious as he is for it (compare, see on Job 37:19) [UMBREIT]. It is because now man sees not the bright sunlight (God's dazzling majesty), owing to the intervening "clouds" (Job 26:9), that they dare to wish to "speak" before God (Job 37:20). Prelude to God's appearance (Job 38:1). The words also hold true in a sense not intended by Elihu, but perhaps included by the Holy Ghost. Job and other sufferers cannot see the light of God's countenance through the clouds of trial: but the wind will soon clear them off, and God shall appear again: let them but wait patiently, for He still shines, though for a time they see Him not (see on Job 37:23).

JFB: Job 37:22 - -- Rather, "golden splendor." MAURER translates "gold." It is found in northern regions. But God cannot be "found out," because of His "Majesty" (Job 37:...

Rather, "golden splendor." MAURER translates "gold." It is found in northern regions. But God cannot be "found out," because of His "Majesty" (Job 37:23). Thus the twenty-eighth chapter corresponds; English Version is simpler.

JFB: Job 37:22 - -- Brightness is chiefly associated with it (see on Job 23:9). Here, perhaps, because the north wind clears the air (Pro 25:23). Thus this clause answers...

Brightness is chiefly associated with it (see on Job 23:9). Here, perhaps, because the north wind clears the air (Pro 25:23). Thus this clause answers to the last of Job 37:21; as the second of this verse to the first of Job 37:21. Inverted parallelism. (See Isa 14:13; Psa 48:2).

JFB: Job 37:22 - -- Rather, "upon God," as a garment (Psa 104:1-2).

Rather, "upon God," as a garment (Psa 104:1-2).

JFB: Job 37:22 - -- Splendor.

Splendor.

Clarke: Job 37:1 - -- My heart trembleth - This is what the Septuagint has anticipated; see under Job 36:28 (note). A proper consideration of God’ s majesty in the t...

My heart trembleth - This is what the Septuagint has anticipated; see under Job 36:28 (note). A proper consideration of God’ s majesty in the thunder and lightning is enough to appall the stoutest heart, confound the wisest mind, and fill all with humility and devotion. This, to the middle of Job 37:5, should be added to the preceding chapter, as it is a continuation of the account of the thunder and lightning given at the conclusion of that chapter. Our present division is as absurd as it is unfortunate.

Clarke: Job 37:2 - -- Hear attentively - " Hear with hearing."The words seem to intimate that there was actually at that time a violent storm of thunder and lightning, an...

Hear attentively - " Hear with hearing."The words seem to intimate that there was actually at that time a violent storm of thunder and lightning, and that the successive peals were now breaking over the house, and the lightning flashing before their eyes. The storm continued till Elihu had finished, and out of that storm the Almighty spoke. See the beginning of the succeeding chapter, Job 38 (note)

Clarke: Job 37:2 - -- The noise of his voice - The sudden clap

The noise of his voice - The sudden clap

Clarke: Job 37:2 - -- And the sound that goeth out - The peal or continued rattling, pounding, and thumping, to the end of the peal. The whole is represented as the voice...

And the sound that goeth out - The peal or continued rattling, pounding, and thumping, to the end of the peal. The whole is represented as the voice of God himself, and the thunder is immediately issuing from his mouth.

Clarke: Job 37:3 - -- He directeth it under the whole heaven - He directeth it (the lightning) under the whole heaven, in the twinkling of an eye from east to west; and i...

He directeth it under the whole heaven - He directeth it (the lightning) under the whole heaven, in the twinkling of an eye from east to west; and its light - the reflection of the flash, not the lightning, unto the ends of the earth, so that a whole hemisphere seems to see it at the same instant.

Clarke: Job 37:4 - -- After it a voice roareth - After the flash has been seen, the peal is heard; and this will be more or fewer seconds after the peal, in proportion to...

After it a voice roareth - After the flash has been seen, the peal is heard; and this will be more or fewer seconds after the peal, in proportion to the distance of the thunder cloud from the ear. Lightning traverses any space without any perceivable succession of time; nothing seems to be any obstacle to its progress. A multitude of persons taking hands, the first and the last connected with the electric machine, all feel the shock in the same instant; and were there a chain as conductor to go round the globe, the last would feel the shock in the same moment as the first. But as sound depends on the undulations of the air for its propagation, and is known to travel at the rate of only 1142 feet in a second; consequently, if the flash were only 1142 feet from the spectator, it would be seen in one second, or one swing of the pendulum, before the sound could reach the ear, though the clap and the flash take place in the same instant, and if twice this distance, two seconds, and so on. It is of some consequence to know that lightning, at a considerable distance, suppose six or eight seconds of time, is never known to burn, kill or do injury. When the flash and the clap immediately succeed each other, then there is strong ground for apprehension, as the thunder cloud is near. If the thunder cloud be a mile and a half distant, it is, I believe, never known to kill man or beast, or to do any damage to buildings, either by throwing them down or burning them. Now its distance may be easily known by means of a pendulum clock, or watch that has seconds. When the flash is seen, count the seconds till the clap is heard. Then compute: If only one second is counted, then the thunder cloud is within 1142 feet, or about 380 yards; if two seconds, then its distance is 2284 feet, or 761 yards; if three seconds, then 3426 feet, or 1142 yards; if four seconds, then the cloud is distant 4568 feet, or 1522 yards; if five seconds, then the distance is 5710 feet, or 1903 yards; if six seconds, then the distance is 6852 feet, or 2284 yards, one mile and nearly one-third; if seven seconds, then the distance of the cloud is 7994 feet, or 2665 yards, or one mile and a half, and 25 yards. Beyond this distance lightning has not been known to do any damage, the fluid being too much diffused, and partially absorbed, in its passage over electric bodies, i.e., those which are not fully impregnated by the electric matter, and which receive their full charge when they come within the electric attraction of the lightning. For more on the rain produced by thunder storms, see on Job 38:25 (note). This scale may be carried on at pleasure, by adding to the last sum for every second 1142 feet, and reducing to yards and miles as above, allowing 1760 yards to one mile

Clarke: Job 37:4 - -- He thundereth with the voice of his excellency - גאונו geono , of his majesty: nor is there a sound in nature more descriptive of, or more bec...

He thundereth with the voice of his excellency - גאונו geono , of his majesty: nor is there a sound in nature more descriptive of, or more becoming, the majesty of God, than that of Thunder. We hear the breeze in its rustling, the rain in its pattering, the hail in its rattling, the wind in its hollow howlings, the cataract in its dash, the bull in his bellowing, the lion in his roar; but we hear God, the Almighty, the Omnipresent, in the continuous peal of Thunder! This sound, and this sound only, becomes the majesty of Jehovah

Clarke: Job 37:4 - -- And he will not stay them - ולא יעקבם velo yeahkebem , and he hath not limited or circumscribed them. His lightnings light the world; liter...

And he will not stay them - ולא יעקבם velo yeahkebem , and he hath not limited or circumscribed them. His lightnings light the world; literally, the whole world. The electric fluid is diffused through all nature, and everywhere art can exhibit it to view. To his thunder and lightning, therefore, he has assigned no limits. And when his voice soundeth, when the lightning goes forth, who shall assign its limits, and who can stop its progress? It is, like God, Irresistible.

Clarke: Job 37:5 - -- God thundereth marvellously with his voice - This is the conclusion of Elihu’ s description of the lightning and thunder: and here only should ...

God thundereth marvellously with his voice - This is the conclusion of Elihu’ s description of the lightning and thunder: and here only should chapter 36 have ended. He began, Job 36:29, with the noise of God’ s tabernacle; and he ends here with the marvellous thundering of Jehovah. Probably the writer of the book of Job had seen the description of a similar thunder storm as given by the psalmist, Psa 77:16-19 : -

Clarke: Job 37:5 - -- Psa 77:16     The waters saw thee, O God! The waters saw thee, and were afraid. Yea, the deeps were affrighted Psa 77:17   ...

Psa 77:16     The waters saw thee, O God!
The waters saw thee, and were afraid.
Yea, the deeps were affrighted

Psa 77:17     The clouds poured out water;
The ethers sent forth a sound;
Yea, thine arrows went abroad

Psa 77:18     The voice of thy thunder was through the expanse:
The lightnings illumined the globe;
The earth trembled and shook

Psa 77:19     Thy way is in the sea,
And thy paths on many waters;
But thy footsteps are not known

Great things doeth he - This is the beginning of a new paragraph; and relates particularly to the phenomena which are afterwards mentioned. All of them wondrous things; and, in many respects, to us incomprehensible.

Clarke: Job 37:6 - -- For he saith to the snow, Be thou on the earth - Snow is generally defined, "A well-known meteor, formed by the freezing of the vapours in the atmos...

For he saith to the snow, Be thou on the earth - Snow is generally defined, "A well-known meteor, formed by the freezing of the vapours in the atmosphere."We may consider the formation of snow thus: - A cloud of vapours being condensed into drops, these drops, becoming too heavy to be suspended in the atmosphere, descend; and, meeting with a cold region of the air, they are frozen, each drop shooting into several points. These still continuing their descent, and meeting with some intermitting gales of a warmer air, are a little thawed, blunted, and again, by falling into colder air, frozen into clusters, or so entangled with each other as to fall down in what we call flakes

Snow differs from hail and hoar-frost in being crystallized: this appears on examining a flake of snow with a magnifying glass; when the whole of it will appear to be composed of fine spicula or points diverging like rays from a center. I have often observed the particles of snow to be of a regular figure, for the most part beautiful stars of six points as clear and transparent as ice. On each of these points are other collateral points, set at the same angles as the main points themselves, though some are irregular, the points broken, and some are formed of the fragments of other regular stars. I have observed snow to fall sometimes entirely in the form of separate regular six-pointed stars, without either clusters or flakes, and each so large as to be the eighth of an inch in diameter

The lightness of snow is owing to the excess of its surface, when compared with the matter contained under it

Its whiteness is owing to the small particles into which it is divided: for take ice, opaque almost to blackness, and pound it fine, and it becomes as white as snow

The immediate cause of the formation of snow is not well understood: it has been attributed to electricity; and hail is supposed to owe its more compact form to a more intense electricity, which unites the particles of hail more closely than the moderate electricity does those of snow. But rain, snow, hail, frost, ice, etc., have all one common origin; they are formed out of the vapours which have been exhaled by heat from the surface of the waters

Snow, in northern countries, is an especial blessing of Providence; for, by covering the earth, it prevents corn and other vegetables from being destroyed by the intense cold of the air in the winter months; and especially preserves them from cold piercing winds. It is not a fact that it possesses in itself any fertilizing quality, such as nitrous salts, according to vulgar opinion: its whole use is covering the vegetables from intense cold, and thus preventing the natural heat of the earth from escaping, so that the intense cold cannot freeze the juices in the tender tubes of vegetables, which would rupture those tubes, and so destroy the plant

Mr. Good alters the punctuation of this verse, and translates thus: -

Behold, he saith to the snow, Be

On earth then falleth it

To the rain, - and it falleth

The rains of his might

By the small rain, we may understand drizzling showers: by the rain of his strength, sudden thunder storms, when the rain descends in torrents: or violent rain from dissipating water-spouts.

Clarke: Job 37:7 - -- He sealeth up the hand of every man - After all that has been said, and much of it most learnedly, on this verse, I think that the act of freezing i...

He sealeth up the hand of every man - After all that has been said, and much of it most learnedly, on this verse, I think that the act of freezing is probably intended; that when the earth is bound up by intense frost, the hand, יד yad , labor, of every man is sealed up; he can do no more labor in the field, till the south wind blow, by which a thaw takes place. While the earth is in this state of rigidity, the beasts go into their dens, and remain in their places, Job 37:8, some of them sleeping out the winter in a state of torpor, and others of them feeding on the stores which they had collected in autumn. However, the passage may mean no more than by the severity of the rains beasts are drawn to their covers; and man is obliged to intermit all his labors. The mighty rains are past. Who would have thought that on this verse, as its Scriptural foundation, the doctrine of chiromancy is built! God has so marked the hand of every man by the lines thereon exhibited, that they tell all the good or bad fortune they shall have during life; and he has done this that all men, by a judicious examination of their hands, may know his work! On this John Taisnier, a famous mathematician, lawyer, musician, and poet laureate of Cologne, has written a large folio volume, with more hands in it than fell to the lot of Briareus: - printed at Cologne, 1683.

Clarke: Job 37:9 - -- Out of the south cometh the whirlwind - See the note on Job 9:9. What is rendered south here, is there rendered chambers. Mr. Good translates here, ...

Out of the south cometh the whirlwind - See the note on Job 9:9. What is rendered south here, is there rendered chambers. Mr. Good translates here, the utmost zone. The Chaldee: - "From the supreme chamber the commotion shall come; and from the cataracts of Arcturus the cold."What the whirlwind, סופה suphah , is, we know not. It might have been a wind peculiar to that district; and it is very possible that it was a scorching wind, something like the simoom.

Clarke: Job 37:10 - -- By the breath of God frost is given - The freezing of water, though it is generally allowed to be the effect of cold, and has been carefully examine...

By the breath of God frost is given - The freezing of water, though it is generally allowed to be the effect of cold, and has been carefully examined by the most eminent philosophers, is still involved in much mystery; and is a very proper subject to be produced among the great things which God doeth, and which we cannot comprehend, Job 37:5. Water, when frozen, becomes solid, and increases considerably in bulk. The expansive power in freezing is so great, that, if water be confined in a gun-barrel, it will split the solid metal throughout its whole length. Bombshells have been filled with water, and plugged tight, and exposed to cold air, when they have been rent, though the shell has been nearly two inches thick! Attempts have been made to account for this; but they have not, as yet, been generally successful. The breath of God freezes the waters; and that breath thaws them. It is the work of Omnipotence, and there, for the present, we must leave it

Clarke: Job 37:10 - -- The breadth of the waters is straitened - This has been variously translated; מוצק mutsak , which we here render straitened, we translate Job 3...

The breadth of the waters is straitened - This has been variously translated; מוצק mutsak , which we here render straitened, we translate Job 37:18 melted. Mr. Good thinks that the idea of a mirror is implied, or something molten; and on this ground it may be descriptive of the state of water formed into ice. He therefore translates: -

By the blast of God the frost congealeth

And the expanse of the waters into a mirror

I have only to observe, that in the act of freezing wind or air is necessary; for it has been observed that water which lay low in ponds did not freeze till some slight current of air fell on and ruffled the surface, when it instantly shot into ice.

Clarke: Job 37:11 - -- By watering he wearieth the thick cloud - Perhaps it would be better to say, The brightness ברי beri , dissipates the cloud; or, if we follow ou...

By watering he wearieth the thick cloud - Perhaps it would be better to say, The brightness ברי beri , dissipates the cloud; or, if we follow our version, By watering the earth he wearieth, wearieth out or emptieth, the thick cloud - causes it to pour down all its contents upon the earth, that they may cause it to bring forth and bud. The Vulgate understood it differently: Frumentum desiderat nubes, et nubes spargunt lumen suum. "The grain desireth the clouds; and the clouds scatter abroad their light."

Clarke: Job 37:12 - -- And it is turned round about by his counsels - The original is difficult: והוא מסבות מתהפך בתחבולתו vehu mesibboth mithhappec...

And it is turned round about by his counsels - The original is difficult: והוא מסבות מתהפך בתחבולתו vehu mesibboth mithhappech bethachbulothav ; which has been thus paraphrased: And he - the sun, makes revolutions - causes the heavenly bodies to revolve round him, turning round himself - turning round his own axis, by his attachments - his attractive and repulsive influences, by which the heavenly bodies revolve round him, and by which, as if strongly tied to their center, בחבל bechebel , with a cable or rope, they are projected to their proper distances, and prevented from coming too near, or flying off too far

Clarke: Job 37:12 - -- That they may do whatsoever he commandeth them - That men may perform his will, availing themselves of the influences of the sun, moon, times, seaso...

That they may do whatsoever he commandeth them - That men may perform his will, availing themselves of the influences of the sun, moon, times, seasons, etc., to cultivate the earth for the sustenance of themselves and their cattle

Clarke: Job 37:12 - -- Upon the face of the world in the earth - אל פני תבל ארצה al peney thebel aretsah , over the surface of the habitable world. Perhaps th...

Upon the face of the world in the earth - אל פני תבל ארצה al peney thebel aretsah , over the surface of the habitable world. Perhaps the above exposition may appear to be too far-fetched; and possibly the passage refers only to the revolutions of the seasons, and the operations connected with them.

Clarke: Job 37:13 - -- He causeth it to come - The Vulgate translates the text thus: Sive in una tribu, sine in terra sua, sive in quocunque loco misericordiae suae eas ju...

He causeth it to come - The Vulgate translates the text thus: Sive in una tribu, sine in terra sua, sive in quocunque loco misericordiae suae eas jusserit inveniri . "Whether in one tribe, or whether in his own land, or in whatsoever place of his mercy he has commanded them to come."In the preceding verse it is said that God conducts the clouds according to the orders of his counsels, whithersoever he pleases: and here it is added that, when he designs to heap favors upon any land, he commands the clouds to go thither, and pour out on it their fertilizing showers. See Calmet. The Vulgate certainly gives a good sense, and our common version is also clear and intelligble; but there are doubts whether the Hebrew will bear this meaning. Here it is stated that God sends the rain either for correction, לשבט leshebet , which signifies rod, staff, tribe, and is here taken as the symbol of correction, he sends rain sometimes as a judgment, inundating certain lands, and sweeping away their produce by irresistible floods: or for his land, לארצו leartso , his own land, Palestine, the place of his favored people: or for mercy, לחסד lechesed ; when a particular district has been devoured by locusts, or cursed with drought, God, in his mercy, sends fertilizing rains to such places to restore the ears which the caterpillars have eaten, and to make the desert blossom like the garden of the Lord. Some think that Job refers to the curse brought upon the old world by the waters of the deluge. Now although God has promised that there shall no more be a flood of waters to destroy the whole earth; yet we know he can, very consistently with his promise, inundate any particular district; or, by a superabundance of rain, render the toil of the husbandman in any place vain. Therefore, still his rain may come for judgment, for mercy, or for the especial help of his people or Church.

Clarke: Job 37:14 - -- Hearken unto this - Hear what I say on the part of God. Stand still - Enter into deep contemplation on the subject

Hearken unto this - Hear what I say on the part of God. Stand still - Enter into deep contemplation on the subject

Clarke: Job 37:14 - -- And consider - Weigh every thing; examine separately and collectively; and draw right conclusions from the whole

And consider - Weigh every thing; examine separately and collectively; and draw right conclusions from the whole

Clarke: Job 37:14 - -- The wondrous works of God - Endless in their variety; stupendous in their structure; complicated in their parts; indescribable in their relations an...

The wondrous works of God - Endless in their variety; stupendous in their structure; complicated in their parts; indescribable in their relations and connections; and incomprehensible in the mode of their formation, in the cohesion of their parts, and in the ends of their creation.

Clarke: Job 37:15 - -- Dost thou know when God disposed them - Dost thou know the laws by which they are governed; and the causes which produce such and such phenomena

Dost thou know when God disposed them - Dost thou know the laws by which they are governed; and the causes which produce such and such phenomena

Clarke: Job 37:15 - -- And caused the light of his cloud to shine? - Almost every critic of note understands this of the rainbow, which God gave as a sign that the earth s...

And caused the light of his cloud to shine? - Almost every critic of note understands this of the rainbow, which God gave as a sign that the earth should no more be destroyed by water. See Gen 9:13 (note), and the note there.

Clarke: Job 37:16 - -- Dost thou know the balancings of the clouds - How are the clouds suspended in the atmosphere? Art thou so well acquainted with the nature of evapora...

Dost thou know the balancings of the clouds - How are the clouds suspended in the atmosphere? Art thou so well acquainted with the nature of evaporation, and the gravity of the air at different heights, to support different weights of aqueous vapor, so as to keep them floating for a certain portion of time, and then let them down to water the earth; dost thou know these things so as to determine the laws by which they are regulated

Clarke: Job 37:16 - -- Wondrous works of him which is perfect in knowledge - This is a paraphrase. Mr. Good’ s translation is much better: - "Wonders, perfections of ...

Wondrous works of him which is perfect in knowledge - This is a paraphrase. Mr. Good’ s translation is much better: -

"Wonders, perfections of wisdom!"

Clarke: Job 37:17 - -- How thy garments are warm - What are warmth and cold? How difficult this question! Is heat incontestably a substance, and is cold none? I am afraid ...

How thy garments are warm - What are warmth and cold? How difficult this question! Is heat incontestably a substance, and is cold none? I am afraid we are in the dark on both these subjects. The existence of caloric, as a substance, is supposed to be demonstrated. Much, satisfactorily, has been said on this subject; but is it yet beyond doubt? I fear not. But supposing this question to be set at rest, is it demonstrated that cold is only a quality, the mere absence of heat? If it be demonstrated that there is such a substance as caloric, is it equally certain that there is no such substance as frigoric? But how do our garments keep us warm? By preventing the too great dissipation of the natural heat. And why is it that certain substances, worked into clothing, keep us warmer than others? Because they are bad conductors of caloric. Some substances conduct off the caloric or natural heat from the body; others do not conduct it at all, or imperfectly; hence those keep us warmest which, being bad conductors of caloric, do not permit the natural heat to be thrown off. In these things we know but little, after endless cares, anxieties, and experiments

But is the question yet satisfactorily answered, why the north wind brings cold, and the south wind heat? If it be so to my readers, it is not so to me; yet I know the reasons which are alleged.

Clarke: Job 37:18 - -- Hast thou with him spread out the sky - Wert thou with him when he made the expanse; fitted the weight to the winds; proportioned the aqueous to the...

Hast thou with him spread out the sky - Wert thou with him when he made the expanse; fitted the weight to the winds; proportioned the aqueous to the terrene surface of the globe; the solar attraction to the quantum of vapours necessary; to be stored up in the clouds, in order to be occasionally deposited in fertilizing showers upon the earth? and then dost thou know how gravity and elasticity should be such essential properties of atmospheric air, that without them and their due proportions, we should neither have animal nor vegetable life

Clarke: Job 37:18 - -- Strong - as a molten looking-glass? - Like a molten mirror. The whole concave of heaven, in a clear day or brilliant night, being like a mass of pol...

Strong - as a molten looking-glass? - Like a molten mirror. The whole concave of heaven, in a clear day or brilliant night, being like a mass of polished metal, reflecting or transmitting innumerable images.

Clarke: Job 37:19 - -- Teach us what we shall say unto him? - Thou pretendest to be so very wise, and to know every thing about God, pray make us as wise as thyself, that ...

Teach us what we shall say unto him? - Thou pretendest to be so very wise, and to know every thing about God, pray make us as wise as thyself, that we may be able to approach with thy boldness the Sovereign of the world; and maintain our cause with thy confidence before him. As for our parts, we are ignorant; and, on all these subjects, are enveloped with darkness. Mr. Good translates: -

"Teach us how we may address him

When arrayed in robes of darkness.

It is a strong and biting irony, however we take it.

Clarke: Job 37:20 - -- Shall it be told him that I speak? - Shall I dare to whisper even before God? And suppose any one were to accuse me before him for what I have spoke...

Shall it be told him that I speak? - Shall I dare to whisper even before God? And suppose any one were to accuse me before him for what I have spoken of him, though that has been well intended, how should I be able to stand in his presence? I should be swallowed up in consternation, and consumed with the splendor of his majesty. But in what state art thou? What hast thou been doing? Thou hast arraigned God for his government of the world; thou hast found fault with the dispensations of his providence; thou hast even charged him with cruelty! What will become of Thee?

Clarke: Job 37:21 - -- And now men see not the bright light - Mr. Good gives the sense clearer: - "Even now we cannot look at the ligh When it is resplendent in the heaven...

And now men see not the bright light - Mr. Good gives the sense clearer: -

"Even now we cannot look at the ligh

When it is resplendent in the heavens

And a wind from the north hath passed along and cleared them.

Elihu seems to refer to the insufferable brightness of the sun. Can any man look at the sun shining in his strength, when a clear and strong wind has purged the sky from clouds and vapours? Much less can any gaze on the majesty of God. Every creature must sink before him. What execrably dangerous folly in man to attempt to arraign His conduct!

Clarke: Job 37:22 - -- Fair weather cometh out of the north - Is this any version of the original מצפון זהב יאתה mitstsaphon zahab yeetheh ? which is rendere...

Fair weather cometh out of the north - Is this any version of the original מצפון זהב יאתה mitstsaphon zahab yeetheh ? which is rendered by almost every version, ancient and modern, thus, or to this effect: "From the north cometh gold."Calmet justly remarks, that in the time of Moses, Job, and Solomon, and for a long time after, gold was obtained from Colchis, Armenia, Phasis, and the land of Ophir, which were all north of Judea and Idumea; and are in the Scriptures ordinarily termed the north country. "But what relation can there be between, Gold cometh out of the north, and, With God is terrible majesty?"Answer: Each thing has its properties, and proper characteristics, which distinguish it; and each country has its advantages. Gold, for instance, comes from the northern countries; so praises offered to the Supreme God should be accompanied with fear and trembling: and as this metal is from the north, and northern countries are the places whence it must be procured; so terrible majesty belongs to God, and in him alone such majesty is eternally resident. As זהב zahob , which we translate gold, (see Job 28:16), comes from a root that signifies to be clear, bright, resplendent, etc.; Mr. Good avails himself of the radical idea, and translates it splendor: -

"Splendor itself is with God

Insufferable majesty.

But he alters the text a little to get this meaning, particularly in the word יאתה yeetheh , which we translate cometh, and which he contends is the pronoun אתה itself; the י yod , as a performative, here being, as he thinks, an interpolation. This makes a very good sense; but none of the ancient versions understood the place thus, and none of the MSS. countenance this very learned critic’ s emendation.

Defender: Job 37:11 - -- Although the language is figurative, the meteorology is accurate. The mystery of the "balancing of the clouds," keeping them aloft against the force o...

Although the language is figurative, the meteorology is accurate. The mystery of the "balancing of the clouds," keeping them aloft against the force of gravity, is mentioned in Job 26:8 and Job 37:16. This mystery has been solved by modern science, so that it is now understood that the droplets of liquid water in the clouds are kept aloft by the force exerted by updrafts of wind. When the droplets coalesce to form large drops of water, however, then their weight can overcome these forces and the drops will fall to the ground as rain or snow. That is, by increased watering, the clouds become thick and can no longer maintain their stability, being wearied, so to speak (Job 36:27, Job 36:28). The condensation of water vapor into droplets and then into raindrops or snowflakes is apparently facilitated by electrical discharges in the atmosphere - the lightning, then thunder, then rain or snow (Job 37:3-6)."

Defender: Job 37:22 - -- The word translated "fair weather" (Hebrew zahab) is used over 175 times in the Old Testament, but is translated "gold" in every instance except here....

The word translated "fair weather" (Hebrew zahab) is used over 175 times in the Old Testament, but is translated "gold" in every instance except here. Thus it probably should read: "Gold cometh out of the north." Almost certainly this refers to the northern lights, or Aurora Borealis , suggesting the terrible majesty of their Creator."

TSK: Job 37:1 - -- Job 4:14, Job 21:6, Job 38:1; Exo 19:16; Psa 89:7, Psa 119:120; Jer 5:22; Dan 10:7, Dan 10:8; Hab 3:16; Mat 28:2-4; Act 16:26, Act 16:29

TSK: Job 37:2 - -- Hear attentively : Heb. Hear in hearing the noise : Job 37:5, Job 36:29, Job 36:33, Job 38:1; Exo 19:16-19; Psa 104:7

Hear attentively : Heb. Hear in hearing

the noise : Job 37:5, Job 36:29, Job 36:33, Job 38:1; Exo 19:16-19; Psa 104:7

TSK: Job 37:3 - -- He : Psa 77:13, Psa 97:4; Mat 24:27; Rev 11:19 lightning : Heb. light ends : Heb. wings, Job 38:13; Isa 11:12 *marg.

He : Psa 77:13, Psa 97:4; Mat 24:27; Rev 11:19

lightning : Heb. light

ends : Heb. wings, Job 38:13; Isa 11:12 *marg.

TSK: Job 37:4 - -- a voice : Psa 29:3-9, Psa 68:33 the voice : Exo 15:7, Exo 15:8; Deu 33:26 he will : Job 36:27-33

a voice : Psa 29:3-9, Psa 68:33

the voice : Exo 15:7, Exo 15:8; Deu 33:26

he will : Job 36:27-33

TSK: Job 37:5 - -- thundereth : 2Sa 22:14, 2Sa 22:15 great : Job 5:9, Job 9:10, Job 11:7, Job 26:14, Job 36:26; Ecc 3:11; Isa 40:21, Isa 40:22, Isa 40:28; Rom 11:33; Rev...

TSK: Job 37:6 - -- he : Job 38:22; Psa 147:16-18, Psa 148:8 likewise to the small : etc. Heb. and to the shower of rain, and to the showers of rain of his strength. Job ...

he : Job 38:22; Psa 147:16-18, Psa 148:8

likewise to the small : etc. Heb. and to the shower of rain, and to the showers of rain of his strength. Job 36:27

great : Gen 7:10-12; Ezr 10:9, Ezr 10:13; Pro 28:3; Eze 13:11, Eze 13:13; Amo 9:6; Mat 7:25-27

TSK: Job 37:7 - -- He : Job 5:12, Job 9:7 that : Job 36:24; Psa 46:8, Psa 64:9, Psa 92:4, Psa 109:27, Psa 111:2; Ecc 8:17; Isa 5:12, Isa 26:11

TSK: Job 37:8 - -- Psa 104:22

TSK: Job 37:9 - -- south : Heb. chamber, Job 9:9; Psa 104:3 the whirlwind : Job 38:1; Isa 21:1; Zec 9:14 north : Heb. scattering winds

south : Heb. chamber, Job 9:9; Psa 104:3

the whirlwind : Job 38:1; Isa 21:1; Zec 9:14

north : Heb. scattering winds

TSK: Job 37:10 - -- Job 38:29, Job 38:30; Psa 78:47, Psa 147:16-18

TSK: Job 37:11 - -- he wearieth : Job 36:27, Job 36:28 he scattereth : Job 36:30, Job 36:32; Isa 18:4; Mat 17:5 his bright cloud : Heb. the cloud of his light

he wearieth : Job 36:27, Job 36:28

he scattereth : Job 36:30, Job 36:32; Isa 18:4; Mat 17:5

his bright cloud : Heb. the cloud of his light

TSK: Job 37:12 - -- it : Psa 65:9, Psa 65:10, Psa 104:24; Jer 14:22; Joe 2:23; Amo 4:7 that : Psa 148:8; Jam 5:17, Jam 5:18; Rev 11:6

TSK: Job 37:13 - -- whether : Job 37:6, Job 36:31, Job 38:37, Job 38:38; Exo 9:18-25; 1Sa 12:18, 1Sa 12:19; Ezr 10:9 correction : Heb. a rod for his : Job 38:26, Job 38:2...

TSK: Job 37:14 - -- stand : Exo 14:13; Psa 46:10; Hab 2:20 consider : Job 26:6-14, Job 36:24; Psa 111:2, Psa 145:5, Psa 145:6, Psa 145:10-12

TSK: Job 37:15 - -- Dost : Job 28:24-27, Job 34:13, 38:4-41; Psa 119:90, Psa 119:91; Isa 40:26 the light : Job 37:11, Job 36:30-32, Job 38:24, Job 38:25

TSK: Job 37:16 - -- the balancings : Job 26:8, Job 36:29; Psa 104:2, Psa 104:3; Isa 40:22; Jer 10:13 perfect : Job 36:4; Psa 104:24, Psa 147:5; Pro 3:19, Pro 3:20; Jer 10...

TSK: Job 37:17 - -- he : Job 6:17, Job 38:31; Psa 147:18; Luk 12:55

TSK: Job 37:18 - -- spread : Job 9:8, Job 9:9; Gen 1:6-8; Psa 104:2, Psa 148:4-6, Psa 150:1; Pro 8:27; Isa 40:12, Isa 40:22; Isa 44:24 as : Exo 38:8

TSK: Job 37:19 - -- Teach : Job 12:3, Job 13:3, Job 13:6 we : Job 26:14, Job 28:20, Job 28:21, Job 38:2, Job 42:3; Psa 73:16, Psa 73:17, Psa 73:22, Psa 139:6; Pro 30:2-4;...

TSK: Job 37:20 - -- Shall it : Psa 139:4; Mat 12:36, Mat 12:37 surely : Job 6:3, Job 11:7, Job 11:8

TSK: Job 37:21 - -- Job 26:9, Job 36:32, Job 38:25

TSK: Job 37:22 - -- Fair : Heb. Gold weather, Pro 25:23 with : Job 40:10; 1Ch 29:11; Psa 29:4, Psa 66:5, Psa 68:7, Psa 68:8, Psa 76:12, Psa 93:1, Psa 104:1, Psa 145:5; Is...

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Job 37:1 - -- At this also - That is, in view of the thunderstorm, for it is that which Elihu is describing. This description was commenced in Job 36:29, and...

At this also - That is, in view of the thunderstorm, for it is that which Elihu is describing. This description was commenced in Job 36:29, and is continued to Job 37:5, and should not have been separated by the division into chapters. Elihu sees a tempest rising. The clouds gather, the lightnings flash, the thunder rolls, and he is awed as with the conscious presence of God. There is nowhere to be found a more graphic and impressive description of a thunder-storm than this; compare Herder on Hebrew Poetry, vol. i., 85ff, by Marsh, Burlington, 1833.

My heart trembleth - With fear. He refers to the palpitation or increased action of the heart produced by alarm.

And is moved out of his place - That is, by violent palpitation. The heart seems to leave its calm resting place, and to burst away because of fright. The increased action of the heart under the effects of fear, as described here by Elihu, has been experienced by all. The "cause"of this increased action is supposed to be this. The immediate effect of fear is on the extremities of the nerves of the system, which are diffused ever the whole body. The first effect is to prevent the circulation of the blood to the extremities, and to drive it back to the heart, and thus to produce paleness. The blood thus driven back on the heart produces an increased action there to propel it through the lungs and the arteries, thus causing at the same time the increased effort of the heart, and the rapid action of the lungs, and of course the quick breathing and the palpitation observed in fear. See Scheutzer, Physica. Sacra, in loc . An expression similar to that which occurs here, is used by Shakespeare, in Macbeth:

"Why do I yield to that suggestion,

Whose horrid image doth unfix my hair,

And make ray seated heart knock at my ribs

Against the use of nature."

Barnes: Job 37:2 - -- Hear attentively - Margin, as in Hebrew "hear in hearing;"that is, bear with attention. It has been supposed by many, and not without probabili...

Hear attentively - Margin, as in Hebrew "hear in hearing;"that is, bear with attention. It has been supposed by many, and not without probability, that the tempest was already seen rising, out of which God was to address Job Job 38, and that Elihu here calls the special attention of his hearers to the gathering storm, and to the low muttering thunder in the distance.

The noise of his voice - Thunder is often represented as the voice of God, and this was one of the most natural of all suppositions when its nature was little understood, and is at all times a beautiful poetic conception; see the whole of Psa 29:1-11. The word rendered "noise"( רגז rôgez ), means properly "commotion,"that which is fitted to produce perturbation, or disquiet (see Job 3:17, Job 3:26; Isa 14:3), and is used here to denote the commotion, or "raging"of thunder.

And the sound - The word used here ( הגה hegeh ) means properly a "muttering growling"- as of thunder. It is often used to denote sighing, moaning, and meditation, in contradistinction from clear enunciation. Here it refers to the thunder which seems to mutter or growl in the sky.

Barnes: Job 37:3 - -- He directeth it under the whole heaven - It is under the control of God, and he directs it where he pleases. It is not confined to one spot, bu...

He directeth it under the whole heaven - It is under the control of God, and he directs it where he pleases. It is not confined to one spot, but seems to be complaining from every part of the heavens.

And his lightning - Margin, as in Hebrew "light."There can be no doubt that the lightning is intended.

Unto the ends of the earth - Margin, as in Hebrew "wings."The word wings is given to the earth from the idea of its being spread out or expanded like the wings of a bird; compare Job 38:13; Eze 7:2. The earth was spoken of as an expanse or plain that had corners or boundaries (see Isa 11:12, note; Isa 24:16, note; Isa 42:5, note), and the meaning here is, that God spread the lightning at pleasure over the whole of that vast expanse.

Barnes: Job 37:4 - -- After it a voice roareth - After the lightning; that is, the flash is seen before the thunder is heard. This is apparent to all, the interval b...

After it a voice roareth - After the lightning; that is, the flash is seen before the thunder is heard. This is apparent to all, the interval between the lightning and the hearing of the thunder depending on the distance. Lucretius, who has referred to the same fact, compares this with what occurs when a woodman is seen at a distance to wield an axe. The glance of the axe is seen long before the sound of the blow is heard:

Sed tonitrum fit uti post antibus accipiamus,

Fulgere quam cernunt ocuil, quia semper ad aures

Tardius adveniunt, quam visum, guam moveant res.

Nunc etiam licet id cognoscere, caedere si quem

Ancipiti videas ferro procul arboris actum.

Ante fit, ut cernas ictum, quam plaga per aures

Det sonitum: Sic fulgorem quoque cernimus ante .

Lib. vi.

He thundereth with the voice of his excellency - That is, with a voice of majesty and grandeur.

And he will not stay them - That is, he will not hold back the rain, hail, and other things which accompany the storm, when he begins to thunder. "Rosenmuller."Or, according to others, he will not hold back and restrain the lightnings when the thunder commences. But the connection seems rather to demand that we should understand it of the usual accompaniments of a storm - the wind, hail, rain, etc. Herder renders it, "We cannot explore his thunderings."Prof. Lee, "And none can trace them, though their voice be heard."According to him, the meaning is, that "great and terrific as this exhibition of God’ s power is, still the progress of these, his ministers, cannot be followed by the mortal eye."But the usual interpretation given to the Hebrew word is that of "holding back,"or "retarding,"and this idea accords well with the connection.

Barnes: Job 37:5 - -- God thundereth marvelously - He thunders in a wonderful manner. The idea is, that the voice of his thunder is an amazing exhibition of his maje...

God thundereth marvelously - He thunders in a wonderful manner. The idea is, that the voice of his thunder is an amazing exhibition of his majesty and power.

Great things doeth he, which we cannot comprehend - That is, not only in regard to the thunder and the tempest, but in other things. The description of the storm properly ends here, and in the subsequent verses Elihu proceeds to specify various other phenomena, which were wholly incomprehensible by man. The reference here to the storm, and to the other grand and incomprehensible phenomena of nature, is a most appropriate introduction to the manifestation of God himself as described in the next chapter, and could not but have done much to prepare Job and his friends for that sublime close of the controversy.

The passage before us Job 36:29-33; Job 37:1-5, is probably the earliest description of a thunderstorm on record. A tempest is a phenomenon which must early have attracted attention, and which we may expect to find described or alluded to in all early poetry. It may be interesting, therefore, to compare this description of a storm, in probably the oldest poem in the world, with what has been furnished by the masters of song in ancient and modern times, and we shall find that in sublimity and beauty the Hebrew poet will suffer nothing in comparison. In one respect, which constitutes the chief sublimity of the description. he surpasses them all: I mean in the recognition of God. In the Hebrew description. God is every where in the storm He excites it; he holds the lightnings in both hands; he directs it where he pleases; he makes it the instrument of his pleasure and of executing his purposes. Sublime, therefore, as is the description of the storm itself, furious as is the tempest; bright as is the lightning: and heavy and awful as is the roar of the thunder, yet the description derives its chief sublimity from the fact that "God"presides over all, riding on the tempest and directing the storm as he pleases. Other poets have rarely attempted to give this direction to the thoughts in their description of a tempest, if we may except Klopstock, and they fall, therefore, far below the sacred poet. The following is the description of a storm by Elihu, according to the exposition which I have given:

Who can understand the outspreading of the clouds,

And the fearful thunderings in his pavilion?

Behold, he spreadeth his light upon it;

He also covereth the depths of the sea.

By these he executeth judgment upon the people,

By these he giveth food in abundance.

With his hands he covereth the lightning,

And commandeth it where to strike.

He pointeth out to his friends -

The collecting of his wrath is upon the wicked.

At this also my heart palpitates,

And is moved out of its place.

Hear, O hear, the thunder of his voice!

The muttering thunder that goes from his mouth!

He directeth it under the whole heaven.

And his lightning to the end of the earth.

After it, the thunder roareth;

He thundereth with the voice of his majesty,

And he will not restrain the tempest when his voice is heard.

God thundereth marvelously with his voice;

He doeth wonders, which we cannot comprehend.

The following is the description of a Tempest by Aeschylus, in the Prometh. Desm., beginning,

- Χθὼν αεσάλευται;

Βρυχία δ ̓ ἠχὼ παραμυκᾶται

Βροντῆς, κ.τ.λ.

- Chthōn sesaleutai ;

Bruchia d' ēchō paramukatai

Brontēs , etc .

- "I feel in very deed

The firm earth rock: the thunder’ s deepening roar

Rolls with redoubled rage; the bickering flames

Flash thick; the eddying sands are whirled on high;

In dreadful opposition, the wild winds

Rend the vex’ d air; the boisterous billows rise

Confounding earth and sky: the impetuous storm

Rolls all its terrible fury."

\qr Potter

Ovid’ s description is the following:

Aethera conscendit, vultumque sequentia traxit

Nubila; queis nimbos, immistaque fulgura ventis

Addidit, et tonitrus, et inevitabile fulmen .

Meta. ii.

The description of a storm by Lucretius, is the following:

Praeterea persaepe niger quoque per mare nimbus

Ut picis e coelo demissum flumen, in undas

Sic cadit, et fertur tenebris, procul et trahit atram

Fulminibus gravidam tempestatem, atque procellis.

Ignibus ac ventis cum primus ipse repletus:

In terris quoque ut horrescant ae tecta requirant.

S c igitur sutpranostrum caput esso putandum est

Tempestatem altam. Neque enim caligine tanta

Obruerat terras, nisi inaedificata superne

Multa forent multis exempto nubila sole .

Lib. vi.

The well-known description of the storm by Virgil is as follows:

Nimborum in patriam, loca foeta furentibus austris,

Aeoliam venit. Hic vasto Rex Aeolus antro

Luctantis ventos tempestatesque sonoras

Imperio premit, ac vinelis et carcere frenat.

Illi indignantes, magno cum murmure, montis

Circum claustra fremunt. Celsa sedet Aeolus arce,

Sceptra tenens: molliitque animos, et temperat iras .

- Venti, velut agmine facto.

Qua data petra, ruunt, et terras turbine perflant.

Incubuere mari, totumque a sedibus imis,

Una Eurusque Notusque ruunt, creberque procelis

Africus, et vastos volvunt ad litora fluctus .

Aeneid i. 51-57, 82-86.

One of the most sublime descriptions of a storm to be found any where, is furnished by Klopstock. It contains a beautiful recognition of the presence and majesty of God, and a most tender and affecting description of the protection which his friends experience when the storm rushes by. It is in the Fruhlingsfeier - a poem which is regarded by many as his masterpiece. A small portion of it I will transcribe:

Wolken stromen herauf!

Sichtbar ist; der komant, der Ewige!

Nun schweben sie, rauschen sie, wirbeln die Winde!

Wie beugt sich der Wald! Wie hebet sich det Strom!

Sichtbar, wie du es Sterblichen seyn kannst,

Ja, das bist du, sichtbar, Unendlicher!

Zurnest du, Herr,

Weil Nacht dein Gewand ist?

Diese Nacht ist Segen der Erde.

Vater, du Zurnest nicht!

Seht ihr den Zeugendes Nahen, den zucken den Strahi?

Hort ihr Jehovah’ s Donner?

Hort ihr ihn? hort ihr ihn.

Der erschtternden Donner des Herrn?

Herr! Herr! Gott!

Barmhertzig, und gnadig!

Angebetet, gepriesen,

Sey dein herrlicher Name!

Und die Gowitterwinde! Sie tragen den Donner!

Wie sie rauschen! Wie sie mit lawter Woge den Wald du: chstromen!

Und nun schwiegen sie. Langsam wandelt

Die schwartze Wolke.

Seht ihr den neurn Zeugen des Nahen, den fliegenden Strahl!

Horet ihr hoch in Wolke den Donner dex Herrn?

Er ruft: Jehova! Jehova!

Und der geschmetterte Wald dampft!

Abet nicht unsre Hutte

Unser Vater gebot

Seinem Verderber,

Vor unsrer Hutte voruberzugehn!

Barnes: Job 37:6 - -- For he saith to the snow - That is, the snow is produced by the command of God, and is a proof of his wisdom and greatness. The idea is, that; ...

For he saith to the snow - That is, the snow is produced by the command of God, and is a proof of his wisdom and greatness. The idea is, that; the formation of snow was an illustration of the wisdom of God, and should teach people to regard him with reverence. It is not to be supposed that the laws by which snow is formed in the atmosphere were understood in the time of Elihu. The fact that it seemed to be the effect of the immediate creation of God, was the principal idea in the mind of Elihu in illustrating his wisdom. But it is not less fitted to excite our admiration of his wisdom now that the laws by which it is produced are better understood; and in fact the knowledge of those laws is adapted to elevate our conceptions of the wisdom and majesty of Him who formed them. The investigations and discoveries of science do not diminish the proofs of the Creator’ s wisdom and greatness. but every new discovery tends to change blind admiration to intelligent devotion; to transform wonder to praise. On the formation of snow, see the notes at Job 38:22.

Be thou on the earth - There is a strong resemblance between this passage and the sublime command in Gen 1:3, "And God said, Let there be light, and there was light."Each of them is expressive of the creative power of God, and of the ease with which he accomplishes his purposes.

Likewise to the small rain - Margin, "and to the shower of rain, and to the showers of rain of his strength."The word which is used here in the Hebrew ( גשׁם geshem ), means "rain"in general, and the phrase "small rain"( גשׁם ( מטר mâṭâr geshem ), seems to be used to denote the "rain"simply, without reference to its violence, or to its being copious. The following phrase, "the great rain of his strength"( עזוּ מטרות גשׁם geshem mâṭârôt ‛ôzû ) refers to the rain when it has increased to a copious shower. The idea before the mind of Elihu seems to have been that of a shower, as it commences and increases until it pours down torrents, and the meaning is, that alike in the one case and the other, the rain was under the command of God, and obeyed his will. The whole description here is that which pertains to winter, and Elihu refers doubtless to the copious rains which fell at that season of the year.

Barnes: Job 37:7 - -- He sealeth up the hand of every man - That is, in the winter, when the snow is on the ground, when the streams are frozen, and when the labors ...

He sealeth up the hand of every man - That is, in the winter, when the snow is on the ground, when the streams are frozen, and when the labors of the husbandman cease. The idea of "sealing up the hand"is derived from the common purpose of a seal, to make fast, to close up, to secure (compare Job 9:7, note; Job 33:16, note), and the sense is, that the hands can no more be used in ordinary toil. Every man in the snow and rain of winter is prevented from going abroad to his accustomed toil, and is, as it were, sealed up in his dwelling. The idea is exquisitely beautiful. God confines human beings and beasts in their houses or caves, until the winter has passed by.

That all men may know his work - The Septuagint renders this,"That every man may know his own weakness"- ἀσθένειαν astheneian . Various interpretations have been given of the passage, but our common version has probably expressed in the main the true sense, that God thus interrupts the labors of man, and confines him in his home, that he may feel his dependence on God, and may recognize the constant agency of his Creator. The Hebrew literally is "For the knowledge of all the men of his making;"that is, that all the people whom he has created may have knowledge. The changing seasons thus keep before us the constant evidence of the unceasing agency of God in his works, and prevent the feeling which we might have, if everything was uniform that the universe was under the control of "fate."As it is, the succession of the seasons, the snow, the rain, the dew, and the sunshine, all bear marks of being under the control of an intelligent Being, and are so regulated that we need not forget that his unceasing agency is constantly round about us. It may be added, that when the farmer in the winter is laid aside from his usual toil, and confined to his dwelling, it is a favorable time for him to meditate on the works of God, and to acquaint himself with his Creator. The labors of man are thus interrupted; the busy affairs of life come to a pause, and while nature is silent around us, and the earth wrapped in her fleecy mantle forbids the labor of the husbandman, everything invites to the contemplation of the Creator, and of the works of his hands. The winter, therefore, might be improved by every farmer to enlarge his knowledge of God, and should be regarded as a season wisely appointed for him to cultivate his understanding and improve his heart.

Barnes: Job 37:8 - -- Then the beasts go into dens - In the winter. This fact appears to have been early observed, that in the season of cold the wild animals withdr...

Then the beasts go into dens - In the winter. This fact appears to have been early observed, that in the season of cold the wild animals withdrew into caves, and that many of them became torpid. This fact Elihu adverts to as an illustration of the wisdom and greatness of God. The proof of his superintending care was seen in the fact that they withdrew from the cold in which they would perish, and that provision is made for their continuance in life at a time when they cannot obtain the food by which they ordinarily subsist. In that torpid and inactive state, they need little food, and remain often for months with almost no nourishment.

Barnes: Job 37:9 - -- Out of the south - Margin, "chamber."Jerome, "ab interioribus - from the interior,"or "inner places."Septuagint, ἐκ ταυείων e...

Out of the south - Margin, "chamber."Jerome, "ab interioribus - from the interior,"or "inner places."Septuagint, ἐκ ταυείων ek taueiōn - "from their chambers issue sorrows"- ὀωύνας othunas . The Hebrew word used here ( חדר cheder ) denotes properly "an apartment,"or "chamber,"especially an inner apartment, or a chamber in the interior of a house or tent: Gen 43:30; Jdg 16:9, Jdg 16:12. Hence, it means a bed-chamber, 2Sa 4:7, or a female apartment or harem, Son 1:4; Son 3:4. In Job 9:9, it is connected with the "south"- "the chambers of the south"(see the notes at that place), and means some remote, hidden regions in that quarter. There can be little doubt that the word "south "is here also to be understood, as it stands in contrast with a word which properly denotes the north. Still there may have been reference to a supposed opinion that whirlwinds had their origin in deep, hollow caves, and that they were owing to the winds which were supposed to be pent up there, and which raged tumultuously until they broke open the doors of their prison, and then poured forth with violence over the earth; compare the description of the storm in Virgil, as quoted above in Job 37:5. There are frequent allusions in the Scriptures to the fact that whirlwinds come from the South; see the notes at Isa 21:1; compare Zec 9:14. Savary says of the south wind, which blows in Egypt from February to May, that it fills the atmosphere with a fine dust, rendering breathing difficult, and that it is filled with an injurious vapor. Sometimes it appears in the form of a furious whirlwind, which advances with great rapidity, and which is highly dangerous to those who traverse the desert. It drives before it clouds of burning sand; the horizon appears covered with a thick veil, and the sun appears red as blood. Occasionally whole caravans are buried by it in the sand. It is possible that there may be reference to such a whirlwind in the passage before us; compare Burder, in Rosenmuller’ s Alte u. neue Morgenland. No. 765.

The whirlwind - See Job 1:19, note; Job 30:22, note.

And cold out of the north - Margin, "scattering"winds. The Hebrew word used here ( מזרים me zâriym ) means literally, "the scattering,"and is hence used for the north winds, says Gesenius which scatter the clouds, and bring severe cold. Umbreit thinks the word is used to denote the north, because we seem to see the north winds strewed on the clouds. Probably the reference is to the north wind as scattering the snow or hail on the ground. Heated winds come from the south; but those which scatter the snow, and are the source of cold, come from the north. In all places north of the equator it is true that the winds from the northern quarter are the source of cold. The idea of Elihu is, that all these things are under the control of God, and that these various arrangements for heat and cold are striking proofs of his greatness.

Barnes: Job 37:10 - -- By the breath of God frost is given - Not by the violent north wind, or by the whirlwind of the south, but God seems to "breathe"in a gentle ma...

By the breath of God frost is given - Not by the violent north wind, or by the whirlwind of the south, but God seems to "breathe"in a gentle manner, and the earth is covered with hoary frost. It appears in a still night, when there is no storm or tempest, and descends upon the earth as silently as if it were produced by mere breathing. Frost is congealed or frozen dew. On the formation and cause of dew, see the notes at Job 38:28. The figure is poetical and beautiful. The slight motion of the air, even when the frost appears, seems to be caused by the breathing of God.

And the breadth of the waters is straitened - That is, is contracted by the cold; or is frozen over. The waters are "compressed"into a solid mass ( במוצק be mûtsaq ), or are in a state of "pressure"or "compression"- or so the word used here means. What were before expanded rivers or arms of the sea, are now compressed into solid masses of ice. This, also, is proof of the greatness and power of God, for though the cause was not understood by Elihu, yet there was no doubt that it was produced by his agency. Though the laws by which this occurs are now better understood than they were then, it is no less clearly seen that it is by his agency; and all the light which we obtain in regard to the laws by which these things occur, only serve to exalt our conceptions of the wisdom and greatness of God.

Barnes: Job 37:11 - -- Also by watering - Very various interpretations have been given of this phrase. Herder renders it, "His brightness rendeth the clouds."Umbreit,...

Also by watering - Very various interpretations have been given of this phrase. Herder renders it, "His brightness rendeth the clouds."Umbreit, Und Heiterkeit vertreibt die Wolke - "and serenity or clearness drives away the clouds."Prof. Lee, "For irrigation is the thick cloud stretched out."Rosenmuller, "Splendor dispels the clouds."Luther, "The thick clouds divide themselves that it may be clear."Coverdale, "The clouds do their labor in giving moistness."The Vulgate, "The grain desires the clouds,"and the Septuagint, "The cloud forms the chosen"- ἐκλεκτον eklekton . This variety of interpretation arises from the uncertainty of the meaning of the original word - ברי be rı̂y . According to the Chaldee and the rabbis, this word means "clearness, serenity"of the heavens, and then the whole clause is to be rendered, "serenity dispelleth the cloud."Or the word may be formed of the preposition ב ( be ), and רי rı̂y , meaning "watering"or "rain,"the same as רוי reviy . The word does not occur elsewhere in Hebrew, and hence, it is not easy to determine its meaning. The weight of authority is in favor of serenity, or clearness - meaning that the thick, dark cloud is driven away by the serenity or clearness of the atmosphere - as where the clear sky seems to light up the heavens and to drive away the clouds. This idea seems, also, to be demanded by the parallelism, and is also more poetical than that in the common version.

Wearieth - Or removes, or scatters. The verb used here ( טרח ṭârach ) occurs nowhere else in the Scriptures, though nouns derived from the verb are found in Isa 1:14, rendered "trouble,"and Deu 1:12, rendered "cumbrance."In Arabic it means "to cast down, to project,"and hence, to lay upon as a burden. But the word may mean to impel, drive forward, and hence, the idea that the dark thick cloud is propelled or driven forward by the serenity of the sky. This "appears"to be so, and hence, the poetic idea as it occurred to Elihu.

He scattereth his bright cloud - Margin, "the cloud of his light."The idea seems to be, that "his light,"that is, the light which God causes to shine as the tempest passes off, seems to scatter or disperse the cloud. The image before the mind of Elihu probably was, that of a departing shower, when the light seems to rise behind it, and as it were to expel the cloud or to drive it away. We are not to suppose that this is philosophically correct, but Elihu represents it as it appeared, and the image is wholly poetical.

Barnes: Job 37:12 - -- And it is turned round about - The word here rendered "it"( הוא hû' ) may refer either to the "cloud,"and then it will mean that it i...

And it is turned round about - The word here rendered "it"( הוא hû' ) may refer either to the "cloud,"and then it will mean that it is driven about at the pleasure of God; or it may refer to God, and then it will mean that "he"drives it about at pleasure. The sense is not materially varied. The use of the Hebrew participle rendered "turned about"(in Hithpael), would rather imply that it refers to the cloud. The sense then is, that it turns itself round about - referring to the appearance of a cloud in the sky that rolls itself about from one place to another.

By his counsels - By the counsels or purposes of God. It is not by any agency or power of its own, but it is by laws such as he has appointed, and so as to accomplish his will. The object is to keep up the idea that God presides over, and directs all these things. The word which is rendered "counsels"( תחבולה tache bûlâh ) means properly a "steering, guidance, management,"Pro 11:14. It is usually applied to the act of steering, as a vessel, and then to prudent management, wise counsel, skillful measures. It is rendered "wise counsels,"and "counsels,"Pro 1:5; Pro 11:14; Pro 12:5; Pro 24:6, and "good advice,"Pro 20:18. It does not elsewhere occur in the Scriptures. The word is derived from חבל chebel , "a rope,"or חבל chôbêl , "a sailor, pilot,"and hence, the idea of "steering,"or "directing."The meaning is, that the movements of the clouds are entirely under the "direction"of God, as the vessel is of the pilot or helmsman. The Septuagint appears not to have understood the meaning of the word, and have not attempted to translate it. They retain it in their version, writing it, θεεβουλαθὼ q theeboulathōth , showing, among other instances, how the Hebrew was "pronounced"by them.

That they may do whatsoever he commandeth them - See Psa 147:17-18. The idea is, that even the clouds, which appear so capricious in their movements, are really under the direction of God, and are accomplishing his purposes. They do not move at haphazard, but they are under the control of one who intends to accomplish important purposes by them. Elihu had made this observation respecting the lightning Job 36:30-33, and he now says that the same thing was true of the clouds. The investigations of science have only served to confirm this, and to show that even the movements of the clouds are regulated by laws which have been ordained by a Being of infinite intelligence.

Barnes: Job 37:13 - -- He causeth it to come - That is, the rain, or the storm. It is entirely under the hand of God, like the lightning Job 36:30, and designed to ac...

He causeth it to come - That is, the rain, or the storm. It is entirely under the hand of God, like the lightning Job 36:30, and designed to accomplish his purposes of mercy and of justice.

Whether for correction - Margin, as in Hebrew "a rod."The rod is often used as an emblem of punishment. The idea is, that God, when he pleases, can send the rain upon the earth for the purpose of executing punishment. So he did on the old world Gen 7:11-12, and so the overflowing flood is often now sent to sweep away the works of man, to lay waste his fields, and to cut off the wicked.

Or for his land - When necessary to render the land productive. He waters it by timely rains. It is called "his land,"meaning that the earth belongs to the Lord, and that he cultivates it as his own; Psa 24:1.

Or for mercy - In kindness and benignity to the world. But for this, the earth would become baked and parched, and all vegetation would expire. The idea is, that the rains are entirely under the control of God, and that he can make use of them to accomplish his various purposes - to execute his judgments, or to express his benignity and love. These various uses to which the lightning, the storm, and the rain could be made subservient under the divine direction. seem to have been one of the main ideas in the mind of Elihu, showing the supremacy and the majesty of God.

Barnes: Job 37:14 - -- Hearken unto this, O Job - That is, to the lesson which such events are fitted to convey respecting God. Stand still - In a posture of re...

Hearken unto this, O Job - That is, to the lesson which such events are fitted to convey respecting God.

Stand still - In a posture of reverence and attention. The object is to secure a calm contemplation of the works of God, so that the mind might be filled with suitable reverence for him.

Barnes: Job 37:15 - -- Dost thou know when God disposed them? - That is, the winds, the clouds, the cold, the snow, the sky, etc. The question refers to the manner in...

Dost thou know when God disposed them? - That is, the winds, the clouds, the cold, the snow, the sky, etc. The question refers to the manner in which God arranges and governs them, rather than to the time when it was done. So the Hebrew implies, and so the connection demands. The question was not whether Job knew "when"all this was done, but whether he could explain "how"it was that God thus arranged and ordered the things referred to. Elihu asks him whether he could explain the manner in which the balancings of the clouds were preserved; in which the lightnings were directed; in which his garments were warm, and in which God had made and sustained the sky? The Septuagint renders this, "We know that God hath disposed his works that he hath made light out of darkness."

And caused the light of his cloud to shine - That is, Canst thou explain the cause of lightning? Canst thou tell how it is that it seems to break out of a dark cloud? Where has it been concealed? And by what laws is it now brought forth? Elihu assumes that all this was done by the agency of God, and since, as he assumes to be true, it was impossible for people to explain the manner in which it was done, his object is to show that profound veneration should be shown for a God who works in this manner. Somewhat more is known now of the laws by which lightning is produced than there was in the time of Job; but the question may still be asked of man, and is as much fitted to produce awe and veneration as it was then, whether he understands the way in which God produces the bright lightning from the dark bosom of a cloud. Can he tell what is the exact agency of the Most High in it? Can he explain all the laws by which it is done?

Barnes: Job 37:16 - -- Dost thou know the balancings of the clouds? - That is, Dost thou know how the clouds are poised and suspended in the air? The difficulty to be...

Dost thou know the balancings of the clouds? - That is, Dost thou know how the clouds are poised and suspended in the air? The difficulty to be explained was, that the clouds, so full of water, did not fail to the earth, but remained suspended in the atmosphere. They were poised and moved about by some unseen hand. Elihu asks what kept them there; what prevented their falling to the earth; what preserved the equilibrium so that they did not all roll together. The phenomena of the clouds would be among the first that would attract the attention of man, and in the early times of Job it is not to be supposed that the subject could be explained. Elihu assumes that they were held in the sky by the power of God, but what was the nature of his agency, he says, man could not understand, and hence, he infers that God should be regarded with profound veneration. We know more of the facts and laws respecting the clouds than was understood then, but our knowledge in this, as in all other things, is fitted only to exalt our conceptions of the Deity, and to change blind wonder into intelligent adoration.

The causes of the suspension of the clouds are thus stated in the Edinburgh Encyclopedia, Art. Meteorology: "When different portions of the atmosphere are intermixed so as to produce a deposition of moisture;"(compare the notes at Job 38:28), "the consequence will be the formation of a cloud. This cloud, from its increased specific gravity, will have a tendency to sink downward; and were the lower strata of the air of the same temperature with the cloud, and saturated with moisture, it would continue to descend until it reached the surface of the earth - in the form of rain, or what is commonly called mist. In general, however, the cloud in its descent passes through a warmer region, when the condensed moisture again passes into a vapor, and consequently ascends until it reaches a temperature sufficiently low to recondense it, when it will begin again to sink. This oscillation will continue until the cloud settles at the point where the temperature and humidity are such as that the condensed moisture begins to be dissipated, and which is found on an average to be between two and three miles above the surface of the earth."By such laws the "balancing"of the clouds is secured, and thus is shown the wisdom of Him that is "perfect in knowledge."

The wondrous works of him that is perfect in knowledge - Particularly in the matter under consideration. He who can command the lightning, and hold the clouds suspended in the air, Elihu infers must be perfect in knowledge. To a Being who can do this, everything must be known. The reasoning of Elihu here is well-founded, and is not less forcible now than it was in the time of Job.

Barnes: Job 37:17 - -- How thy garments are warm - What is the reason that the garments which we wear produce warmth? This, it would seem, was one of the philosophica...

How thy garments are warm - What is the reason that the garments which we wear produce warmth? This, it would seem, was one of the philosophical questions which were asked at that time, and which it was difficult to explain. Perhaps it has never occurred to most persons to ask this apparently simple question, and if the inquiry were proposed to them, plain as it seems to be, they would find it as difficult to give an answer as Elihu supposed it would be for Job. Of the fact here referred to that the garments became oppressive when a sultry wind came from the south, there could be no dispute. But what was the precise difficulty in explaining the fact, is not so clear. Some suppose that Elihu asks this question sarcastically, as meaning that Job could not explain the simplest matters and the plainest facts; but there is every reason to think that the question was proposed with entire seriousness, and that it was supposed to involve real difficulty. It seems probable that the difficulty was not so much to explain why the garments should become oppressive in a burning or sultry atmosphere, as to show how the heated air itself was produced It was difficult to explain why cold came out of the north Job 37:9; how the clouds were suspended, and the lightnings caused Job 37:11, Job 37:15-16; and it was not less difficult to show what produced uncomfortable heat when the storms from the north were allayed; when the earth became quiet, and when the breezes blowed from the south. This would be a fair question for investigation, and we may readily suppose that the causes then were not fully known.

When he quieteth the earth - When the piercing blast from the north dies away, and the wind comes round to the south, producing a more gentle, but a sultry air. It was true not only that the whirlwind came from the south Job 37:9, but also that the heated burning air came also from that quarter, Luk 12:55. We know the reason to be that the equatorial regions are warmer than those at the north, and especially that in the regions where Job lived the air becomes heated by passing over extended plains of sand, but there is no reason to suppose that this was fully understood at the time referred to here.

Barnes: Job 37:18 - -- Hast thou with him spread out the sky? - That is, wert thou employed with God in performing that vast work, that thou canst explain how it was ...

Hast thou with him spread out the sky? - That is, wert thou employed with God in performing that vast work, that thou canst explain how it was done? Elihu here speaks of the sky as it appears, and as it is often spoken of, as an expanse or solid body spread out over our heads, and as sustained by some cause which is unknown. Sometimes in the Scriptures it is spoken of as a curtain (Notes, Isa 40:22); sometimes as a "firmament,"or a solid body spread out (Septuagint, Gen 1:6-7); sometimes as a fixture in which the stars are placed (Notes, Isa 34:4), and sometimes as a scroll that may be rolled up, or as a garment, Psa 102:26. There is no reason to suppose that the true cause of the appearance of an expanse was understood at that time, but probably the prevailing impression was that the sky was solid and was a fixture in which the stars were held. Many of the ancients supposed that there were concentric spheres, which were transparent but solid, and that these spheres revolved around the earth carrying the heavenly bodies with them. In one of these spheres, they supposed, was the sun; in another the moon; in another the fixed stars; in another the planets; and it was the harmonious movement of these concentric and transparent orbs which it was supposed produced the "music of the spheres."

Which is strong - Firm, compact. Elihu evidently supposed that it was solid. It was so firm that it was self-sustained.

And as a molten looking-glass - As a mirror that is made by being fused or cast. The word "glass"is not in the original, the Hebrew denoting simply "seeing,"or a "mirror"( ראי re 'ı̂y ). Mirrors were commonly made of plates of metal highly polished; see the notes at Isa 3:23; compare Wilkinson’ s Manners and Customs of the Ancient Egyptians, vol. iii. p. 365. Ancient mirrors were so highly polished that in some which have been discovered at Thebes the luster has been partially restored, though they have been buried for many centuries. There can be no doubt that the early apprehension in regard to the sky was, that it was a solid expanse, and that it is often so spoken of in the Bible. There is, however, no direct declaration that it is so, and whenever it is so spoken of, it is to be understood as popular language, as we speak still of the rising or setting of the sun, though we know that the language is not philosophically correct. The design of the Bible is not to teach science, but religion, and the speakers in the Bible were allowed to use the language of common life - just as scientific men in fact do now.

Barnes: Job 37:19 - -- Teach us what we shall say unto him - This seems to be addressed to Job. It is the language of Elihu, implying that he was overawed with a sens...

Teach us what we shall say unto him - This seems to be addressed to Job. It is the language of Elihu, implying that he was overawed with a sense of the majesty and glory of such a God. He knew not in what manner, or with what words to approach such a Being, and he asks Job to inform him, if he knew.

We cannot order our speech by reason of darkness - Job had repeatedly professed a desire to bring his cause directly before God, and to argue it in his presence. He felt assured that if he could do that, he should be able so to present it as to obtain a decision in his favor; see Job 13:3, note; Job 13:18-22, notes. Elihu now designs, indirectly, to censure that confidence. He says that he and his friends were so overawed by the majesty of God, and felt themselves so ignorant and so ill qualified to judge of him and his works, that they would not know what to say. They were in darkness. They could not understand even the works of his hands which were directly before them, and the most common operations of nature were inscrutable to them. How then could they presume to arraign God? How could they manage a cause before him with any hope of success? It is scarcely necessary to say, that the state of mind referred to here by Elihu is that which should be cultivated, and that the feelings which he expresses are those with which we should approach the Creator. We need someone to teach us. We are surrounded by mysteries which we cannot comprehend, and we should, therefore, approach our Maker with profound reverence and submission

Barnes: Job 37:20 - -- Shall it be told him that I speak? - Still the language of profound awe and reverence, as if he would not have it even intimated to God that he...

Shall it be told him that I speak? - Still the language of profound awe and reverence, as if he would not have it even intimated to God that he had presumed to say anything in regard to him, or with a view to explain the reason of his doings.

If a man speak - That is, if he attempt to speak with God; to argue a case with him; to contend with him in debate; to oppose him. Elihu had designed to reprove Job for the bold and presumptuous manner in which he bad spoken of God, and for his wish to enter into a debate with him in order to vindicate his cause. He now says, that if anyone should attempt this, God had power at once to destroy him; and that such an attempt would be perilous to his life. But other interpretations have been proposed, which may be seen in Rosenmuller, Umbreit, and Lee.

Surely he shall be swallowed up - Destroyed for his presumption and rashness in thus contending with the Almighty. Elihu says that on this account he would not dare to speak with God. He would fear that he would come forth in his anger, and destroy him. How much man by nature instinctively feels, when he has any just views of the majesty of God, that he needs a Mediator!

Barnes: Job 37:21 - -- And now men see not the bright light which is in the clouds - Either the lightning that plays on the clouds in an approaching tempest, or a glo...

And now men see not the bright light which is in the clouds - Either the lightning that plays on the clouds in an approaching tempest, or a glorious light spread over the sky on the approach of God. There is reason to believe that as Elihu delivered the sentiments recorded in the close of this chapter, he meant to describe God as if he were seen to be approaching, and that the symbols of his presence were discovered in the gathering tempest and storm. He is introduced in the following chapter with amazing sublimity and grandeur to speak to Job and his friends, and to close the argument. He comes in a whirlwind, and speaks in tones of vast sublimity. The tokens of his coming were now seen, and as Elihu discerned them he was agitated, and his language became abrupt and confused. His language is just such as one would use when the mind was overawed with the approach of God - solemn, and full of reverence, but not connected, and much less calm than in his ordinary discourse. The close of this chapter, it seems to me, therefore, is to be regarded as spoken when the tempest was seen to be gathering, and when in awful majesty God was approaching, the lightnings playing around him, the clouds piled on clouds attending him, the thunder reverberating along the sky, and an unusual brightness evincing his approach; Notes, Job 37:22. The idea here is, that people could not steadfastly behold that bright light. It was so dazzling and so overpowering that they could not gaze on it intently. The coming of such a Being strayed in so much grandeur, and clothed in such a light, was fitted to overcome the human powers.

But the wind passeth, and cleanseth them - The wind passes along and makes them clear. The idea seems to be, that the wind appeared to sweep along over the clouds as the tempest was rising, and they seemed to open or disperse in one part of the heavens, and to reveal in the opening a glory so bright and dazzling that the eye could not rest upon it. That light or splendor made in the opening cloud was the symbol of God, approaching to wind up this great controversy, and to address Job and his friends in the sublime language which is found in the closing chapters of the book, The word rendered "cleanseth"( טהר ṭâhêr ) means properly to shine, to be bright; and then to be pure or clean. Here the notion of shining or brightness is to be retained; and the idea is, that a wind appeared to pass along, removing the cloud which seemed to be a veil on the throne of God, and suffering the visible symbol of his majesty to be seen through the opening; see the notes at Job 26:9, "He holdeth back the face of his throne, and spreadeth his cloud upon it."

Barnes: Job 37:22 - -- Fair weather - Margin, "gold,"The Hebrew word ( זהב zâhâb ) properly means "gold,"and is so rendered by the Vulgate, the Syriac, an...

Fair weather - Margin, "gold,"The Hebrew word ( זהב zâhâb ) properly means "gold,"and is so rendered by the Vulgate, the Syriac, and by most versions. The Septuagint renders it, νέψη χρυσαυγουντα nepsē chrusaugounta , "clouds shining like gold."The Chaldee, אסתניא , the north wind, Boreas. Many expositors have endeavored to show that gold was found in the northern regions (see Schultens, in loc .); and it is not difficult so to establish that fact as to be a confirmation of what is here said, on the supposition that it refers literally to gold. But it is difficult to see why Elihu should here make a reference to the source where gold was found, or how such a reference should be connected with the description of the approaching tempest, and the light which was already seen on the opening clouds. It seems probable to me that the idea is wholly different and that Elihu means to say that a bright, dazzling light was seen in the northern sky like burnished gold, which was a fit symbol of the approaching Deity. This idea is hinted at in the Septuagint, but it has not seemed to occur to expositors. The image is that of the heavens darkened with the tempest, the lightnings playing, the thunder rolling, and then the wind seeming to brush away the clouds in the north, and disclosing in the opening a bright, dazzling appearance like burnished gold, that bespoke the approach of God. The word is never used in the sense of "fair weather."An ancient Greek tragedian, mentioned by Grotius, speaks of golden air - χρυσωπός αἰθήρ chrusōpos aithēr . Varro also uses a similar expression - aurescit aer, "the air becomes like gold."So Thomson, in his Seasons:

But yonder comes the powerful king of day

Rejoicing in the east. The lessening cloud.

The kindling azure, and the mountain’ s brow,

Illumed with fluid gold, his near approach

Betoken glad.

Summer

Out of the north - That is, the symbol of the approaching Deity appears in that quarter, or God was seen to approach from the north. It may serve to explain this, to remark that among the ancients the northern regions were regarded as the residence of the gods, and that on the mountains in the north it was supposed they were accustomed to assemble. In proof of this, and for the reasons of it, see the notes at Isa 14:13. From that region Elihu sees God now approaching, and directs the attention of his companions to the symbols of his advent. It is this which fills his mind with so much consternation, and which renders his discourse so broken and disconnected. Having, in a manner evincing great alarm, directed their attention to these symbols, he concludes what he has to say in a hurried manner, and God appears, to close the controversy.

With God is terrible majesty - This is not a declaration asserting this of God in general, but as he then appeared. It is the language of one who was overwhelmed with his awful majesty, as the brightness of his presence was seen on the tempest.

Poole: Job 37:1 - -- At this also of which I have already spoken, and am now to speak further, to wit, the thunder, which hath ofttimes made even atheists and other wick...

At this also of which I have already spoken, and am now to speak further, to wit, the thunder, which hath ofttimes made even atheists and other wicked men to tremble with a fear of horror, and good men to tremble with a fear of reverence, and a due dread of God’ s judgments.

Is moved out of his place leaps and beats excessively, as if it would leap out of my body.

Poole: Job 37:2 - -- It seems not improbable, that whilst Elihu was speaking it thundered greatly, and that tempest was begun wherewith God ushered in his speech, as it ...

It seems not improbable, that whilst Elihu was speaking it thundered greatly, and that tempest was begun wherewith God ushered in his speech, as it here follows, Job 38:1 , and that this occasioned his return to that subject of which he had discoursed before, and his exhortation to them to mind it with deeper attention.

The noise of his voice or, his voice (to wit, the thunder, which is called a voice , Exo 20:18 , and God’ s voice, Psa 29:4 ) with trembling ; because the thunder is an effect or evidence of God’ s mighty power, and ofttimes of his anger also. The sound that goeth out of his mouth ; as the voice (and thunder is God’ s voice) goeth out of man’ s mouth. Or, that is produced by God’ s word or command, which is oft signified by his mouth.

Poole: Job 37:3 - -- He directeth it to wit, his voice; which he shooteth or guideth like an arrow to the mark, so disposing it that it may do that work for which he send...

He directeth it to wit, his voice; which he shooteth or guideth like an arrow to the mark, so disposing it that it may do that work for which he sends it.

Under the whole heaven far and wide through all the parts of this lower world.

Unto the ends of the earth from one end of the heaven to the opposite end or part of the earth, as from east to west, Mat 24:27 .

Poole: Job 37:4 - -- After it a voice i.e. after the lightning. For though the thunder be in order of nature before the lightning, yet the lightning is seen before the th...

After it a voice i.e. after the lightning. For though the thunder be in order of nature before the lightning, yet the lightning is seen before the thunder is heard.

With the voice of his excellency or, with his excellent , or high , or lofted voice, both loud and full of majesty and awfulness.

He will not stay or, delay . Heb. take them by the heel , as Jacob did Esau in the womb, to delay or stop him from entering into the world before him. Them ; either,

1. The lightnings spoken of in the beginning of the verse. But these do not stay till his voice be heard, but come before it. Or rather,

2. The rains and storms, of which he spoke before, and will speak again, Job 37:6 .

Poole: Job 37:5 - -- Marvellously with a wonderful and terrible noise, and so as to produce many wonderful effects, as the breaking down of great and strong trees or buil...

Marvellously with a wonderful and terrible noise, and so as to produce many wonderful effects, as the breaking down of great and strong trees or buildings, the killing of men in a stupendous manner, &c.

Great things doeth he even in the course of nature, and in visible things; which all men see, but scarce any can give the true and satisfactory reasons of them; for the greatest philosophers speak only by guess, and are greatly divided among themselves about them. And therefore it is not strange if the secret and deep counsels of Divine Providence be out of our reach; and it is great arrogancy in thee, O Job, to censure them, because thou dost not fully understand them.

Poole: Job 37:6 - -- By his powerful word and will the snow is made in the air, and falls upon the earth where and when he seeth fit. The great rain of his strength i....

By his powerful word and will the snow is made in the air, and falls upon the earth where and when he seeth fit.

The great rain of his strength i.e. those great storms or showers of rain which come with great force and irresistible violence.

Poole: Job 37:7 - -- By these great snows and rains he drives men out of the fields, and seals or binds tap their hands from all that work, and drives them home to their...

By these great snows and rains he drives men out of the fields, and seals or binds tap their hands from all that work, and drives them home to their houses, and in a manner shuts them up there. See Gen 7:16 Exo 9:19 . Or, by his hand or power (i.e. by those powerful works of his hand here mentioned) he sealeth , or shutteth up , or keepeth close every man , to wit, in his house, as the beasts in their dens, Job 37:8 . That all men may know his work ; that men being hindered from action and their own work, and so being idle and at perfect leisure, may fall to a serious contemplation of these and other great and glorious works of God. Or, that he (i.e. every man , as was now expressed)

may know (or inquire into , or take an account of ) all his workmen; for which the proper season is when they are all hindered from their work, and brought together into the house.

Poole: Job 37:8 - -- Then in great rains or deep snows, the beasts go into dens for shelter and comfort.

Then in great rains or deep snows, the beasts go into dens for shelter and comfort.

Poole: Job 37:9 - -- Out of the south Heb. out of the inner chamber ; as the southern part of the world is called, because in a great part it was and is hid and unknown ...

Out of the south Heb. out of the inner chamber ; as the southern part of the world is called, because in a great part it was and is hid and unknown to those who live in the northern hemisphere, in which Job’ s habitation lay. Or, out of the chambers of the south , as it is more largely expressed, Job 9:9 ; for this is opposed to the north in the following clause.

The whirlwind violent and stormy winds which in those parts most frequently came-out of the south, whence they are called whirlwinds of the south , Zec 9:14 . So also Isa 21:1 .

Cold i.e. cold and freezing winds, which generally come from that quarter.

Poole: Job 37:10 - -- By the breath of God i.e. by the word of God, as this very phrase is explained, Psa 33:6 ; by his will or appointment, to which as the principal caus...

By the breath of God i.e. by the word of God, as this very phrase is explained, Psa 33:6 ; by his will or appointment, to which as the principal cause all these works are ascribed.

The breadth of the waters is straitened the frost dries up the waters in great measure, and bringeth the remainder into a narrower compass, as we see.

Poole: Job 37:11 - -- By watering to wit, the earth; by causing them first to receive and return, and then to pour forth abundance of water. He wearieth the thick cloud ...

By watering to wit, the earth; by causing them first to receive and return, and then to pour forth abundance of water.

He wearieth the thick cloud by filling and burdening them with much water, and making them to go long journeys to water remote parts, and at last to spend and empty themselves there; all which things make men weary; and therefore are here said to make the clouds weary by a common figure called prosopopoeia .

He scattereth his bright cloud: as for the white and lightsome clouds, (which are opposed to the thick and black clouds in the former clause,) he scattereth and dissolveth them by the wind or sun. Or, he scattereth other clouds by his light , i.e. by the beams of the sun. So he gathereth some, and scattereth others, as he pleaseth, causing either clear, or dark and rainy weather.

Poole: Job 37:12 - -- It is turned round about the clouds (now mentioned) are carried about to this or that place. By his counsels not by chance, (though nothing seems t...

It is turned round about the clouds (now mentioned) are carried about to this or that place.

By his counsels not by chance, (though nothing seems to be more casual and uncertain than the motions of the clouds,) but by his order and governance.

That they may do whatsoever he commandeth them either be dispersed and pass away without effect, to the disappointment of the husbandmen’ s hopes, or be dissolved in sweet and fruitful showers.

Poole: Job 37:13 - -- He causeth it to come Heb. he maketh it (to wit, the cloud, or clouds, and the rain which is in it) to find , to wit, a path, or to find out the p...

He causeth it to come Heb. he maketh it (to wit, the cloud, or clouds, and the rain which is in it) to find , to wit, a path, or to find out the persons or place to which God intends either good or hurt by it.

For correction Heb. for a rod , to scourge or correct men by immoderate showers. Or, for a tribe, or certain portion of land, which God intends particularly to punish in that kind.

For his land i.e. for God’ s land, whereby he understands either,

1. The land which he favoureth, and where his servants live, such as Canaan was, which for that reason God blessed with rain, as is noted, Deu 11:12 Psa 68:9,10 . But in Job’ s time God’ s people were not in Canaan, but in Egypt, where little or no rain fell. Or,

2. The uninhabited or desert parts of the world, which may be called God’ s land peculiarly, because it is immediately and only under God’ s care, as being not regarded nor possessed by any man. For it is noted as a special act of God’ s providence, that he causeth rain to fall upon such places, Job 38:26,27 . Or,

3. His earth , as it may be rendered, to wit, the whole earth, which is said to be the Lord’ s , Psa 24:50:12 , and which may be here opposed to a tribe , or little part of the earth. And so this may note a general judgment by excessive rains inflicted upon the whole earth, and all its inhabitants, even the universal deluge, which then was in a manner of fresh memory, which came in a great measure out of the clouds. And thus these two first members speak of correction, and the last of mercy.

For mercy for the comfort and benefit of mankind, by cooling and cleansing the air, and refreshing and improving all the fruits of the earth, and other ways.

Poole: Job 37:14 - -- If there be so much matter of wonder and adoration in the most obvious and sensible works of God, how wonderful must his deep and secret counsels an...

If there be so much matter of wonder and adoration in the most obvious and sensible works of God, how wonderful must his deep and secret counsels and judgments be! And therefore it would better become thee humbly to admire, and quietly to submit to them, than to murmur or quarrel with them.

Poole: Job 37:15 - -- When God disposed them to wit, the things before mentioned, the clouds, rain, snow, thunder and lightning, and other meteors. Did God ask counsel fro...

When God disposed them to wit, the things before mentioned, the clouds, rain, snow, thunder and lightning, and other meteors. Did God ask counsel from thee to acquaint thee with his counsels in the producing and ordering of them, when, and where, and in what manner he should dispose them? God ordereth all these things not as it pleaseth thee, but as he thinks meet; and in like manner he disposeth of all human affairs, and of thine among the rest.

Caused the light of his cloud to shine which may be understood either,

1. Of the light of the sun breaking through the clouds, when it is most glorious and comfortable. But though this light break through the clouds, yet it is very improper to call it the light of the clouds . Or,

2. The lightning, which is properly so called, as being produced by and in a cloud. Or,

3. The rainbow, which is a lightsome and glorious work of God, and therefore not likely to be omitted in this place, and which is seated in a cloud, which also may well be called God’ s cloud, because therein God puts his bow , as the rainbow is called, Gen 9:13 .

Poole: Job 37:16 - -- The balancings how God doth as it were weigh and suspend the clouds in balances; so that although they are ponderous and flail of water, yet they are...

The balancings how God doth as it were weigh and suspend the clouds in balances; so that although they are ponderous and flail of water, yet they are by his power kept up in the thin air from falling down upon us in spouts and floods, as sometimes they have done, and generally would do, if not overruled by a higher Providence.

Which is perfect in knowledge who exactly knows the weight. These are effects and evidences of his infinite power and knowledge.

Poole: Job 37:17 - -- How and why thy garments keep thee warm; of which as there are some natural causes, so it is certain that they are not sufficient to do it without G...

How and why thy garments keep thee warm; of which as there are some natural causes, so it is certain that they are not sufficient to do it without God’ s blessing, as experience shows, Hag 1:6 .

The earth i.e. the air about the earth.

By the south wind which though sometimes it brings tempests, Job 37:9 , yet commonly it ushereth in hot weather, Luk 12:55 , as the north wind brings cold, Job 37:9 . Or, from the south wind , i.e. from the tempest, which was noted to come out of the south, Job 37:9 . Heb. from or

by the south i.e. by the sun’ s coming into the southern parts, which makes the air quiet and warm.

Poole: Job 37:18 - -- Wast thou his co-worker or assistant in spreading out the sky like a tent or canopy over the earth? or canst thou spread out such another sky? Then ...

Wast thou his co-worker or assistant in spreading out the sky like a tent or canopy over the earth? or canst thou spread out such another sky? Then indeed thou mayst with some colour pretend to be privy to his counsels, and to judge of his works.

Which is strong which though it be very thin and transparent, yet is also firm, and compact, and stedfast, and of great force when it is pent up.

As a molten looking-glass made of brass or steel, as the manner then was.

Poole: Job 37:19 - -- Unto him i.e. unto God, either by way of apology for thee; or rather, by way of debate and disputation with him about his counsels and ways: about wh...

Unto him i.e. unto God, either by way of apology for thee; or rather, by way of debate and disputation with him about his counsels and ways: about which we know not what to say, and therefore are willing to be taught by thee, who pretendest to such exquisite knowledge of these matters. So it is a reproof of his presumption and arrogance.

We cannot order our speech we know neither with what words or matter, nor in what method and manner, to maintain discourse with him, or plead against him. The words our speech are easily understood out of the former clause of the verse.

By reason of darkness both because of the darkness of the matter, God’ s counsels and ways being a great depth, and far out of our reach; and because of the darkness or blindness of our minds.

Poole: Job 37:20 - -- That I speak Heb. that I will speak . Shall I send, or who dare carry, a challenge from me to God, or a message that I am ready and desirous to deba...

That I speak Heb. that I will speak . Shall I send, or who dare carry, a challenge from me to God, or a message that I am ready and desirous to debate with him concerning his proceedings? This indeed thou hast done in effect, but far be such presumption from me.

If a man speak if a man should be so bold and venturous to enter the lists with God.

He shall be swallowed up with the sense of God’ s infinite majesty and spotless purity.

Poole: Job 37:21 - -- And or, for , as this particle is oft rendered; the following words containing a reason of those which go before. Now: this particle is either, 1...

And or, for , as this particle is oft rendered; the following words containing a reason of those which go before.

Now: this particle is either,

1. A note of time, and so it intimates a sudden change which then was in the weather, which having been very dark, began now to clear up; or rather,

2. A note of inference to usher in the argument. Men see not ; either,

1. Do not observe (as seeing is oft used) nor consider these glorious works of God; or,

2. Cannot behold, or at least not gaze upon it.

In the clouds or, in the skies ; for the Hebrew word signifies both clouds and skies. This is to be understood, either,

1. Of bright and lightsome clouds; or rather,

2. Of the sun, which is oft and emphatically called light, as was noted before, and here the bright light; which men ofttimes cannot behold, either when it is covered with a black and thick cloud; or when, as it follows, the sky is very clear, and consequently the sunshine is very bright. And therefore it is not strange if we cannot see God, who dwelleth in darkness, 1Ki 8:12 , nor discern his counsels and ways, which are covered with great obscurity; and if we dare not approach to him, with whom is, as it here follows, terrible majesty; and if we presume to do so, we must needs be swallowed up, as was said, Job 37:20 .

But the wind passeth or rather, when (as this particle is used) the wind passeth. Cleanseth them; earlier the clouds, i.e. cleanseth the air from them; or the skies, by driving away those clouds which darkened it.

Poole: Job 37:22 - -- Fair weather or, when (which particle may well be understood out of, the foregoing verse; and so this may be a further description of the time when...

Fair weather or, when (which particle may well be understood out of, the foregoing verse; and so this may be a further description of the time when men cannot see or gaze upon the sun, namely, when) fair weather , &c. Heb. gold ; either,

1. Properly. And so this may be noted as another wonderful work of God, that the choicest of metals, to wit, gold, should be found in and fetched out of the bowels of cold northern countries. Or,

2. Metaphorically, as this word is oft used of bright and shining things; as we read of golden oil , Zec 4:12 , and we call happy times golden days . And so bright and fair weather may well be called golden, because then the sun gilds the air and earth with its beams, which also are called by poets golden beams.

Out of the north i.e. from the northern winds, which scatter the clouds, and clear the sky, Pro 25:23 .

With God is terrible majesty and therefore we neither can nor may approach too near to him, nor speak presumptuously or irreverently to him, or of him. And so this is the application of what he had now said, that we could not see the sun, &c, much less God; and withal it is an epiphonema or conclusion of the whole foregoing discourse. Those glorious works of his which I have described, are testimonies of that great and terrible majesty which is in him; which should cause us to fear and reverence him, and not to behave ourselves so insolently towards him, as Job hath done.

Haydock: Job 37:1 - -- This thunder, the effects of which are so terrible, that it is often styled the voice of God. (Calmet) (Psalm xxviii.) (Menochius) --- The cons...

This thunder, the effects of which are so terrible, that it is often styled the voice of God. (Calmet) (Psalm xxviii.) (Menochius) ---

The consideration of rewards (chap. xxxvi. 33.) stimulates the good, while thunder strikes the heart with terror. (Worthington)

Haydock: Job 37:3 - -- Earth. Lightning appears from the east to the west, Matthew xxiv. 27.

Earth. Lightning appears from the east to the west, Matthew xxiv. 27.

Haydock: Job 37:4 - -- After. Light travels faster than sound, (Haydock) though thunder and lightning are produced at the same instant. (Calmet) --- Found out. Philoso...

After. Light travels faster than sound, (Haydock) though thunder and lightning are produced at the same instant. (Calmet) ---

Found out. Philosophers can only propose their conjectures on the cause of thunder. This sense is confirmed by the Greek, Chaldean, &c. Hebrew may be, "he delays not;" (Calmet) ---

Protestants, "he will not stay them;" (Haydock) rain commonly falling soon after thunder. As the latter is occasioned by the collision of clouds, when they come to a certain distance from the earth, the heat causes them to dissolve into showers, which augments at each crack. (Calmet) ---

Septuagint, "For he has done great things, which we have not understood." This is connected with chap. xxxvi. 24. Then we read, (ver. 7.) "that man may know his own weakness." All the intermediate verses have been supplied by Origen from Theodotion, or others. (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 37:7 - -- He sealed up, &c. When he sends those showers of his strength; that is, those storms of rain, he seals up; that is, he shuts up the hands of men...

He sealed up, &c. When he sends those showers of his strength; that is, those storms of rain, he seals up; that is, he shuts up the hands of men from their usual work abroad, and confines them within doors, to consider his works; or to forecast their works; that is, what they themselves are to do. (Challoner) ---

We are all the servants of God. He marks us in the hand, as such, Isaias xliv. 5., and Ezechiel ix. 6., and Apocalypse xiii. 6. The Romans marked soldiers with a hot iron in the hands. (Veget. i. 8.) ---

The abettors of chiromancy have hence vainly pretended that they can discover each person's future in the lineaments of his hands. (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 37:8 - -- Den. Foreseeing the tempest and retreating for shelter.

Den. Foreseeing the tempest and retreating for shelter.

Haydock: Job 37:9 - -- Parts. The south, (chap. ix. 9.) whence storms commonly came in that country, (Calmet) from the sea or desert of Idumea. (Haydock) (Psalm lxxvii. ...

Parts. The south, (chap. ix. 9.) whence storms commonly came in that country, (Calmet) from the sea or desert of Idumea. (Haydock) (Psalm lxxvii. 26., and Zacharias ix. 14., and Isaias xxi. 1.) ---

North wind or pole. (Worthington) ---

Yet the south seems to be designated; (ver. 17., and chap. xxxviii. 32.) though cold comes from the north, in Idumea as well as here. (Calmet) ---

Mezarim, is rendered by Protestants "north." Marginal note, "scattering winds. " Septuagint Greek: akroterion, "summits" of mountains.

Haydock: Job 37:10 - -- Abundantly. He cause it to freeze or rain at pleasure. (Haydock) (Psalm cxlvii. 17.) (Menochius)

Abundantly. He cause it to freeze or rain at pleasure. (Haydock) (Psalm cxlvii. 17.) (Menochius)

Haydock: Job 37:11 - -- Corn requires rain. (Haydock) --- Light. As they are transparent, they do not hinder the sun from appearing. Hebrew, "the brightness of the sky ...

Corn requires rain. (Haydock) ---

Light. As they are transparent, they do not hinder the sun from appearing. Hebrew, "the brightness of the sky disperses the clouds, and the clouds shed their light" in the rainbow, (ver. 15.; Grotius) or lightning. (Junius; Calmet; Menochius) ---

Protestants, "Also by watering, he wearieth the thick cloud, he scattereth his bright cloud, ( 12 ) and it is turned round about by his counsels, that they may do whatsoever," &c. God prohibits or gives rain. (Haydock) ---

Nothing is left to chance. (Calmet) ---

He directeth the clouds as a master does his ship. (Worthington)

Haydock: Job 37:13 - -- Tribe. Hebrew also, "for correction." (Haydock) (Amos iv. 7.) --- Land of promise, Psalm lxvii. 10.

Tribe. Hebrew also, "for correction." (Haydock) (Amos iv. 7.) ---

Land of promise, Psalm lxvii. 10.

Haydock: Job 37:15 - -- Light: the rain-bow, according to the best interpreters; or the lightning. (Calmet)

Light: the rain-bow, according to the best interpreters; or the lightning. (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 37:16 - -- Paths. Hebrew, "the balancing of the clouds, the wondrous works of Him whose knowledge is perfect?" chap. xxxvi. 4. Dost thou know what suspends th...

Paths. Hebrew, "the balancing of the clouds, the wondrous works of Him whose knowledge is perfect?" chap. xxxvi. 4. Dost thou know what suspends the heavy clouds in the air? (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 37:17 - -- Are. Hebrew, "How thy," &c. It is also beyond thy comprehension, why thou shouldst be too hot when the south winds blows (Haydock) moderately, thou...

Are. Hebrew, "How thy," &c. It is also beyond thy comprehension, why thou shouldst be too hot when the south winds blows (Haydock) moderately, though tempests generally proceed from the same quarter, ver. 9. If thou art in the dark, respecting these things, which thou feelest, how canst thou pretend to fathom and condemn the counsels of God? (Calmet) ---

Job was far from doing either. His friends rather undertook to explain God's reasons for punishing thus his servants, which Job acknowledged was to him a mystery, (Haydock) till God had enlightened him, chap. xxii. 3. (Houbigant)

Haydock: Job 37:18 - -- Brass. Hebrew, "Hast thou with him stretched out (or beaten, as brass, tarkiang; which word Moses uses for the firmament) the heavens, which are a...

Brass. Hebrew, "Hast thou with him stretched out (or beaten, as brass, tarkiang; which word Moses uses for the firmament) the heavens, which are as solid (Chaldean, and like) a molten looking-glass?" which was formerly made of metal, Exodus xxxviii. 8. The Hebrews looked upon the sky as a sheet of brass; and the poets speak of the brazen heaven. (Pindar. Nem. vi.; Homer, Iliad A.)

Haydock: Job 37:19 - -- Darkness. Thou who art so learned, give us some information, what we may blame in the works of God. Cutting irony! (Calmet)

Darkness. Thou who art so learned, give us some information, what we may blame in the works of God. Cutting irony! (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 37:20 - -- He shall be swallowed up. All that man can say, when he speaks of God, is so little and inconsiderable in comparison with the subject, that man is l...

He shall be swallowed up. All that man can say, when he speaks of God, is so little and inconsiderable in comparison with the subject, that man is lost, an das it were swallowed up in so immense an ocean. (Challoner) ---

The man who should are to mention what I could reprehend in God's works, would soon be overwhelmed with majesty. (Calmet) ---

Alphonsus IX, king of Leon, (the year of our Lord 1252) surnamed "the wise and the astronomer," said "he could have given some good advice respecting the motions of the stars, if he had been consulted by God;" meaning to ridicule some vain systems of philosophers, then in vogue. (Dict. 1774.) (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 37:21 - -- Light; being hindered by the clouds, and dazzled when they are removed. Yet we presume to judge of the secrets of Providence! (Calmet) --- Away. ...

Light; being hindered by the clouds, and dazzled when they are removed. Yet we presume to judge of the secrets of Providence! (Calmet) ---

Away. As there is a constant vicissitude of these things, so there is of happiness and misery. (Menochius) ---

Septuagint, "For the light is not seen by all. It is refulgent in beauties, as that which comes thence upon the clouds." If, therefore, this light does not pervade all places, why should we wonder that all do not understand the ways of God? (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 37:22 - -- Gold. Septuagint, "from the north, gold-coloured clouds. Above these, great is the praise and honour of the Almighty." (Haydock) --- When the win...

Gold. Septuagint, "from the north, gold-coloured clouds. Above these, great is the praise and honour of the Almighty." (Haydock) ---

When the wind blows, the clouds are dispersed, and the sky appears serene. Each country has its peculiar advantages. In the north, Ophir, &c., may boast of gold: but what ought to be most conspicuous in the praises given to God, is an humble fear. Pindar begin his Olympic Odes somewhat in the same style. (Calmet) ---

"Water is excellent, and gold....But if, dear heart, thou wilt sing of games, regard no other star....as brighter than the sun....nor shall we celebrate any game more excellent than that of Olympia." (Haydock) ---

God disposes of all things as he pleases. He makes the golden day succeed a tempest. But it is our duty to praise him with awe, whatever he may ordain. This is the epilogue. (Pineda) ---

Man must praise God with fear, as he cannot do it sufficiently. (Worthington)

Gill: Job 37:1 - -- At this also my heart trembleth,.... At the greatness and majesty of God, not only as displayed in those works of his before observed, but as displaye...

At this also my heart trembleth,.... At the greatness and majesty of God, not only as displayed in those works of his before observed, but as displayed in those he was about to speak of: such terrible majesty is there with God, that all rational creatures tremble at it; the nations of the world, the kings and great men of the earth, and even the devils themselves, Isa 64:2. Good men tremble in the worship of God, and at the word of God; and even at the judgments of God on wicked men, and at the things that are coming on the churches of Christ. But Elihu has a particular respect to thunder and lightning, which are very terrible to many persons s, both good and bad t. At the giving of the law, there were such blazes of lightning and claps of thunder, that not only all the people of Israel in the camp trembled, but Moses himself also exceedingly feared and quaked, Exo 19:16. It is very probable, that at this time Elihu saw a storm gathering, and a tempest rising; some flashes of lightning were seen, and some murmurs u of thunders heard, which began to affect him; since quickly after we read that God spoke out of the whirlwind or tempest, Job 38:1;

and is moved out of his place; was ready to leap out of his body. Such an effect had this phenomenon of nature on him; as is sometimes the case with men at a sudden fright or unusual sound, and particularly thunder w.

Gill: Job 37:2 - -- Hear attentively the noise of his voice,.... Of the voice of God in the clouds; and of thunder, which is his voice, Job 40:9. Elihu being affected wit...

Hear attentively the noise of his voice,.... Of the voice of God in the clouds; and of thunder, which is his voice, Job 40:9. Elihu being affected with it himself, exhorts the company about him to hearken and listen to it, and learn something from it;

and the sound that goeth out of his mouth: as the former clause may have respect to loud thunder, a more violent crack or clap of it; so this may intend some lesser whispers and murmurs of it at a distance; or a rumbling noise in the clouds before they burst; since the word is sometimes used for private meditation. Now the voice of God, whether in his works of nature, or in the dispensations of his providence, or in his word; whether in the thunder of the law, or in the still sound of the Gospel, is to be attentively hearkened to; because it is the voice of God, the voice of the God of glory, majestic and powerful, and is attended with various effects; of which see Psa 29:3.

Gill: Job 37:3 - -- He directeth it under the whole heaven,.... His voice of thunder, which rolls from one end of the heaven to the other: he charges the clouds with it, ...

He directeth it under the whole heaven,.... His voice of thunder, which rolls from one end of the heaven to the other: he charges the clouds with it, and directs both it and them where they shall go and discharge; what tree, house, or man, it shall strike; and where the rain shall fall when the clouds burst: yet Pliny x atheistically calls thunder and lightning chance matters. Thus the ministers of the word, who are compared to clouds, Isa 5:6, are charged with it by the Lord: they are directed by him what they shall say, where they shall go and declare it, and he directs where it shall fall with power and weight; yea, he directs it into the very hearts of men, where it pierces and penetrates, and is a discerner and discoverer of their thoughts and intents;

and his lightning unto the ends of the earth: it cometh out of the east, and shineth to the west, Mat 24:27; and swiftly move to the further parts of the earth: and such a direction, motion, and extent, has the Gospel had; the glorious light of it, comparable to lightning, it first broke forth in the east, where Christ, his forerunner and his disciples, first preached it, and Christian churches were formed; and from thence it spread into the western parts of the world, and before the destruction of Jerusalem it was preached unto all nations; it had a free course, ran, and was glorified; the sound of the voice of it went into all the earth, and the words and doctrines of the apostles unto the ends of the world.

Gill: Job 37:4 - -- After it a voice roareth,.... After the lightning comes a violent crack or clap of thunder, which is like the roaring of a lion. Such is the order of ...

After it a voice roareth,.... After the lightning comes a violent crack or clap of thunder, which is like the roaring of a lion. Such is the order of thunder and lightning, according to our sense and apprehension of them; otherwise in nature they are together: but the reasons given why the lightning is seen before, and so the same in the flash and report of a gun, are, because the sense of seeing is quicker than the sense of hearing y; and the motion of light is quicker than that of sound; which latter is the truest reason z. The roaring voice of thunder may be an emblem of the thunder of the law; its dreadful volleys of curses, vengeance, and wrath on the breakers of it, as delivered out by Boanergeses, sons of thunder, Mar 3:17, or the loud proclamation of the Gospel, made by the ministers of it; and the alarming awakening sound of the word, when attended with the Spirit and power of God, to sinners asleep and dead in trespasses and sins; upon which they awake, hear, and live;

he thundereth with the voice of his excellency: that is, God thunders with such a voice, an excellent and majestic one; for his voice of thunder is full of majesty, Psa 29:4. So is the voice of Christ in the Gospel; he spake when on earth as one having authority, and he comes forth and appears in it now with majesty and glory; and speaks in it of the excellent things which he has done, of the excellent righteousness he has wrought out, of the excellent sacrifice he has offered up, and of the excellent salvation he is the author of;

and he will not stay them when his voice is heard; either the thunder and the lightning, as some; which he does not long defer after he has given out the decree concerning them, the order and disposition for them: or rather the rain and hail; these are not stayed, but quickly follow the flash of lightning and clap of thunder: "for when he utters his voice of thunder, there is a multitude of waters in the heavens"; and these quickly come down and are not stopped, Jer 10:13. The word for "stay" signifies "to supplant", or "act deceitfully"; the name of Jacob is derived from this root, because he supplanted his brother, Gen 25:26; and so it may be rendered here, "he will not supplant", or "deceive them a, when his voice is heard": that is, either he does not subvert them, the heavens and earth, but preserves them; though he makes them to tremble with his voice of thunder b: or he does not act the part of a secret, subtle, and deceitful enemy, when he thunders; but shows himself openly as a King, executing his decrees with authority c: or rather he deceives none with his voice; none can mistake it; all know it to be the voice of thunder when it is heard: so Christ's sheep know his voice in the Gospel, and cannot be deceived; the voice of a stranger they will not follow, Joh 10:4.

Gill: Job 37:5 - -- God thundereth marvellously with his voice,.... Or "marvels" c, or marvellous things, which may respect the marvellous effects of thunder and lightnin...

God thundereth marvellously with his voice,.... Or "marvels" c, or marvellous things, which may respect the marvellous effects of thunder and lightning: such as rending rocks and mountains; throwing down high and strong towers; shattering to pieces high and mighty oaks and cedars, and other such like effects, mentioned in Psa 29:5; and there are some things reported which seem almost incredible, were they not well attested facts; as that an egg should be consumed thereby, and the shell unhurt; a cask of liquor, the liquor in it spoiled, and the cask not touched; money melted in the purse, and the purse whole; the fetus in the womb killed, and the woman preserved; with other things of the like kind mentioned by various writers d; and which are to be accounted for only by the swift motion and piercing and penetrating nature of lightning. So the voice of God in the Gospel thunders out and declares many wonderful things; as the doctrines of the trinity of Persons in one God; of the everlasting love of the three Persons; of the Person of Christ, and the union of the two natures in him; of his incarnation, of redemption and salvation by him; of regeneration by the spirit of God; of union to Christ, and communion with him; and of the resurrection of the dead: and it produces marvellous effects, attended with a divine power; as quickening sinners dead in trespasses and sins; enlightening those who are darkness itself; bearing down all opposition before it; casting down the strong holds of sin and Satan, and reducing the most stubborn and obstinate to the obedience of Christ;

great things doth he, which we cannot comprehend; or "know" e: great things in creation, the nature and causes of which lie greatly out of the reach of man; and which he rather guesses at than knows, and still less comprehends. Great things in providence; in sustaining all creatures and providing for them; and in the government of the world, and in his dispensations in it; his judgments being unsearchable, and his ways past finding out: and great things in grace; as the salvation of sinners by Christ, and the conversion of their souls by his Spirit; and even what is known of them is known but in part and very imperfectly. This is a transition to other great things done by the Lord, besides those before mentioned, and particular instances follow.

Gill: Job 37:6 - -- For he saith to the snow, be thou on the earth,.... In the original it is, be thou earth: hence one of the Rabbins formed a notion, that the earth wa...

For he saith to the snow, be thou on the earth,.... In the original it is, be thou earth: hence one of the Rabbins formed a notion, that the earth was created from snow under the throne of glory, which is justly censured by Maimonides f; for there is a defect of the letter ב, as in 2Ch 34:30; as Aben Ezra observes; and therefore rightly supplied by us, on the earth. This is one of the great and incomprehensible things of God. What is the cause of it, how it is generated, what gives it its exceeding whiteness and its form, we rather guess at than certainly know; and there are some things relative to it not easy to be accounted for: as that it should be generated in the lower region of the air, so near us, and yet be so cold; and be so cold in its own nature, yet be like a blanket warming to the earth; and that being so cold, it should fall in hot countries, as in many parts of Africa, as Leo Africanus asserts g; and though so easily melted, yet lies continually upon the top of a burning mountain, Mount Etna, as observed by Pineda and others. God has his treasures of it, and he brings it forth from thence; it is at his command, it goes at a word speaking; it is one of the things that fulfil his word, Psa 148:8. And if what Pliny h says is true, that snow never falls upon the high seas or main ocean, the expression here is, with great exactness and propriety, be thou on the earth. However, this is certain, that to the earth only it is useful, warming, refreshing, and fructifying; it has a wonderful virtue in it to fatten the earth. Olaus Magnus i reports, that in the northern countries, where it falls in great plenty, the fields are more fruitful than any others, and sooner put forth their fruits and increase than other fields prepared and cultivated with the greatest labour and diligence: and that they are often obliged to drive off the cattle from them, lest they should eat too much and burst, the fields and meadows becoming so luxurious by it; and frequently they mow off the tops of herbs and grass with their scythes, to prevent their growing too thick. The word of God, as for its purity, so for its warming, refreshing, and fructifying nature, is compared unto it, Isa 55:10;

likewise to the small rain, and to the great rain of his strength: that is, God says to these as to the snow, be upon the earth; and they presently are, whether lesser or larger showers: the lesser or more gentle, according to Seneca k, fall in, the winter, and the larger in spring; the former when the north wind blows, the latter when the south; but whenever they come, they fall by the direction of God, and at his command. He and he only gives rain, the vanities of the Gentiles cannot; and these are sent to water and refresh the earth, and make it fruitful; for which reason also the word of God is compared thereunto, Deu 32:12. The Targum is,

"to the rain after rain in summer, to ripen the fruits; and to the rain after the rain, to cause the grass to bud in winter in his strength.''

So a shower of rain in the singular number signifies rain that falls in summer; and a shower of rain in the plural what falls in winter.

Gill: Job 37:7 - -- He sealeth up the hand of every man,.... That is, by deep snows and heavy rains being on the earth; where, as travellers are stopped in their journeys...

He sealeth up the hand of every man,.... That is, by deep snows and heavy rains being on the earth; where, as travellers are stopped in their journeys, and cannot proceed, so various artificers are hindered from their work, and husbandmen especially from their employment in the fields; so that their hands are as it were shut up and sealed, that they cannot work with them. Sephorno interprets this of the fruits and increase of the earth being produced and brought to perfection by means of the snow and rain, and so gathered by and into the hands of men; whereby they are led to observe the work of God and his goodness herein, and so to love and fear him; which he takes to be the sense of the following clause,

that all men may know his work; either their own work; what they have to do at home when they cannot work abroad; or that they may have leisure to reflect upon their moral ways and works, and consider how deficient they are: or rather the work of God; that they may know and own the snow and rain are his work, and depend upon his will; or that they may have time and opportunity of considering and meditating on the works of God, in nature, providence, and grace. Some choose to read the words, "that all men of his work may know" l; may know him the author of their beings, and the God of their mercies. For all men are the work of his hands; he has made them, and not they themselves; and the end of all God's dealings with them is, that they may know him, fear, serve, and glorify him.

Gill: Job 37:8 - -- Then the beasts go into dens,.... When snow and rains are on the earth in great abundance, then the wild beasts of the field, not being able to prowl ...

Then the beasts go into dens,.... When snow and rains are on the earth in great abundance, then the wild beasts of the field, not being able to prowl about, betake themselves to dens; where they lie in wait, lurking for any prey that may pass by, from whence they spring and seize it;

and remain in their places; until the snow and rains are finished. As for other beasts, Olaus Magnus m observes, that when such large snows fall, that trees are covered with them, and the tender branches bend under the weight of them, they will come and abide under them, as in shady places, in great security, sheltered from the cold wind. The former may put us in mind of great personages, comparable to beasts of prey for their savageness and cruelty, who, when the day of God's wrath and vengeance is come, will flee to rocks and mountains, dens and caverns, there to hide themselves from it; Rev 6:15.

Gill: Job 37:9 - -- Out of the south cometh the whirlwind,.... Or "from the chamber" n; from the chamber of the cloud, as Ben Gersom, from the inside of it; or from the t...

Out of the south cometh the whirlwind,.... Or "from the chamber" n; from the chamber of the cloud, as Ben Gersom, from the inside of it; or from the treasury of God, who bringeth the wind out of his treasures; alluding to chambers where treasures are kept; or from the heavens, shut up and veiled around with clouds like a pavilion: but because we read of the chambers of the south, Job 9:9; and the southern pole was like a secret chamber, shut up, unseen, and unknown very much to the ancients; hence we render it, and others interpret it, of the south; from whence in these countries came whirlwinds. Hence we read of the whirlwinds of the south, Isa 21:1;

and cold out of the north; cold freezing winds from thence; or "from the scatterers" o: Aben Ezra interprets them of stars, the same with the "Mazzaroth", Job 38:32; stars scattered about the Arctic or northern pole, as some: or rather the northern winds are designed which scatter the clouds, drive away rain, Pro 25:23; and bring fair weather, Job 37:22. Wherefore Mr. Broughton renders the word,

"fair weather winds;''

and, in a marginal note,

"the scatterers of clouds p.''

Gill: Job 37:10 - -- By the breath of God frost is given,.... By the word of God, as the Targum; at his command it is, at his word it comes, and at his word it goes, Psa 1...

By the breath of God frost is given,.... By the word of God, as the Targum; at his command it is, at his word it comes, and at his word it goes, Psa 147:15; or by his will, as Ben Gersom interprets it, when it is his pleasure it should be, it appears; it may be understood of a freezing wind from the Lord, for a wind is sometimes expressed by the breath of his nostrils, Psa 18:15; and as the word "God" added to things increases the signification of them, as mountains of God are strong mountains; so the breath of God may signify a strong wind, as Sephorno notes, the north wind q;

and the breadth of the waters is straitened; by the frost they are reduced and brought into a narrower compass; or made hard, as Mr. Broughton renders it; so hard as to walk upon, to draw carriages on, and lay weights and burdens very great upon; or become compact or bound together, like metal melted, poured out, and consolidated; though some think it refers to the thawing of ice by the south winds r, when the waters return to their former breadth; which is done by the breath or commandment of God, as appears from the place before quoted from the psalmist, Psa 18:15; for it may be rendered, "and the breadth of the waters is pouring out", so the Targum, when thawed; or through the pouring down of rain, so the Syriac and Arabic versions, "he sends forth plenty of water".

Gill: Job 37:11 - -- Also by watering he wearieth the thick cloud,.... By filling it with a multitude of water, it is as it were loaded and made weary with it; and especia...

Also by watering he wearieth the thick cloud,.... By filling it with a multitude of water, it is as it were loaded and made weary with it; and especially by sending it about thus loaded from place to place before discharged, when it becomes as a weary traveller; and then by letting down the water in it, whereby it spends itself like one that is weary; an emblem of ministers that spend and are spent for the good of men: some render it by serenity or fair weather, and so Mr. Broughton,

"by clearness he wearieth the thick vapours;''

by causing a clear sky he dispels them;

he scattereth his bright cloud; thin light clouds that have nothing in them, and are soon dispersed and come to nothing, and are seen no more; all emblem of such as are clouds without water, Jud 1:12; see Zec 11:17; or "he scatters the cloud by his light" s; by the sun, which dispels clouds and makes a clear sky; an emblem of the blotting out and forgiveness of sins, and of restoring the manifestations of divine love, and the joys of salvation; see Isa 44:22.

Gill: Job 37:12 - -- And it is turned round about by his counsels,.... The cloud is, and that by the wind, which is turned about to all points of the compass, according to...

And it is turned round about by his counsels,.... The cloud is, and that by the wind, which is turned about to all points of the compass, according to the will of God; by the counsels of him who sits at the helm, as the word signifies, and orders all things according to the counsel of his own will: to which owing every shifting of the wind, and the various motions of the clouds;

that they may do whatsoever he commandeth them upon the face of the world in the earth; as all his creatures do; the several meteors in the air, clouds, stormy wind, fire, hail, snow, and vapour, all fulfilling his word; and which they do everywhere in the several parts of the world whither they are sent, Psa 107:25. So ministers of the word drop down or withhold the rain of Gospel doctrine, and carry it into the several places of the world, as the Lord directs them; see Isa 5:6.

Gill: Job 37:13 - -- He causeth it to come,.... The cloud, and rain by it; whether for correction; for the reproof and chastisement of men for their sins, by suffering ...

He causeth it to come,.... The cloud, and rain by it;

whether for correction; for the reproof and chastisement of men for their sins, by suffering such quantities to fall as wash away, or corrupt and destroy, the fruits of the earth: or "for a tribe" t, as the word sometimes signifies; the rain is sent, and comes only to a particular part or spot of ground, to one city and not to another, Amo 4:7;

or for his land; some particular land he has a favour for, as the land of Canaan he cared for from one end of the year to another, and therefore sent on it rain in due season, though as yet it did not appear to be the object of his peculiar regard; or for the whole earth, which is his; and wherever rain comes seasonably and in proper quantity, it is for the benefit of it; though some think the land which no man has a property in but the Lord is meant, even the wilderness where no man is, Job 38:26;

or for mercy; to some particular spot, and to some particular persons; and indeed it is a kindness and benefit both to good and bad men; hereby the earth is watered and made fertile and fruitful, to bring forth seed to the sower and bread to the eater, see Mat 5:45; the word of God is for the correction of some, and for the comfort of others, 2Ti 3:16; yea, the savour of death unto death to some, and the savour of life unto life to others, 2Co 2:16. The Targum paraphrases the words,

"either a rain of vengeance on the seas and deserts, or an impetuous rain on the trees of the mountains and hills, or a still rain of mercy on the fruitful fields and vineyards.''

Gill: Job 37:14 - -- Hearken unto this, O Job,.... Either to the present clap of thunder then heard; or rather to what Elihu had last said concerning clouds of rain coming...

Hearken unto this, O Job,.... Either to the present clap of thunder then heard; or rather to what Elihu had last said concerning clouds of rain coming for correction or mercy; and improve it and apply it to his own case, and consider whether the afflictions he was under were for the reproof and correction of him for sin, or in mercy and love to his soul and for his good, as both might be the case; or to what he had further to say to him, which was but little more, and he should conclude;

stand still; stand up, in order to hear better, and in reverence of what might be said; and with silence, that it might be the better received and understood:

and consider the wondrous works of God; not prodigies and extraordinary things, which are out of the common course of nature, such as the wonders in Egypt, at the Red sea, in the wilderness, and in the land of Canaan, but common things; such as come more or less under daily observation, for of such only he had been speaking, and continued to speak; such as winds, clouds, thunder, lightning, hail, rain, and snow; these he would have him consider and reflect upon, that though they were so common and obvious to view, yet there were some things in them marvellous and beyond the full comprehension of men; and therefore much more must be the works of Providence, and the hidden causes and reasons of them.

Gill: Job 37:15 - -- Dost thou know when God disposed them?.... The clouds, that part of the wondrous works of God he was speaking of; when he decreed concerning them that...

Dost thou know when God disposed them?.... The clouds, that part of the wondrous works of God he was speaking of; when he decreed concerning them that they should be, when he put into them and stored them with rain, hail, snow, &c. disposed of them here and there in the heavens, and gave them orders to fall on this and the other spot of ground; wast thou present at all this, and knew what God was doing secretly in the clouds, and before heard what would break out of them, or fall from them? and if thou art ignorant of these things, canst thou imagine that thou shouldest be made acquainted with the secret springs of God's providential dealings with the children of men?

and caused the light of his cloud to shine; either the lightning to break through the cloud, or rather the light of the sun to shine upon his cloud, prepared to receive the light reflected on it, and form the rainbow; which, as it is called his bow, the cloud in which it is may be called his cloud; which is one of the wondrous works of God, and is called by the Heathens the daughter of wonder u; formed in a semicircle, with various colours, and as a token that God will drown the earth no more; an emblem of the covenant of peace, and of Jesus Christ, said to be clothed with a cloud, and with a rainbow about his head, Rev 10:1.

Gill: Job 37:16 - -- Dost thou know the balancings of the clouds?.... How those ponderous bodies, as some of them are very weighty, full of water, are poised, and hang in ...

Dost thou know the balancings of the clouds?.... How those ponderous bodies, as some of them are very weighty, full of water, are poised, and hang in the air, without turning this way or the other, or falling on the earth;

the wondrous works of him which is perfect in knowledge; of God, who is a God of knowledge, of knowledges, 1Sa 2:3; who knows himself and all his works, all creatures and things whatever, see Job 36:4; and this is another of his wondrous works, which none but he, whose knowledge is perfect, and is the author and giver of knowledge, can know, even the poising and balancing of the clouds in the air; we see they are balanced, but we know not how it is done.

Gill: Job 37:17 - -- How thy garments are warm, when he quieteth the earth by the south wind? One should think there is no great difficulty in accounting for this, that ...

How thy garments are warm, when he quieteth the earth by the south wind? One should think there is no great difficulty in accounting for this, that a man's clothes should be warm, and he so hot as not to be able to bear them, but obliged to put them off in the summer season, when only the south wind blows, which brings heat, a serene sky, and fine weather, Luk 12:55; and yet there is something in the concourse of divine Providence attending these natural causes, and his blessing with them, without which the garment of a man will not be warm, or at least not warming to him, Hag 1:6; or

"how thy garments are warm when the land is still from the south,''

as Mr. Broughton renders the words; that is, how it is when the earth is still from the whirlwinds of the south; or when that wind does not blow which brings heat, but northerly winds in the winter time; that then a man's garments should be warm, and keep him warm.

Gill: Job 37:18 - -- Hast thou with him spread out the sky?.... Wast thou concerned with him at the first spreading out of the sky? wast thou an assistant to him in it? di...

Hast thou with him spread out the sky?.... Wast thou concerned with him at the first spreading out of the sky? wast thou an assistant to him in it? did he not spread it as a curtain or canopy about himself, without the help of another? verily he did; see Job 9:8, Isa 44:24;

which is strong: for though it seems a fluid and thin, is very firm and strong, as appears by what it bears, and are contained in it; and therefore is called "the firmament of his power", Psa 150:1;

and as a molten looking glass; clear and transparent, like the looking glasses of the women, made of molten brass, Exo 38:8; and firm and permanent u; and a glass this is in which the glory of God, and his divine perfections, is to be seen; and is one of the wondrous works of God, made for the display of his own glory, and the benefit of men, Psa 19:1. Or this may respect the spreading out a clear serene sky, and smoothing it after it has been covered and ruffled with storms and tempests; which is such a wonderful work of God, that man has no hand in.

Gill: Job 37:19 - -- Teach us what we shall say unto him,.... To this wonder working God, of whose common works of nature we know so little; how we should reason with him ...

Teach us what we shall say unto him,.... To this wonder working God, of whose common works of nature we know so little; how we should reason with him about his works of Providence, when we know so little of these:

for we cannot order our speech by reason of darkness; by reason of darkness in themselves, which is in all men naturally, and even in the saints in this state of imperfection; and by reason of the clouds and darkness which are about the Lord himself, who is incomprehensible in his nature and perfections; and by reason of the darkness cast about his providential dealings with men, so that they are unsearchable and past finding out; and the best of men are at a loss how to order their speech, or discourse with God concerning these things.

Gill: Job 37:20 - -- Shall it be told him that I speak?.... And what I speak? there is no need of it, since he is omniscient, and knows every word that is spoken by men; o...

Shall it be told him that I speak?.... And what I speak? there is no need of it, since he is omniscient, and knows every word that is spoken by men; or is anything I have said concerning him, his ways, and his works, worthy relating, or worthy of his hearing, being so very imperfect? nor can the things I have spoken of, though common things, be fully explained to any; or should it be told him, the Lord, that he, Elihu, had spoke as Job had done, and arraigned his justice, and complained of his dealings? God forbid; he would not have it said they were spoken by him for all the world: or "shall it be recorded unto him what I speak?" as Mr. Broughton, or that I speak; shall it be recorded in a book, and that sent to God; that I will speak in thy cause, and be an advocate for thee, and endeavour to justify thee in all thou hast said? no, by no means;

if a man speak, surely he shall be swallowed up; if he speaks of the being and perfections of God, he is soon lost; his essence, and many of his attributes, are beyond his comprehension; if he speaks of his works of nature and providence, he is presently out of his depth; there is a bathos, a depth in them he cannot fathom: if he speaks of his love, and grace, and mercy, in the salvation of man, he is swallowed up with admiration; he is obliged to say, what manner of love is this? it has heights he cannot reach, depths he cannot get to the bottom of, lengths and breadths immeasurable: or should he undertake to dispute with God, to litigate a point with him concerning his works, he could not answer him in one thing of a thousand; and particularly Elihu suggests, was he to undertake Job's cause, it would soon be lost and all over with him; so Mr. Broughton renders the words, "would any plead, when he should be undone?" who would engage in a cause he is sure would be lost, and prove his utter undoing?

Gill: Job 37:21 - -- And now men see not the bright light which is in the clouds,.... Here Elihu returns to his subject, it may be, occasioned by black clouds gathering i...

And now men see not the bright light which is in the clouds,.... Here Elihu returns to his subject, it may be, occasioned by black clouds gathering in the heavens, as a preparation for the whirlwind, storm, and tempest, out of which the Lord is said to speak in the next chapter. And this is to be understood, not of the lightning in the cloud, which is not to be seen until it breaks out of it; nor the rainbow in the cloud, formed by the rays of light from the sun, which disappears when the wind passes and clears the sky of the cloud in which it is; nor of the Galaxy, or Milky Way, as Sephorno, which is not to be seen in a cloudy night; but of the sun, which is the great light and a bright one, and shines brightly; yet sometimes not to be seen by men, because of interposing clouds, until they are cleared away by winds. Though rather this respects the sun shining in its brightness, and in its full strength, in the skies or ethereal regions, in a clear day, when men are not able to look full at it: and how much less then are they able to behold him who is light itself, and in whom is no darkness at all, nor shadow of turning; who dwells in light, which no mortal can approach unto; into whose nature and perfections none can fully look, or behold the secret springs of his actions, and the reasons of his dispensations towards men?

but the wind passeth and cleanseth them; the clouds, and clears the air of them, which obstruct the light of the sun: or "when a wind passeth and cleareth it"; the air, as Mr. Broughton, then the sun shines so brightly that it dazzles the eye to look at it.

Gill: Job 37:22 - -- Fair weather cometh out of the north,.... Or "gold" x, which some understand literally; this being found in northern climates as well as southern, as ...

Fair weather cometh out of the north,.... Or "gold" x, which some understand literally; this being found in northern climates as well as southern, as Pliny relates y; particularly in Colchis and Scythia, which lay to the north of Palestine and Arabia; and is thought by a learned man z to be here intended: though to understand it figuratively of the serenity of the air, bright and pure as gold, or of fair weather, which is golden weather, as Mr. Broughton renders it,

"through the north the golden cometh,''

seems best to agree with the subject Elihu is upon; and such weather comes from the north, through the north winds, which drive away rain, Pro 25:23;

with God is terrible majesty; majesty belongs to him as he is King of kings, whose the kingdom of nature and providence is; and he is the Governor among and over the nations of the world. His throne is prepared in the heavens; that is his throne, and his kingdom ruleth over all: and this majesty of his is "terrible", commanding awe and reverence among all men, who are his subjects; and especially among his saints and peculiar people; and strikes a terror to others, even to great personages, the kings and princes of the earth; to whom the Lord is sometimes terrible now, and will be hereafter; see Psa 76:12, Rev 6:15; and to all Christless sinners, especially when he comes to judgment; see Isa 2:19. Or "terrible praise" a; for God is "fearful in praises", Exo 15:11; which may respect the subject of praise, terrible things, and the manner of praising him with fear and reverence, Psa 106:22.

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 37:2 The word is the usual word for “to meditate; to murmur; to groan”; here it refers to the low building of the thunder as it rumbles in the ...

NET Notes: Job 37:3 Heb “wings,” and then figuratively for the extremities of garments, of land, etc.

NET Notes: Job 37:4 The verb simply has the pronominal suffix, “them.” The idea must be that when God brings in all the thunderings he does not hold back his ...

NET Notes: Job 37:5 Heb “and we do not know.”

NET Notes: Job 37:6 Heb “Be strong.”

NET Notes: Job 37:7 D. W. Thomas suggested a meaning of “rest” for the verb, based on Arabic. He then reads אֱנוֹשׁ ...

NET Notes: Job 37:9 The “driving winds” reflects the Hebrew “from the scatterers.” This refers to the north winds that bring the cold air and the ...

NET Notes: Job 37:11 The word “moisture” is drawn from רִי (ri) as a contraction for רְוִי (rÿvi). Others ...

NET Notes: Job 37:12 Heb “that it may do.”

NET Notes: Job 37:13 This is interpretive; Heb “he makes find it.” The lightning could be what is intended here, for it finds its mark. But R. Gordis (Job, 429...

NET Notes: Job 37:15 Dhorme reads this “and how his stormcloud makes lightning to flash forth?”

NET Notes: Job 37:16 As indicated by HALOT 618 s.v. מִפְלָשׂ, the concept of “balancing” probably refers to ...

NET Notes: Job 37:18 The verb means “to beat out; to flatten,” and the analogy in the next line will use molten metal. From this verb is derived the word for t...

NET Notes: Job 37:19 The verb means “to arrange; to set in order.” From the context the idea of a legal case is included.

NET Notes: Job 37:20 This imperfect works well as a desiderative imperfect.

NET Notes: Job 37:21 Heb “and cleaned them.” The referent is the clouds (v. 18), which has been supplied in the translation for clarity. There is another way o...

NET Notes: Job 37:22 The MT has “out of the north comes gold.” Left in that sense the line seems irrelevant. The translation “golden splendor” (wit...

Geneva Bible: Job 37:1 At this also my heart ( a ) trembleth, and is moved out of his place. ( a ) At the marvelling of the thunder and lightnings: by which he declares tha...

Geneva Bible: Job 37:2 Hear attentively the ( b ) noise of his voice, and the sound [that] goeth out of his mouth. ( b ) That is the thunder, by which he speaks to men to w...

Geneva Bible: Job 37:4 After it a voice roareth: he thundereth with the voice of his excellency; and he will not stay ( c ) them when his voice is heard. ( c ) Meaning, the...

Geneva Bible: Job 37:6 For he saith to the snow, Be thou [on] the earth; ( d ) likewise to the small rain, and to the great rain of his strength. ( d ) So that neither smal...

Geneva Bible: Job 37:7 He ( e ) sealeth up the hand of every man; that all men may know his work. ( e ) By rains and thunders God causes men to keep themselves within their...

Geneva Bible: Job 37:9 Out of the south cometh the whirlwind: and cold out of the ( f ) north. ( f ) In Hebrew it is called the scattering wind, because it drives away the ...

Geneva Bible: Job 37:10 By the breath of God frost is given: and the breadth of the waters ( g ) is straitened. ( g ) That is, frozen up and dried.

Geneva Bible: Job 37:11 Also by watering he ( h ) wearieth the thick cloud: he scattereth his ( i ) bright cloud: ( h ) Gather the vapours and move to and fro to water the e...

Geneva Bible: Job 37:13 He causeth it to come, whether for ( k ) correction, or for his land, or for mercy. ( k ) Rain, cold, heat, tempests and such like are sent from God,...

Geneva Bible: Job 37:15 Dost thou know when God disposed them, and caused the ( l ) light of his cloud to shine? ( l ) That is, the lightning to break forth in the clouds?

Geneva Bible: Job 37:16 Dost thou know the ( m ) balancings of the clouds, the wondrous works of him which is perfect in knowledge? ( m ) Which is sometimes changed into rai...

Geneva Bible: Job 37:17 How thy garments [are] ( n ) warm, when he quieteth the earth by the south [wind]? ( n ) Why your clothes should keep you warm when the south wind bl...

Geneva Bible: Job 37:18 Hast thou with him spread out the sky, [which is] strong, [and] as a molten looking ( o ) glass? ( o ) For the clearness.

Geneva Bible: Job 37:19 Teach us what we shall say unto him; [for] we cannot order [our speech] by reason of ( p ) darkness. ( p ) That is, our ignorance: signifying that Jo...

Geneva Bible: Job 37:20 Shall it be ( q ) told him that I speak? if a man speak, surely he shall be swallowed up. ( q ) Has God need that any should tell him when man murmur...

Geneva Bible: Job 37:21 And now [men] see not the bright light ( s ) which [is] in the clouds: but the wind passeth, and cleanseth them. ( s ) The cloud stops the shining of...

Geneva Bible: Job 37:22 ( t ) Fair weather cometh out of the north: with God [is] terrible majesty. ( t ) In Hebrew, gold, meaning fair weather and clear as gold.

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Job 37:1-24 - --1 God is to be feared because of his great works.15 His wisdom is unsearchable in them.

MHCC: Job 37:1-13 - --The changes of the weather are the subject of a great deal of our thoughts and common talk; but how seldom do we think and speak of these things, as E...

MHCC: Job 37:14-20 - --Due thoughts of the works of God will help to reconcile us to all his providences. As God has a powerful, freezing north wind, so he has a thawing, co...

MHCC: Job 37:21-24 - --Elihu concludes his discourse with some great sayings concerning the glory of God. Light always is, but is not always to be seen. When clouds come bet...

Matthew Henry: Job 37:1-5 - -- Thunder and lightning, which usually go together, are sensible indications of the glory and majesty, the power and terror, of Almighty God, one to t...

Matthew Henry: Job 37:6-13 - -- The changes and extremities of the weather, wet or dry, hot or cold, are the subject of a great deal of our common talk and observation; but how sel...

Matthew Henry: Job 37:14-20 - -- Elihu here addresses himself closely to Job, desiring him to apply what he had hitherto said to himself. He begs that he would hearken to this disco...

Matthew Henry: Job 37:21-24 - -- Elihu here concludes his discourse with some short but great sayings concerning the glory of God, as that which he was himself impressed, and desire...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 37:1-5 - -- 1 Yea, at this my heart trembleth And tottereth from its place. 2 Hear, O hear the roar of His voice, And the murmur that goeth out of His mouth....

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 37:6-10 - -- 6 For He saith to the snow: Fall towards the earth, And to the rain-shower And the showers of His mighty rain. 7 He putteth a seal on the hand of...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 37:11-13 - -- 11 Also He loadeth the clouds with water, He spreadeth far and wide the cloud of His light, 12 And these turn themselves round about, Directed by...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 37:14-16 - -- 14 Hearken unto this, O Job; Stand still and consider the wonderful works of God! 15 Dost thou know when God designeth To cause the light of His ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 37:17-20 - -- 17 Thou whose garments became hot, When the land is sultry from the south: 18 Dost thou with Him spread out the sky, The strong, as it were molte...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 37:21-24 - -- 21 Although one seeth now the sunlight That is bright in the ethereal heights: A wind passeth by and cleareth them up. 22 Gold is brought from th...

Constable: Job 32:1--37:24 - --F. Elihu's Speeches chs. 32-37 Many critical scholars believe that a later editor inserted chapters 32-3...

Constable: Job 36:1--37:24 - --5. Elihu's fourth speech chs. 36-37 Of all Elihu's discourses this one is the most impressive be...

Constable: Job 36:27--38:1 - --God's dealings with nature 36:27-37:24 Elihu focused next on God's activities in nature....

expand all
Commentary -- Other

Critics Ask: Job 37:18 JOB 37:18 —Does the Bible err in speaking of a solid dome above the earth? PROBLEM: Job speaks of God who “spread out the skies” like “a ...

expand all
Introduction / Outline

JFB: Job (Book Introduction) JOB A REAL PERSON.--It has been supposed by some that the book of Job is an allegory, not a real narrative, on account of the artificial character of ...

JFB: Job (Outline) THE HOLINESS OF JOB, HIS WEALTH, &c. (Job 1:1-5) SATAN, APPEARING BEFORE GOD, FALSELY ACCUSES JOB. (Job 1:6-12) SATAN FURTHER TEMPTS JOB. (Job 2:1-8)...

TSK: Job (Book Introduction) A large aquatic animal, perhaps the extinct dinosaur, plesiosaurus, the exact meaning is unknown. Some think this to be a crocodile but from the desc...

TSK: Job 37 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Job 37:1, God is to be feared because of his great works; Job 37:15, His wisdom is unsearchable in them.

Poole: Job 37 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 37 God’ s great works, lightning, thunder, snow, rain, winds, frosts, clouds, and his providences towards nations, whether for correct...

MHCC: Job (Book Introduction) This book is so called from Job, whose prosperity, afflictions, and restoration, are here recorded. He lived soon after Abraham, or perhaps before tha...

MHCC: Job 37 (Chapter Introduction) (Job 37:1-13) Elihu observes the power of God. (Job 37:14-20) Job required to explain the works of nature. (Job 37:21-24) God is great, and is to be...

Matthew Henry: Job (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Job This book of Job stands by itself, is not connected with any other, and is therefore to...

Matthew Henry: Job 37 (Chapter Introduction) Elihu here goes on to extol the wonderful power of God in the meteors and all the changes of the weather: if, in those changes, we submit to the wi...

Constable: Job (Book Introduction) Introduction Title This book, like many others in the Old Testament, got its name from...

Constable: Job (Outline) Outline I. Prologue chs. 1-2 A. Job's character 1:1-5 B. Job's calamitie...

Constable: Job Job Bibliography Andersen, Francis I. Job. Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries series. Leicester, Eng. and Downe...

Haydock: Job (Book Introduction) THE BOOK OF JOB. INTRODUCTION. This Book takes its name from the holy man, of whom it treats; who, according to the more probable opinion, was ...

Gill: Job (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JOB This book, in the Hebrew copies, generally goes by this name, from Job, who is however the subject, if not the writer of it. In...

Gill: Job 37 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JOB 37 Elihu in this chapter proceeds to show the greatness of God as it appears in other of his works of nature, which greatly aff...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


TIP #20: 'To dig deeper, please read related articles at BIBLE.org (via Articles Tab).' [ALL]
created in 0.58 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA