collapse all  

Text -- Job 39:1-4 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
39:1 “Are you acquainted with the way the mountain goats give birth? Do you watch as the wild deer give birth to their young? 39:2 Do you count the months they must fulfill, and do you know the time they give birth? 39:3 They crouch, they bear their young, they bring forth the offspring they have carried. 39:4 Their young grow strong, and grow up in the open; they go off, and do not return to them.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: ZOOLOGY | Roe | Readings, Select | LIKE; LIKEN; LIKENESS; LIKING | Job | Ignorance | HIND | God | GOAT | EAGLE | DEER | Condescension of God | CHAMOIS | BRING | Animals | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , 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

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

Wesley: Job 39:4 - -- Notwithstanding their great weakness caused by their hard entrance into the world.

Notwithstanding their great weakness caused by their hard entrance into the world.

Wesley: Job 39:4 - -- As with corn, that is, as if they were fed with corn.

As with corn, that is, as if they were fed with corn.

Wesley: Job 39:4 - -- Finding sufficient provisions abroad by the care of God's providence.

Finding sufficient provisions abroad by the care of God's providence.

JFB: Job 39:1 - -- (Job 39:1-30) Even wild beasts, cut off from all care of man, are cared for by God at their seasons of greatest need. Their instinct comes direct fro...

(Job 39:1-30)

Even wild beasts, cut off from all care of man, are cared for by God at their seasons of greatest need. Their instinct comes direct from God and guides them to help themselves in parturition; the very time when the herdsman is most anxious for his herds.

JFB: Job 39:1 - -- Ibex (Psa 104:18; 1Sa 24:2).

Ibex (Psa 104:18; 1Sa 24:2).

JFB: Job 39:1 - -- Fawns; most timid and defenseless animals, yet cared for by God.

Fawns; most timid and defenseless animals, yet cared for by God.

JFB: Job 39:2 - -- They bring forth with ease and do not need to reckon the months of pregnancy, as the shepherd does in the case of his flocks.

They bring forth with ease and do not need to reckon the months of pregnancy, as the shepherd does in the case of his flocks.

JFB: Job 39:3 - -- In parturition; bend on their knees (1Sa 4:19).

In parturition; bend on their knees (1Sa 4:19).

JFB: Job 39:3 - -- Literally, "cause their young to cleave the womb and break forth."

Literally, "cause their young to cleave the womb and break forth."

JFB: Job 39:3 - -- Their young ones, the cause of their momentary pains.

Their young ones, the cause of their momentary pains.

JFB: Job 39:4 - -- In good condition, grow up strong.

In good condition, grow up strong.

JFB: Job 39:4 - -- Rather, "in the field," without man's care.

Rather, "in the field," without man's care.

JFB: Job 39:4 - -- Being able to provide for themselves.

Being able to provide for themselves.

Clarke: Job 39:1 - -- Knowest thou the time - To know time, etc., only, was easy, and has nothing extraordinary in it; but the meaning of these questions is, to know the ...

Knowest thou the time - To know time, etc., only, was easy, and has nothing extraordinary in it; but the meaning of these questions is, to know the circumstances, which have something peculiarly expressive of God’ s providence, and make the questions proper in this place. Pliny observes, that the hind with young is by instinct directed to a certain herb, named seselis, which facilitates the birth. Thunder, also, which looks like the more immediate hand of Providence, has the same effect. Psa 29:9 : "The Voice of the Lord maketh the Hinds to Calve."See Dr. Young. What is called the wild goat, יעל yael , from עלה alah , to ascend, go or mount up, is generally understood to be the ibex or mountain goat, called yael, from the wonderful manner in which it mounts to the tops of the highest rocks. It is certain, says Johnston, there is no crag of the mountains so high, prominent or steep, but this animal will mount it in a number of leaps, provided only it be rough, and have protuberances large enough to receive its hoofs in leaping. This animal is indigenous to Arabia, is of amazing strength and agility, and considerably larger than the common goat. Its horns are very long, and often bend back over the whole body of the animal; and it is said to throw itself from the tops of rocks or towers, and light upon its horns, without receiving any damage. It goes five months with young

Clarke: Job 39:1 - -- When the hinds do calve? - The hind is the female of the stag, or cervus elaphus , and goes eight months with young. They live to thirty-five or for...

When the hinds do calve? - The hind is the female of the stag, or cervus elaphus , and goes eight months with young. They live to thirty-five or forty years. Incredible longevity has been attributed to some stags. One was taken by Charles VI., in the forest of Senlis, about whose neck was a collar with this inscription, Caesar hoc mihi donavit , which led some to believe that this animal had lived from the days of some one of the twelve Caesars, emperors of Rome. I have seen the following form of this inscription: -

Tempore quo Caesar Roma dominatus in alt

Aureolo jussit collum signare monili

Nehemiah depascentem quisquis me gramina laedat

Caesaris heu! caussa periturae parcere vitae

Which has been long public in the old English ballad strain, thus: -

"When Julius Caesar reigned king

About my neck he put this ring

That whosoever should me tak

Would save my life for Caesar’ s sake.

Aristotle mentions the longevity of the stag, but thinks it fabulous.

Clarke: Job 39:3 - -- They bow themselves - In order to bring forth their young ones

They bow themselves - In order to bring forth their young ones

Clarke: Job 39:3 - -- They cast out their sorrows - חבליהם chebleyhem ; the placenta, afterbirth, or umbilical cord. So this word has been understood.

They cast out their sorrows - חבליהם chebleyhem ; the placenta, afterbirth, or umbilical cord. So this word has been understood.

Clarke: Job 39:4 - -- In good liking - After the fawns have sucked for some time, the dam leads them to the pastures, where they feed on different kinds of herbage; but n...

In good liking - After the fawns have sucked for some time, the dam leads them to the pastures, where they feed on different kinds of herbage; but not on corn, for they are not born before harvest-time in Arabia and Palestine, and the stag does not feed on corn, but on grass, moss, and the shoots of the fir, beech, and other trees: therefore the word בר bar , here translated corn, should be translated the open field or country. See Parkhurst. Their nurslings bound away - Mr. Good. In a short time they become independent of the mother, leave her, and return no more. The spirit of the questions in these verses appears to be the following: - Understandest thou the cause of breeding of the mountain goats, etc.? Art thou acquainted with the course and progress of the parturition, and the manner in which the bones grow, and acquire solidity in the womb? See Mr. Good’ s observations. Houbigant’ s version appears very correct: (Knowest thou) "how their young ones grow up, increase in the fields, and once departing, return to them no more?"

TSK: Job 39:1 - -- the wild : 1Sa 24:2; Psa 104:18 when : Psa 29:9; Jer 14:5

the wild : 1Sa 24:2; Psa 104:18

when : Psa 29:9; Jer 14:5

TSK: Job 39:2 - -- Jer 2:24

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

Barnes: Job 39:1 - -- Knowest thou, the time when the wild goats of the rock bring forth? - That is, the particular season when the mountain goats bring forth their ...

Knowest thou, the time when the wild goats of the rock bring forth? - That is, the particular season when the mountain goats bring forth their young. Of domestic animals - the sheep, the tame goat, etc., the habits would be fuIly understood. But the question here relates to the animals that roamed at large on inaccessible cliffs; that were buried in deep forests; that were far from the dwellings and observation of people; and the meaning is, that there were many facts in regard to such points of Natural History which Job could not explain. God knew all their instincts and habits, and on the inaccessible cliffs, in the deep dell, in the dark forest, he was with them, and they were the objects of his care. He not only regarded the condition of the domestic animals that had been brought into the service of man, and where man perhaps might be disposed to claim that they owed much of their comfort to his care, but he regarded also the wild, wandering beast of the mountain, where no such pretence could be advanced.

The providence of God is over them; and in the periods of their lives when they seem most to need attention, when every shepherd and herdsmen is most solicitous about his flocks and herds, then God is present, and his care is seen in their preservation. The particular point in the inquiry here is, not in regard to the time when these animals produced their young or the period of their gestation, which might probably be known, but in regard to the attention and care which was needful for them when they were so far removed from the observance of man, and had no human aid. The "wild goat of the rock"here referred to, is, doubtless, the Ibex, or mountain goat, that has its dwellings among the rocks, or in stony places. The Hebrew term is יעל yâ‛êl , from יעל ya‛al , "to ascend, to go up."They had their residence in the lofty rocks of mountains; Psa 104:18. "The high hills are a refuge for the wild goats."

Hebrew "For the goats of the rocks"- סלעים יעלים yâ‛êliym sela‛iym . So in 1Sa 24:2 (3), "Saul went to seek David and his men upon the rocks of the wild goats;"that is, where were the wild goats - היעלים hayâ‛êliym . For a description of the wild goat, see Bochart, Hieroz. P. i. Lib. iii. c. xxiii. The animal here referred to is, doubtless, the same which Burckhardt saw on the summit of Mount Catharine, adjacent to Mount Sinai, and which he thus describes in his Travels in Syria, p. 571: "As we approached the summit of the mountain (Catharine, adjacent to Mount Sinai), we saw at a distance a small flock of mountain goats feeding among the rocks. One of our Arabs left us, and by a widely circuitous route endeavored to get to the leeward of them, and near enough to fire at them. He enjoined us to remain in sight of them, and to sit down in order not to alarm them. He had nearly reached a favorable spot behind a rock, when the goats suddenly took to flight. They could not have seen the Arab, but the wind changed, and thus they smelt him. The chase of the beden, as the wild goat is called, resembles that of the chamois of the Alps, and requires as much enterprise and patience. The Arabs make long circuits to surprise them, and endeavor to come upon them early in the morning, when they feed.

The goats have a leader who keeps watch, and on any suspicious smell, sound, or object, makes a noise, which is a signal to the flock to make their escape. They have much decreased of late, if we may believe the Arabs; who say that fifty years ago, if a stranger came to a tent, and the owner of it had no sheep to kill, he took his gun and went in search of a beden. They are, however, even now more common here than in the Alps, or in the mountains to the east of the Red Sea. I had three or four of them brought to me at the convent, which I bought at three-fourths of a dollar each. The flesh is excellent, and has nearly the same flavor as that of the deer. The Bedouins make water bags of their skins, and rings of their horns, which they wear on their thumbs. When the beden is met with in the plains, the dogs of the hunters easily catch him; but they cannot come up with him among the rocks, where he can make leaps of 20 feet."

Or Canst thou mark when the hinds do calve? - The reference here is to the special care and protection of God manifested for them. The meaning is, that this animal seems to be always timid and apprehensive of danger, and that there is special care bestowed upon an animal so defenseless in enabling it to rear its young. The word hinds denotes the deer, the fawn, the most timid and defenseless, perhaps, of all animals.

Barnes: Job 39:2 - -- Canst thou number the months ... - That is, as they wander in the wilderness, as they live in inaccessible crags and cliffs of the rocks, it is...

Canst thou number the months ... - That is, as they wander in the wilderness, as they live in inaccessible crags and cliffs of the rocks, it is impossible for man to be acquainted with their habits as he can with those of the domestic animals.

Barnes: Job 39:3 - -- They bow themselves - literally, they curve or bend themselves; that is, they draw their limbs together. They cast out their sorrows - Th...

They bow themselves - literally, they curve or bend themselves; that is, they draw their limbs together.

They cast out their sorrows - That is, they cast forth the offspring of their pains, or the young which cause their pains. The idea seems to be, that they do this without any of the care and attention which shepherds are obliged to show to their flocks at such seasons. They do it when God only guards them; when they are in the wilderness or on the rocks far away from the abodes of man. The leading thought in all this seems to be, that the tender care of God was over his creatures, in the most perilous and delicate state, and that all this was exercised where man could have no access to them, and could not even observe them.

Barnes: Job 39:4 - -- Their young ones are in good liking - Hebrew "they are fat;"and hence, it means that they are strong and robust. They grow up with corn - ...

Their young ones are in good liking - Hebrew "they are fat;"and hence, it means that they are strong and robust.

They grow up with corn - Herder, Gesenius, Noyes, Umbreit, and Rosenmuller render this, "in the wilderness,"or "field."The proper and usual meaning of the word used here ( בר bâr ) is corn (grain); but in Chaldee it has the sense of open fields, or country. The same idea is found in the Arabic, and this sense seems to be required by the connection. The idea is not that they are nurtured with grain, which would require the care of man, but that they are nurtured under the direct eye of God far away from human dwellings, and even when they go away from their dam and return no more to the place of their birth. This is one of the instances, therefore, in which the connection seems to require us to adopt a signification that does not elsewhere occur in the Hebrew, but which is found in the cognate languages.

They go forth, and return not unto them - God guards and preserves them, even when they wander away from their dam, and are left helpless. Many of the young of animals require long attention from man, many are kept for a considerable period by the side of the mother, but the idea here seems to be, that the young of the wild goat and of the fawn are thrown early on the providence of God, and are protected by him alone. The particular care of Providence over these animals seems to be specified because there are no others that are exposed to so many dangers in their early life. "Every creature then is a formidable enemy. The eagle, the falcon, the osprey, the wolf, the dog, and all the rapacious animals of the cat kind, are in continual employment to find out their retreat. But what is more unnatural still, the stag himself is a professed enemy, and she, the hind, is obliged to use all her arts to conceal her young from him, as from the most dangerous of her pursuers.""Goldsmith’ s Nat. His."

Poole: Job 39:1 - -- Knowest thou the time that thou mayst then go to them, and afford them thy help in their hard work? The wild goats of the rock which dwell in high...

Knowest thou the time that thou mayst then go to them, and afford them thy help in their hard work?

The wild goats of the rock which dwell in high and steep rocks, where no man can come. See 1Sa 24:2 Psa 104:18 .

Bring forth which they do with great difficulty, as is implied, Psa 29:9 , and noted by philosophers, wherein they have no assistance from men, but only from God.

When the hinds do calve when God by his secret instinct directs them to a certain herb called seseli , which, as naturalists report, doth hasten and help forward their birth.

Poole: Job 39:2 - -- Dost thou exactly know when they did conceive, and when they will bring forth? which is more uncertain in these than in other creatures, because the...

Dost thou exactly know when they did conceive, and when they will bring forth? which is more uncertain in these than in other creatures, because there fall out many accidents which cause them to bring forth before their time, as thunder, Psa 29:9 , and other like causes of sudden fear, which may be many and various in those desert places where they live.

Poole: Job 39:3 - -- They bow themselves being taught by a Divine instinct to dispose themselves in such a posture as may be fittest for their safe and easy bringing fort...

They bow themselves being taught by a Divine instinct to dispose themselves in such a posture as may be fittest for their safe and easy bringing forth.

They bring forth their young ones to wit, with great pain, being almost torn or rent asunder with the birth, as the word signifies; or, without any of that help which tame beasts oft have.

Their sorrows i.e. their young ones, and their sorrows together. Or, though (which particle is oft understood) they remit or put away their sorrows , i.e. though instead of cherishing and furthering their sorrows, which for their own ease and safety they should do, they foolishly hinder them, and so increase their own danger; yet by God’ s good providence to them they are enabled to bring forth, as was now said.

Poole: Job 39:4 - -- Are in good liking or, grow strong , or fat ; notwithstanding their great weakness caused by their hard entrance into the world. With corn which ...

Are in good liking or, grow strong , or fat ; notwithstanding their great weakness caused by their hard entrance into the world.

With corn which they find and feed upon in the fields. Or, as with corn , i.e. as if they were fed with corn; the particle as being oft deficient, and to be supplied. Or, in the field , as this word in the Chaldee or Syriac dialect signifies.

Return not unto them finding sufficient provisions abroad by the care and conduct of God’ s providence.

Haydock: Job 39:1 - -- Goats ( Ibex. Hebrew Yahale.; Haydock) frequent rocks, and places which are almost inaccessible to man. (Calmet)

Goats ( Ibex. Hebrew Yahale.; Haydock) frequent rocks, and places which are almost inaccessible to man. (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 39:3 - -- Roarings. They pretend that these animals bring forth with great difficulty, Psalm xxviii. 9. (Vatable, &c.) --- Aristotle (v. 2., and vi. 29.) as...

Roarings. They pretend that these animals bring forth with great difficulty, Psalm xxviii. 9. (Vatable, &c.) ---

Aristotle (v. 2., and vi. 29.) asserts, that they receive the male bending down, as Hebrew may be here explained. "They bend, they divide their young," as they have often two; "and they leave their strings" at the navel, &c. (Calmet)

Haydock: Job 39:4 - -- Feed. Being weaned very soon. (Pliny, [Natural History?] viii. 32.)

Feed. Being weaned very soon. (Pliny, [Natural History?] viii. 32.)

Gill: Job 39:1 - -- Knowest thou the time when the wild goats of the rock bring forth?.... Which creatures are so called, because they dwell among the rocks d and run upo...

Knowest thou the time when the wild goats of the rock bring forth?.... Which creatures are so called, because they dwell among the rocks d and run upon them; and though their heads are loaded with a vast burden of horns upon them, yet can so poise themselves, as with the greatest swiftness, to leap from mountain to mountain, as Pliny says e: and if they bring forth their young in the rocks, as Olympiodorus asserts, and which is not improbable, it is not to be wondered, that the time of their bringing forth should not be known by men, to whom the rocks they run upon are inaccessible;

or canst thou mark the time when the hinds do calve? that is, precisely and exactly, and so as to direct, order, and manage, and bring it about, as the Lord does: and it is wonderful that they should calve, and not cast their young before their time, when they are continually in flight and fright, through men or wild beasts, and are almost always running and leaping about; and often scared with thunder, which hastens birth, Psa 29:9; otherwise the time of their bringing forth in general is known by men, as will be observed in Job 39:2.

Gill: Job 39:2 - -- Canst thou number the months that they fulfil?.... Which some understand both of wild goats and hinds. Common goats fulfil five months, they conceive...

Canst thou number the months that they fulfil?.... Which some understand both of wild goats and hinds. Common goats fulfil five months, they conceive in November, and bring forth in March, as Pliny f observes; but how many the wild goats of the rock fulfil is not said by him or any other I know of: the same writer says g of hinds, that they go eight months;

or knowest thou the time when they bring forth? naturalists h tell us, that the hinds conceive after the rise of the star Arcturus, which rises eleven days before the autumnal equinox; so that they conceive in September; and as they go eight months, they bring forth in April; but then the exact time to a day and hour is not known. Besides, who has fixed the time for their bringing forth, and carries them in it through so many dangers and difficulties? None but the Lord himself. Now if such common things in nature were not known perfectly by Job, how should he be able to search into and find out the causes and reasons of God's providential dealings with men, or what is in the womb of Providence?

Gill: Job 39:3 - -- They bow themselves,.... That they may bring forth their young with greater ease and more safety: for it seems the hinds bring forth their young with ...

They bow themselves,.... That they may bring forth their young with greater ease and more safety: for it seems the hinds bring forth their young with great difficulty; and there are provisions in nature made to lessen it; as thunder, before observed, which causes them to bring forth the sooner; and there is an herb called "seselis", which it is said i they feed upon before birth, to make it the easier; as well as they use that, and another called "aros", after the birth, to ease them of their later pains;

they bring forth their young ones; renting and cleaving asunder the membrane, as the word signifies, in which their young is wrapped;

they cast out their sorrows; either their young, which they bring forth in pains and which then cease; or the secundines, or afterbirth, in which the young is wrapped, and which the philosopher says k they eat, and is supposed to be medical to them. None but a woman seems to bring forth with more pain than this creature; and a wife is compared to it, Pro 5:19.

Gill: Job 39:4 - -- Their young ones are in good liking,.... Plump, fat, and sleek, as fawns are: they grow up with corn; by which they grow, or without in the field, ...

Their young ones are in good liking,.... Plump, fat, and sleek, as fawns are:

they grow up with corn; by which they grow, or without in the field, as the word also signifies; and their growth and increase is very quick, as Aristotle observes l;

they go forth, and return not unto them: they go forth into the fields, and shift and provide for themselves, and trouble their dams no more; and return not to them, nor are they known by them.

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 39:1 Or “ibex.”

NET Notes: Job 39:2 Here the infinitive is again a substantive: “the time of their giving birth.”

NET Notes: Job 39:3 Heb “they cast forth their labor pains.” This word usually means “birth pangs” but here can mean what caused the pains (metony...

NET Notes: Job 39:4 The idea is that of the open countryside. The Aramaism is found only here.

Geneva Bible: Job 39:2 Canst thou number the months [that] they ( d ) fulfil? or knowest thou the time when they bring forth? ( d ) That is, how long they go with young?

Geneva Bible: Job 39:3 They bow themselves, they ( e ) bring forth their young ones, they cast out their sorrows. ( e ) They bring forth with great difficulty.

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Job 39:1-30 - --1 Of the wild goats and hinds.5 Of the wild ass.9 The unicorn.13 The peacock, stork, and ostrich.19 The horse.26 The hawk.27 The eagle.

MHCC: Job 39:1-30 - --In these questions the Lord continued to humble Job. In this chapter several animals are spoken of, whose nature or situation particularly show the po...

Matthew Henry: Job 39:1-12 - -- God here shows Job what little acquaintance he had with the untamed creatures that run wild in the deserts and live at large, but are the care of th...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 39:1-4 - -- 1 Dost thou know the bearing time of the wild goats of the rock? Observest thou the circles of the hinds? 2 Dost thou number the months which they...

Constable: Job 38:1--42:7 - --G. The Cycle of Speeches between Job and God chs. 38:1-42:6 Finally God spoke to Job and gave revelation...

Constable: Job 38:1--40:3 - --1. God's first speech 38:1-40:2 God's first speech "transcends all other descriptions of the won...

Constable: Job 38:4--40:1 - --God's questions of Job 38:4-39:30 As Job's friends had done, God began to break Job down...

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 39 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Job 39:1, Of the wild goats and hinds; Job 39:5, Of the wild ass; Job 39:9, The unicorn; Job 39:13, The peacock, stork, and ostrich; Job ...

Poole: Job 39 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 39 Of the wild goats and hinds, Job 39:1-4 ; the wild ass, Job 39:5-8 ; the unicorn, Job 39:9-12 ; the peacock, stork, and ostrich, Job 39:...

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 39 (Chapter Introduction) God inquires of Job concerning several animals.

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 39 (Chapter Introduction) God proceeds here to show Job what little reason he had to charge him with unkindness who was so compassionate to the inferior creatures and took s...

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 39 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JOB 39 This chapter treats of various creatures, beasts and birds, which Job had little knowledge of, had no concern in the making ...

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


TIP #22: To open links on Discovery Box in a new window, use the right click. [ALL]
created in 0.15 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA