collapse all  

Text -- Job 39:20-30 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
39:20 Do you make it leap like a locust? Its proud neighing is terrifying! 39:21 It paws the ground in the valley, exulting mightily, it goes out to meet the weapons. 39:22 It laughs at fear and is not dismayed; it does not shy away from the sword. 39:23 On it the quiver rattles; the lance and javelin flash. 39:24 In excitement and impatience it consumes the ground; it cannot stand still when the trumpet is blown. 39:25 At the sound of the trumpet, it says, ‘Aha!’ And from a distance it catches the scent of battle, the thunderous shouting of commanders, and the battle cries. 39:26 “Is it by your understanding that the hawk soars, and spreads its wings toward the south? 39:27 Is it at your command that the eagle soars, and builds its nest on high? 39:28 It lives on a rock and spends the night there, on a rocky crag and a fortress. 39:29 From there it spots its prey, its eyes gaze intently from a distance. 39:30 And its young ones devour the blood, and where the dead carcasses are, there it is.”
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Valley | Target | QUIVER | NEESING | MOCK; MOCKER; MOCKING | Ignorance | IVORY | HA | Grasshopper | God | GLITTER; GLITTERING | GAMES | FLY | Condescension of God | CRAG | Blade | Animals | Aha! | ARMOR; ARMS | AH; AHA | 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 39:21 - -- Battles used to be pitched in valleys, or low grounds, especially horse battles.

Battles used to be pitched in valleys, or low grounds, especially horse battles.

Wesley: Job 39:23 - -- The quiver is here put for the arrows contained in it, which being shot against the horse and rider, make a rattling noise.

The quiver is here put for the arrows contained in it, which being shot against the horse and rider, make a rattling noise.

Wesley: Job 39:24 - -- He is so full of rage and fury, that he not only champs his bridle, but is ready to tear and devour the very ground on which he goes.

He is so full of rage and fury, that he not only champs his bridle, but is ready to tear and devour the very ground on which he goes.

Wesley: Job 39:24 - -- He is so pleased with the approach of the battle, and the sound of the trumpet calling to it, that he can scarce believe his ears for gladness.

He is so pleased with the approach of the battle, and the sound of the trumpet calling to it, that he can scarce believe his ears for gladness.

Wesley: Job 39:25 - -- An expression of joy and alacrity declared by his proud neighings.

An expression of joy and alacrity declared by his proud neighings.

Wesley: Job 39:25 - -- The loud and joyful clamour begun by the commanders, and followed by the soldiers when they are ready to join battle.

The loud and joyful clamour begun by the commanders, and followed by the soldiers when they are ready to join battle.

Wesley: Job 39:26 - -- So strongly, constantly, unweariedly, and swiftly.

So strongly, constantly, unweariedly, and swiftly.

Wesley: Job 39:26 - -- At the approach of winter, when wild hawks fly into warmer countries, as being impatient of cold. The birds of the air are proofs of the wonderful pro...

At the approach of winter, when wild hawks fly into warmer countries, as being impatient of cold. The birds of the air are proofs of the wonderful providence of God, as well as the beasts of the earth. God instances in two stately ones.

Wesley: Job 39:27 - -- Flies directly upward 'till she be out of thy sight; which no other bird can do.

Flies directly upward 'till she be out of thy sight; which no other bird can do.

Wesley: Job 39:29 - -- Her sight is exceeding sharp and strong, so that she is able to look upon the sun with open eyes, and to behold the smallest prey upon the earth or se...

Her sight is exceeding sharp and strong, so that she is able to look upon the sun with open eyes, and to behold the smallest prey upon the earth or sea, when she is mounted out of our sight.

JFB: Job 39:20 - -- Rather, "canst thou (as I do) make him spring as the locust?" So in Joe 2:4, the comparison is between locusts and war-horses. The heads of the two ar...

Rather, "canst thou (as I do) make him spring as the locust?" So in Joe 2:4, the comparison is between locusts and war-horses. The heads of the two are so similar that the Italians call the locusts cavaletta, "little horse."

JFB: Job 39:20 - -- Snorting furiously.

Snorting furiously.

JFB: Job 39:21 - -- Where the battle is joined.

Where the battle is joined.

JFB: Job 39:21 - -- Goeth forth (Num 1:3; Num 21:23).

Goeth forth (Num 1:3; Num 21:23).

JFB: Job 39:23 - -- For the arrows, which they contain, and which are directed "against him."

For the arrows, which they contain, and which are directed "against him."

JFB: Job 39:23 - -- Literally, "glittering of the spear," like "lightning of the spear" (Hab 3:11).

Literally, "glittering of the spear," like "lightning of the spear" (Hab 3:11).

JFB: Job 39:23 - -- Rather, "lance."

Rather, "lance."

JFB: Job 39:24 - -- Fretting with impatience, he draws the ground towards him with his hoof, as if he would swallow it. The parallelism shows this to be the sense; not as...

Fretting with impatience, he draws the ground towards him with his hoof, as if he would swallow it. The parallelism shows this to be the sense; not as MAURER, "scours over it."

JFB: Job 39:24 - -- For joy. Rather, "he will not stand still, when the note of the trumpet (soundeth)."

For joy. Rather, "he will not stand still, when the note of the trumpet (soundeth)."

JFB: Job 39:25 - -- Poetically applied to his mettlesome neighing, whereby he shows his love of the battle.

Poetically applied to his mettlesome neighing, whereby he shows his love of the battle.

JFB: Job 39:25 - -- Snuffeth; discerneth (Isa 11:3, Margin).

Snuffeth; discerneth (Isa 11:3, Margin).

JFB: Job 39:25 - -- Thundering voice.

Thundering voice.

JFB: Job 39:26 - -- The instinct by which some birds migrate to warmer climes before winter. Rapid flying peculiarly characterizes the whole hawk genus.

The instinct by which some birds migrate to warmer climes before winter. Rapid flying peculiarly characterizes the whole hawk genus.

JFB: Job 39:27 - -- It flies highest of all birds: thence called "the bird of heaven."

It flies highest of all birds: thence called "the bird of heaven."

JFB: Job 39:28 - -- Securely (Psa 91:1); it occupies the same abode mostly for life.

Securely (Psa 91:1); it occupies the same abode mostly for life.

JFB: Job 39:28 - -- Literally, "tooth" (1Sa 14:5, Margin).

Literally, "tooth" (1Sa 14:5, Margin).

JFB: Job 39:28 - -- Citadel, fastness.

Citadel, fastness.

JFB: Job 39:29 - -- Is on the lookout for.

Is on the lookout for.

JFB: Job 39:29 - -- The eagle descries its prey at an astonishing distance, by sight, rather than smell.

The eagle descries its prey at an astonishing distance, by sight, rather than smell.

JFB: Job 39:30 - -- Quoted partly by Jesus Christ (Mat 24:28). The food of young eagles is the blood of victims brought by the parent, when they are still too feeble to d...

Quoted partly by Jesus Christ (Mat 24:28). The food of young eagles is the blood of victims brought by the parent, when they are still too feeble to devour flesh.

JFB: Job 39:30 - -- As the vulture chiefly feeds on carcasses, it is included probably in the eagle genus. He had paused for a reply, but Job was silent.

As the vulture chiefly feeds on carcasses, it is included probably in the eagle genus.

He had paused for a reply, but Job was silent.

Clarke: Job 39:21 - -- He paweth in the valley - יחפרו yachperu , "they dig in the valley,"i.e., in his violent galloping, in every pitch of his body, he scoops up s...

He paweth in the valley - יחפרו yachperu , "they dig in the valley,"i.e., in his violent galloping, in every pitch of his body, he scoops up sods out of the earth. Virgil has seized this idea also, in his cavat tellurem; "he scoops out the ground."See before.

Clarke: Job 39:25 - -- He saith among the trumpets, Ha, ha - The original is peculiarly emphatical: האח Heach ! a strong, partly nasal, partly guttural sound, exactly...

He saith among the trumpets, Ha, ha - The original is peculiarly emphatical: האח Heach ! a strong, partly nasal, partly guttural sound, exactly resembling the first note which the horse emits in neighing. The strong, guttural sounds in this hemistich are exceedingly expressive: האח ומרחוק יריח מלחמה Heach ! umerachok yariach milchamah ; "Heach, for from afar he scenteth the battle.

The reader will perceive that Mr. Good has given a very different meaning to Job 39:20 from that in the present text, Canst thou make him afraid as a grasshopper? by translating the Hebrew thus: -

"Hast thou given him to launch forth as an arrow?

The word ארבה arbeh , which we translate locust or grasshopper, and which he derives from רבה rabah , the א aleph being merely formative, he says, "may as well mean an arrow as it does in Job 16:13, רביו rabbaiv , ‘ His arrows fly around me.’ "The verb רעש raash in the word התועישנו hatharishennu , "Canst thou make him afraid?’ he contends, "signifies to tremble, quiver, rush, launch, dart forth; and, taken in this sense, it seems to unite the two ideas of rapidity and coruscation."This is the principal alteration which this learned man has made in the text

I shall conclude on this subject by giving Coverdale’ s translation: Hast thou geven the horse his strength, or lerned him how to bow down his neck with feare; that he letteth himself be dryven forth like a greshopper, where as the stout neyenge that he maketh is fearfull? He breaketh the grounde with the hoffes of his fete chearfully in his strength, and runneth to mete the harnest men. He layeth aside all feare, his stomach is not abated, neither starteth he aback for eny swerde. Though the qyvers rattle upon him, though the speare and shilde glistre: yet russheth he in fearsley, and beateth upon the grounde. He feareth not the noise of the trompettes, but as soone as he heareth the shawmes blowe, Tush (sayeth he) for he smelleth the batell afarre of, the noyse, the captaynes, and the shoutinge. This is wonderfully nervous, and at the same time accurate.

Clarke: Job 39:26 - -- Doth the hawk fly by thy wisdom - The hawk is called נץ nets , from its swiftness in darting down upon its prey; hence its Latin name, nisus, whi...

Doth the hawk fly by thy wisdom - The hawk is called נץ nets , from its swiftness in darting down upon its prey; hence its Latin name, nisus, which is almost the same as the Hebrew. It may very probably mean the falcon, observes Dr. Shaw. The flight of a strong falcon is wonderfully swift. A falcon belonging to the Duke of Cleves flew out of Westphalia into Prussia in one day; and in the county of Norfolk, a hawk has made a flight at a woodcock of near thirty miles in an hour. Thuanus says, "A hawk flew from London to Paris in one night."It was owing to its swiftness that the Egyptians in their hieroglyphics made it the emblem of the wind

Clarke: Job 39:26 - -- Stretch her wings toward the south? - Most of the falcon tribe pass their spring and summer in cold climates; and wing their way toward warmer regio...

Stretch her wings toward the south? - Most of the falcon tribe pass their spring and summer in cold climates; and wing their way toward warmer regions on the approach of winter. This is what is here meant by stretching her wings toward the south. Is it through thy teaching that this or any other bird of passage knows the precise time for taking flight, and the direction in which she is to go in order to come to a warmer climate? There is much of the wisdom and providence of God to be seen in the migration of birds of passage. This has been remarked before. There is a beautiful passage in Jeremiah, Jer 8:7, on the same subject: "The stork in the heavens knoweth her appointed times; and the turtle, and the crane, and the swallow, observe the time of their coming: but my people know not the judgment of the Lord."

Clarke: Job 39:27 - -- Doth the eagle mount up - The eagle is said to be of so acute a sight, that when she is so high in the air that men cannot see her, she can discern ...

Doth the eagle mount up - The eagle is said to be of so acute a sight, that when she is so high in the air that men cannot see her, she can discern a small fish in the water! See on Job 39:29 (note).

Clarke: Job 39:28 - -- Upon the crag of the rock - שן סלע shen sela , the tooth of the rock, i.e., some projecting part, whither adventurous man himself dares not fo...

Upon the crag of the rock - שן סלע shen sela , the tooth of the rock, i.e., some projecting part, whither adventurous man himself dares not follow her

Clarke: Job 39:28 - -- And the strong place - ומצודה umetsudah . Mr. Good translates this word ravine, and joins it to Job 39:29, thus: "And thence espieth the rav...

And the strong place - ומצודה umetsudah . Mr. Good translates this word ravine, and joins it to Job 39:29, thus: "And thence espieth the ravine: her eyes trace the prey afar off."

Clarke: Job 39:29 - -- Her eyes behold afar off - The eagle was proverbial for her strong and clear sight. So Horace, lib. i., sat. iii., ver. 25: - Cum tua pervideas ocu...

Her eyes behold afar off - The eagle was proverbial for her strong and clear sight. So Horace, lib. i., sat. iii., ver. 25: -

Cum tua pervideas oculis mala lippus inunctis

Cur in amicorum vitas tam cernis acutum

Quam aut aquila, aut serpens Epidaurius

"For wherefore while you carelessly pass b

Your own worst vices with unheeding eye

Why so sharp-sighted in another’ s fame

Strong as an eagle’ s ken, or dragon’ s beam?

Francis

So Aelian, lib. i., cap. 42. And Homer, Iliad xvii., calls the eagle οξυτατον ὑπουρανιων πετεηνων, "The most quick-sighted of all fowls under heaven."

Clarke: Job 39:30 - -- Her young ones also suck up blood - The eagle does not feed her young with carrion, but with prey newly slain, so that they may suck up blood

Her young ones also suck up blood - The eagle does not feed her young with carrion, but with prey newly slain, so that they may suck up blood

Clarke: Job 39:30 - -- Where the slain are, there is she - These words are quoted by our Lord. "Wheresoever the carcass is, there will the eagles be gathered together,"Mat...

Where the slain are, there is she - These words are quoted by our Lord. "Wheresoever the carcass is, there will the eagles be gathered together,"Mat 24:28 (note). It is likely, however, that this was a proverbial mode of expression; and our Lord adapts it to the circumstances of the Jewish people, who were about to fall a prey to the Romans. See the notes there

In the preceding notes I have referred to Dr. Shaw’ s account of the ostrich as the most accurate and authentic yet published. With the following description I am sure every intelligent reader will be pleased

"In commenting therefore upon these texts it may be observed, that when the ostrich is full grown, the neck, particularly of the male, which before was almost naked, is now very beautifully covered with red feathers. The plumage likewise upon the shoulders, the back, and some parts of the wings, from being hitherto of a dark grayish color, becomes now as black as jet, whilst the rest of the feathers retain an exquisite whiteness. They are, as described Job 39:13, the very feathers and plumage of the stork, i.e., they consist of such black and white feathers as the stork, called from thence hdysx chasidah, is known to have. But the belly, the thighs, and the breast, do not partake of this covering, being usually naked, and when touched are of the same warmth as the flesh of quadrupeds

"Under the joint of the great pinion, and sometimes under the less, there is a strong pointed excrescence like a cock’ s spur, with which it is said to prick and stimulate itself, and thereby acquire fresh strength and vigor whenever it is pursued. But nature seems rather to have intended that, in order to prevent the suffocating effects of too great a plethora, a loss of blood should be consequent thereupon, especially as the ostrich appears to be of a hot constitution, with lungs always confined, and consequently liable to be preter-naturally inflamed upon these occasions

"When these birds are surprised by coming suddenly upon them whilst they are feeding in some valley, or behind some rocky or sandy eminence in the deserts, they will not stay to be curiously viewed and examined. Neither are the Arabs ever dexterous enough to overtake them, even when they are mounted upon their jinse, or horses, as they are called, of family. They, when they raise themselves up for flight, (Job 39:18), laugh at the horse and his rider. They afford him an opportunity only of admiring at a distance the extraordinary agility and the stateliness of their motions, the richness of their plumage, and the great propriety there was of ascribing to them (Job 30:13) an expanded quivering wing. Nothing, certainly, can be more beautiful and entertaining than such a sight! The wings, by their repeated though unwearied vibrations, equally serving them for sails and oars; whilst their feet, no less assisting in conveying them out of sight, are in no degree sensible of fatigue

"By the repeated accounts which I often had from my conductors, as well as from Arabs of different places, I have been informed that the ostrich lays from thirty to fifty eggs. Aelian mentions more than eighty, but I never heard of so large a number. The first egg is deposited in the center; the rest are placed as conveniently as possible round about it. In this manner it is said to lay-deposit or thrust (Job 39:14) - her eggs in The Earth, and to warm them in the sand, and forgetteth, as they are not placed, like those of some other birds, upon trees or in the clefts of rocks, etc., that the foot of the traveler may crush them, or that the wild beasts may break them

"Yet notwithstanding the ample provision which is hereby made for a numerous offspring, scarce one quarter of these eggs are ever supposed to be hatched; and of those that are, no small share of the young ones may perish with hunger, from being left too early by their dams to shift for themselves. For in these the most barren and desolate recesses of the Sahara, where the ostrich chooses to make her nest, it would not be enough to lay eggs and hatch them, unless some proper food was near at hand, and already prepared for their nourishment. And accordingly we are not to consider this large collection of eggs as if they were all intended for a brood; they are, the greatest part of them, reserved for food, which the dam breaks and disposes of according to the number and the cravings of her young ones

"But yet, for all this, a very little share of that στοργη, or natural affection, which so strongly exerts itself in most other creatures, is observable in the ostrich. For, upon the least distant noise or trivial occasion, she forsakes her eggs, or her young ones, to which perhaps she never returns, or if she do, it may be too late either to restore life to the one, or to preserve the lives of the other. Agreeably to this account, the Arabs meet sometimes with whole nests of these eggs undisturbed; some of which are sweet and good, others are addle and corrupted, others again have their young ones of different growths, according to the time it may be presumed they have been forsaken by the dam. They oftener meet a few of the little ones, no bigger than well-grown pullets, half starved, straggling, and moaning about, like so many distressed orphans, for their mother. And in this manner the ostrich may be said (Job 39:16) to be hardened against her young ones, as though they were not hers; her labor in hatching and attending them so far being vain without fear, or the least concern of what becomes of them afterwards. This want of affection is also recorded, Lam 4:3 : The daughter of my people, says the prophet, is cruel, like the ostriches in the wilderness

"Neither is this the only reproach that may be due to the ostrich; she is likewise inconsiderate and foolish in her private capacity; particularly in the choice of food, which is frequently highly detrimental and pernicious to her; for she swallows every thing greedily and indiscriminately, whether it be pieces of rags, leather, wood, stone, or iron. When I was at Oram, I saw one off these birds swallow, without any seeming uneasiness or inconvenience, several leaden bullets, as they were thrown upon the floor, scorching hot from the mould, the inner coats of the aesophapus and stomach being probably better stocked with glands and juices than in other animals with shorter necks. They are particularly fond of their own excrement, which they greedily eat up as soon as it is voided. No less fond are they of the dung of hens and other poultry. It seems as if their optic as well as olfactory nerves were less adequate and conducive to their safety and preservation than in other creatures. The Divine providence in this, no less than in other respects, (Job 39:17), having deprived them of wisdom, neither hath it imparted to them understanding

"Those parts of the Sahara which these birds chiefly frequent are destitute of all manner of food and herbage, except it be some few tufts of coarse grass, or else a few other solitary plants of the laureola, apocynum, and some other kinds; each of which is equally destitute of nourishment; and, in the psalmist’ s phrase, (Psa 129:6), even withereth afore it groweth up. Yet these herbs, notwithstanding their dryness, and want of moisture in their temperature, will sometimes have both their leaves and their stalks studded all over with a great variety of land snails, which may afford them some little refreshment. It is very probable, likewise, that they may sometimes seize upon lizards, serpents, together with insects and reptiles of various kinds. Yet still, considering the great voracity and size of this camel-bird, it is wonderful, not only how the little ones, after they are weaned from the provisions I have mentioned, should be brought up and nourished, but even how those of fuller growth and much better qualified to look out for themselves, are able to subsist

"Their organs of digestion, and particularly the gizzards, which, by their strong friction, will wear away iron itself, show them indeed to be granivorous; but yet they have scarce ever an opportunity to exercise them in this way, unless when they chance to stray, which is very seldom, towards those parts of the country which are sown and cultivated, For these, as they are much frequented by the Arabs at the several seasons of grazing, ploughing, and gathering in the harvest; so they are little visited by as indeed they would be an improper abode for this shy, timorous bird; φιλερημος, a lover of the deserts. This last circumstance in the behavior of the ostrich is frequently alluded to in the Holy Scriptures; particularly Isa 13:21; Isa 34:13; Isa 43:20; Jer 50:39; where the word, יענה yaanah , instead of being rendered the ostrich, as it is rightly put in the margin, is called the owl; a word used likewise instead of yaanah or the ostrich, Lev 11:16, and Deu 14:15

"Whilst I was abroad, I had several opportunities of amusing myself with the actions and behavior of the ostrich. It was very diverting to observe with what dexterity and equipoise of body it would play and frisk about on all occasions. In the heat of the day, particularly it would strut along the sunny side of the house with great majesty. It would be perpetually fanning and priding itself with its quivering expanded wings; and seem at every turn to admire and be in love with its shadow. Even at other times whether walking about or resting itself upon the ground, the wings would continue these fanning vibrating motions, as if they were designed to mitigate and assuage that extraordinary heat wherewith their bodies seem to be naturally affected

"Notwithstanding these birds appear tame and tractable to such persons of the family as were more known and familiar to them, yet they were often very rude and fierce to strangers, especially the poorer sort, whom they would not only endeavor to push down by running furiously upon them; but would not cease to peck at them violently with their bills, and to strike them with their feet; whereby they were frequently very mischievous. For the inward claw, or hoof rather as we may call it, of this avis bisulca, being exceedingly strong pointed and angular, I once saw an unfortunate person who had his belly ripped open by one of these strokes. Whilst they are engaged in these combats and assaults, they sometimes make a fierce, angry, and hissing noise with their throats inflated, and their mouths open; at other times, when less resistance is made they have a chuckling or cackling voice, as in the poultry kind; and thereby seem to rejoice and laugh as it were at the timorousness of their adversary. But during the lonesome part of the night, as if their organs of voice had then attained a quite different tone, they often made a very doleful and hideous noise; which would be sometimes like the roaring of a lion; at other times it would bear a near resemblance to the hoarser voices of other quadrupeds, particularly of the bull and the ox. I have often heard them groan, as if they were in the greatest agonies; an action beautifully alluded to by the Prophet Micah, Mic 1:8, where it is said, I will make a mourning like the yaanah or ostrich. Yaanah, therefore, and רננים renanim , the names by which the ostrich is known in the Holy Scriptures, may very properly be deduced from ענה anah , and רנן ranan , words which the lexicographi explain by exclamare or clamare fortiter; for the noise made by the ostrich being loud and sonorous, exclamare or clamare fortiter may, with propriety enough, be attributed to it, especially as those words do not seem to denote any certain or determined mode of voice or sound peculiar to any one particular species of animals, but such as may be applicable to them all, to birds as well as to quadrupeds and other creatures.

Shaw’ s Travels, p. 541, edit. 4th. 1757

The subjects in this chapter have been so various and important, that I have been obliged to extend the notes and observations to an unusual length; and yet much is left unnoticed which I wished to have inserted. I have made the best selection I could, and must request those readers who wish for more information to consult zoological writers.

TSK: Job 39:20 - -- the glory : Job 41:20, Job 41:21; Jer 8:16 terrible : Heb. terrors

the glory : Job 41:20, Job 41:21; Jer 8:16

terrible : Heb. terrors

TSK: Job 39:21 - -- He paweth : or, His feet dig, Jdg 5:22 and : 1Sa 17:4-10, 1Sa 17:42; Psa 19:5; Jer 9:23 he goeth : Pro 21:31; Jer 8:6 armed men : Heb. armour

He paweth : or, His feet dig, Jdg 5:22

and : 1Sa 17:4-10, 1Sa 17:42; Psa 19:5; Jer 9:23

he goeth : Pro 21:31; Jer 8:6

armed men : Heb. armour

TSK: Job 39:22 - -- Job 39:16, Job 39:18, Job 41:33

TSK: Job 39:23 - -- Job 41:26-29

TSK: Job 39:24 - -- He swalloweth : Job 37:20; Hab 1:8, Hab 1:9 neither : Job 9:16, Job 29:24; Luk 24:41

He swalloweth : Job 37:20; Hab 1:8, Hab 1:9

neither : Job 9:16, Job 29:24; Luk 24:41

TSK: Job 39:25 - -- ha : Psa 70:3; Eze 26:2, Eze 36:2

TSK: Job 39:26 - -- the hawk : Netz , Arabic naz , Latin nisus , the hawk, so called from natzah , to shoot away, fly, because of the rapidity of its flight. It ...

the hawk : Netz , Arabic naz , Latin nisus , the hawk, so called from natzah , to shoot away, fly, because of the rapidity of its flight. It probably comprehends various species of the falcon family, as the ger-falcon, goshawk, and sparrowhawk. Lev 16:11; Deu 14:15

stretch : Is it through thy teaching that the falcon, or any other bird of passage, knows the precise time for taking flight, and the direction in which she is to go to arrive at a warmer climate? Son 2:12; Jer 8:7

TSK: Job 39:27 - -- the eagle : Exo 19:4; Lev 11:13; Psa 103:5; Pro 23:5; Isa 40:31; Hos 8:1 at thy command : Heb. by thy mouth make : Jer 49:16; Oba 1:4

the eagle : Exo 19:4; Lev 11:13; Psa 103:5; Pro 23:5; Isa 40:31; Hos 8:1

at thy command : Heb. by thy mouth

make : Jer 49:16; Oba 1:4

TSK: Job 39:28 - -- upon : 1Sa 14:4

upon : 1Sa 14:4

TSK: Job 39:29 - -- she : Job 9:26 her : The eagle is proverbial for her strong and clear sight.

she : Job 9:26

her : The eagle is proverbial for her strong and clear sight.

TSK: Job 39:30 - -- where : Eze 39:17-19; Mat 24:28; Luk 17:37

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

Barnes: Job 39:20 - -- Canst thou make him afraid as a grasshopper? - Or, rather, "as a locust"- כארבה kā'arbeh . This is the word which is commonly appl...

Canst thou make him afraid as a grasshopper? - Or, rather, "as a locust"- כארבה kā'arbeh . This is the word which is commonly applied to the locust considered as gregarious, or as appearing in great numbers (from רבה râbâh , "to be multiplied"). On the variety of the species of locusts, see Bochart "Hieroz."P. ii. Lib. iv. c. 1ff The Hebrew word here rendered "make afraid"( רעשׁ râ‛ash ) means properly "to be moved, to be shaken,"and hence, to tremble, to be afraid. In the Hiphil, the form used here, it means to cause to tremble, to shake; and then "to cause to leap,"as a horse; and the idea here is, Canst thou cause the horse, an animal so large and powerful, to leap with the agility of a locust? See Gesenius, "Lex."The allusion here is to the leaping or moving of the locusts as they advance in the appearance of squadrons or troops; but the comparison is not so much that of a single horse to a single locust, as of cavalry or a company of war-horses to an army of locusts; and the point of comparison turns on the elasticity or agility of the motion of cavalry advancing to the field of battle.

The sense is, that God could cause that rapid and beautiful movement in animals so large and powerful as the horse, but that it was wholly beyond the power of man to effect it. It is quite common in the East to compare a horse with a locust, and travelers have spoken of the remarkable resemblance between the heads of the two. This comparison occurs also in the Bible; see Joe 2:4, "The appearance of them is as the appearance of horses; and as horsemen so shall they run;"Rev 9:7. The Italians, from this resemblance, call the locust "cavaletta,"or little horse. Sir W. Ouseley says, "Zakaria Cavini divides the locusts into two classes, like horsemen and footmen, ‘ mounted and pedestrian.’ "Niebuhr says that he heard from a Bedouin near Bassorah, a particular comparison of the locust with other animals; but he thought it a mere fancy of the Arabs, until he heard it repeated at Bagdad. He compared the head of a locust to that of a horse, the breast to that of a lion, the feet to those of a camel, the belly with that of a serpent, the tail with that of a scorpion, and the feelers with the hair of a virgin; see the Pictorial Bible on Joe 2:4.

The glory of his nostrils is terrible - Margin, as in Hebrew, "terrors."That is, it is fitted to inspire terror or awe. The reference is to the wide-extended and fiery looking nostrils of the horse when animated, and impatient, for action. So Lucretius, L. v.:

Et fremitum patulis sub naribus edit ad arma .

So Virgil, "Georg."iii. 87:

Collectumque premens voluit sub naribus ignem .

Claudian, in iv. "Consulatu Honorii:"

Ignescunt patulae nares .

Barnes: Job 39:21 - -- He paweth in the valley - Margin, "or, His feet dig."The marginal reading is more in accordance with the Hebrew. The reference is to the well k...

He paweth in the valley - Margin, "or, His feet dig."The marginal reading is more in accordance with the Hebrew. The reference is to the well known fact of the "pawing"of the horse with his feet, as if he would dig up the ground. The same idea occurs in Virgil, as quoted above:

caavatque

Tellurem, et solido graviter solar ungula cornu .

Also in Apollonius, L. iii. "Argonauticon:"

Ὡς δ ̓ ἀρήΐος ἵππος, ἐελδόμενος πολεμοίο ,

Σκαρθμῷ ἐπιχρεμέθων κρούει πέδον.

Hōs d' arēios hippos , eeldomenos polemoio ,

Skarthmō epichremethōn krouei pedon .

"As a war-horse, impatient for the battle,

Neighing beats the ground with bis hoofs"

He goeth on to meet the armed men - Margin, "armor."The margin is in accordance with the Hebrew, but still the idea is substantially the same. The horse rushes on furiously against the weapons of war.

Barnes: Job 39:22 - -- He mocketh at fear - He laughs at that which is fitted to intimidate; that is, he is not afraid. Neither turneth he back from the sword - ...

He mocketh at fear - He laughs at that which is fitted to intimidate; that is, he is not afraid.

Neither turneth he back from the sword - He rushes on it without fear. Of the fact here stated, and the accuracy of the description, there can be no doubt.

Barnes: Job 39:23 - -- The quiver rattleth against him - The quiver was a case made for containing arrows. It was usually slung over the shoulder, so that it could be...

The quiver rattleth against him - The quiver was a case made for containing arrows. It was usually slung over the shoulder, so that it could be easily reached to draw out an arrow. Warriors on horseback, as well as on foot, fought with bows and arrows, as well as with swords and spears; and the idea here is, that the war-horse bore upon himself these instruments of war. The rattling of the quiver was caused by the fact that the arrows were thrown somewhat loosely into the case or the quiver, and that in the rapid motion of the warrior they were shaken against each other. Thus, Virgil, Aeneid ix. 660:

- pharetramque fuga sensere sonantem .

Silius, L. 12:

Plena tenet et resonante pharetra .

And again:

Turba ruunt stridentque sagittiferi coryti .

So Homer ("Iliad, a."), when speaking of Apollo:

Τόξ ὤμοισιν ἔχων, ἀμφηρεφέα τε φαρέτρην

Ἔκλαγξαν δ ̓ ἄῤ ὀΐστοὶ ἐπ ̓ ὤμων χωομένοιο.

Tox́ ōmoisin echōn , amfērefea te faretrēn

Eklangxan d' aŕ oistoi ep' ōmōn chōmenoio .

See Seheutzer’ s "Phys. Sac., in loc ."

Barnes: Job 39:24 - -- He swalloweth the ground - He seems as if he would absorb the earth. That is, he strikes his feet into it with such fierceness, and raises up t...

He swalloweth the ground - He seems as if he would absorb the earth. That is, he strikes his feet into it with such fierceness, and raises up the dust in his prancing, as if he would devour it. This figure is unusual with us, but it is common in the Arabic. See Schultens, " in loc .,"and Bochart, "Hieroz,"P. i. L. ii. c. viii. pp. 143-145. So Statius:

Stare loco nescit, pereunt vestigia mille

Ante fugam, absentemque ferit gravis ungula campum .

Th’ impatient courser pants in every’ vein,

And pawing seems to beat the distant plain;

Hills, vales, and floods, appear already cross’ d,

And ere he starts a thousand steps are lost.

Pope

Neither believeth he that it is the sound of the trumpet - This translation by no means conveys the meaning of the original. The true sense is probably expressed by Umbreit. "He standeth not still when the trumpet soundeth; "that is, he becomes impatient; he no longer confides in the voice of the rider and remains submissive, but he becomes excited by the martial clangor, and rushes into the midst of the battle. The Hebrew word which is employed ( יאמין ya'âmiyn ) means properly "to prop, stay, support"; then "to believe, to be firm, stable"; and is that which is commonly used to denote an act of "faith,"or as meaning "believing."But the original sense of the word is here to be retained, and then it refers to the fact that the impatient horse no longer stands still when the trumpet begins to sound for battle.

Barnes: Job 39:25 - -- He saith among the trumpets, Ha, ha - That is,"When the trumpet sounds, his voice is heard "as if"he said, Aha - or said that he heard the soun...

He saith among the trumpets, Ha, ha - That is,"When the trumpet sounds, his voice is heard "as if"he said, Aha - or said that he heard the sound calling him to the battle."The reference is to the impatient neighing of the war horse about to rush into the conflict.

And he smelleth the battle afar off - That is, he snuffs, as it were, for the slaughter. The reference is to the effect of an approaching army upon a spirited war-horse, as if he perceived the approach by the sense of smelling, and longed to be in the midst of the battle.

The thunder of the captains - literally, "the war-cry of the princes."The reference is to the loud voices of the leaders of the army commanding the hosts under them. In regard to the whole of this magnificent description of the war-horse, the reader may consult Bochart, "Hieroz."P. i. L. ii. c. viii., where the phrases used are considered and illustrated at length. The leading idea. here is, that the war-horse evinced the wisdom and the power of God. His majesty, energy, strength, impatience for the battle, and spirit, were proofs of the greatness of Him who had made him, and might be appealed to as illustrating His perfections. Much as people admire the noble horse, and much as they take pains to train him for the turf or for battle, yet how seldom do they refer to it as illustrating the power and greatness of the Creator; and, it may be added, how seldom do they use the horse as if he were one of the grand and noble works of God!

Barnes: Job 39:26 - -- Doth the hawk fly by thy wisdom - The appeal here is to the hawk, because it is among the most rapid of the birds in its flight. The particuIar...

Doth the hawk fly by thy wisdom - The appeal here is to the hawk, because it is among the most rapid of the birds in its flight. The particuIar thing specified is its flying, and it is supposed that there was something special in that which distinguished it from other birds. Whether it was in regard to its speed, to its manner of flying, or to its habits of flying at periodical seasons, may indeed be made a matter of inquiry, but it is clear that the particular thing in this bird which was adapted to draw the attention, and which evinced especially the wisdom of God, was connected with its flight. The word here rendered "hawk,"( נץ nêts ) is probably generic, and includes the various species of the falcon or hawk tribe, as the jet-falcon, the goshawk, the sparrow, hawk, the lanner, the saker, the hobby, the kestril, and the merlin. Not less than one hundred and fifty species of the hawk, it is said, have been described, but of these many are little known, and many of them differ from others only by very slight distinctions.

They are birds of prey, and, as many of them are endowed with remarkable docility, they are trained for the diversions of falconry - which has been quite a science among sportsmen. The falcon, or hawk, is often distinguished for fleetness. One, belonging to a Duke of Cleves, flew out of Westphalia into Prussia in one day; and in the county of Norfolk (England) one was known to make a flight of nearly thirty miles in an hour. A falcon which belonged to Henry IV. of France, having escaped from Fontainebleau, was found twenty-four hours after in Malta, the space traversed being not less than one thousand three hundred and fifty miles; being a velocity of about fifty-seven miles an hour, on the supposition that the bird was on the wing the whole time. It is this remarkable velocity which is here appealed to as a proof of the divine wisdom. God asks Job whether he could have formed these birds for their rapid flight. The wisdom and skill which has done this is evidently far above any that is possessed by man.

And stretch her wings toward the south - Referring to the fact that the bird is migratory at certain seasons of the year. It is not here merely the rapidity of its flight which is referred to, but that remarkable instinct which leads the feathered tribes to seek more congenial climates at the approach of winter. In no way is this to be accounted for, except by the fact that God has so appointed it. This great law of the winged tribes is one of the clearest proofs of divine wisdom and agency.

Barnes: Job 39:27 - -- Doth the eagle mount up at thy command? - Margin, as in Hebrew, "by thy mouth."The meaning is, that Job had not power to direct or order the ea...

Doth the eagle mount up at thy command? - Margin, as in Hebrew, "by thy mouth."The meaning is, that Job had not power to direct or order the eagle in his lofty flight. The eagle has always been celebrated for the height to which it ascends. When Ramond had reached the summit of Mount Perdu, the highest of the Pyrenees, he perceived no living creature but an eagle which passed above him, flying with inconceivable rapidity in direct opposition to a furious wind. "Edin. Ency.""Of all animals, the eagle flies highest; and from thence the ancients have given him the epithet of "the bird of heaven.""Goldsmith."What is particularly worth remarking here is, the accuracy with which the descriptions in Job are made. If these are any indications of the progress of the knowledge of Natural History, that science could not have been then in its infancy. Just the things are adverted to here which all the investigations of subsequent ages have shown to characterize the classes of the feathered creation referred to.

And make her nest on high - " The nest of the eagle is usually built in the most inaccessible cliff of the rock, and often shielded from the weather by some jutting crag that hangs over it.""Goldsmith.""It is usually placed horizontally, in the hollow or fissure, of some high and abrupt rock, and is constructed of sticks of five or six feet in length, interlaced with pliant twigs, and covered with layers of rushes, heath, or moss. Unless destroyed by some accident, it is supposed to suffice, with occasional repairs, for the same couple during their lives.""Edin. Ency."

Barnes: Job 39:28 - -- She dwelleth and abideth on the rock - " He rarely quits the mountains to descend into the plains. Each pair live in an insulated state, establi...

She dwelleth and abideth on the rock - " He rarely quits the mountains to descend into the plains. Each pair live in an insulated state, establishing their quarters on some high and precipitous cliff, at a respectful distance from others of the same species.""Edin. Ency."They seem to occupy the same cliff, or place of abode, during their lives; and hence, it is that they are represented as having a permanent abode on the lofty rock. In Damir it is said that the blind poet Besar, son of Jazidi, being asked, if God would give him the choice to be an animal, what he would be, said that he would wish to be nothing else than an "alokab,"a species of the eagle, for they dwelt in places to which no wild animal could have access. Scheutzer, "Phys. Sac. in loc ."The word rendered "abideth"means commonly "to pass the night,"and here refers to the fact that the high rock was its constant abode or dwelling. By night as well as by day, the eagle had his home there.

Upon the crag of the rock - Hebrew, "Upon the tooth of the rock"- from the resemblance of the crag of a rock to a tooth.

Barnes: Job 39:29 - -- From, thence she seeketh the prey, and her eyes behold afar off - " When far aloft, and no longer discernible by the human eye, such is the wond...

From, thence she seeketh the prey, and her eyes behold afar off - " When far aloft, and no longer discernible by the human eye, such is the wonderful acuteness of its sight, that from the same elevation it will mark a hare, or even a smaller animal, and dart down on it with unerring aim.""Edin. Ency.""Of all animals, the eagle has the quickest eye; but his sense of smelling is far inferior to that of the vulture. He never pursues, therefore, but in sight.""Goldsmith."This power of sight was early known, and is celebrated by the ancients. Thus, Homer, r’ - . verse 674.

- ὥστ ̓ ἀιετός ὄν ῥά τε φασὶν

Ὀξύσατον δέρκεσθαι ὑπουρανίων πετεηνῶν.

- hōst' aietos on ra te fasin

Oxusaton derkesthai hupouraniōn peteēnōn .

"As the eagle of whom it is said that it enjoys the keenest vision of

All the fowls under heaven."

So Aelian, II. L. i. 32. Also Horace "Serm."L. i. Sat. 3:

- tam cernit acutum

Quam aut aquila, aut serpeus Epidaurus .

The Arabic writers say that the eagle can see "four hundred parasangs.""Damir,"as quoted by Scheutzer. It is now ascertained that birds of prey search out or discern their food rather by the sight than the smell. No sooner does a camel fall and die on the plains of Arabia, than there may be seen in the far-distant sky apparently a black speck, which is soon discovered to be a vulture hastening to its prey. From that vast distance the bird, invisible to human eye, has seen the prey stretched upon the sand and immediately commences toward it its rapid flight.

Barnes: Job 39:30 - -- Her young ones also suck up blood - The word used here ( יעלעוּ ye ‛âl‛û ) occurs nowhere else in the Scriptures. It is suppo...

Her young ones also suck up blood - The word used here ( יעלעוּ ye ‛âl‛û ) occurs nowhere else in the Scriptures. It is supposed to mean, to sup up greedily; referring to the fact that the young ones of the eagle devour blood voraciously. They are too feeble to devour the flesh, and hence, they are fed on the blood of the victim. The strength of the eagle consists in the beak, talons, and wings; and such is their power, that they are able to convey animals of considerable size, alive, to their places of abode. They often bear away in this manner, lambs, kids, and the young of the gazelle. Three instances, at least, are known, where they have carried off children. In the year 1737, in Norway, a boy upward of two years of age was carried off by an eagle in the sight of his parents. Anderson, in his history of Iceland, asserts that in that island children of four and five years of age have experienced the same fate; and Ray mentions that in one of the Orkheys an infant of a year old was seized in the talons of an eagle, and conveyed about four miles to its eyry. "Edin. Ency."The principal food of the young eagle is blood. The proof of this fact may be seen in Scheutzer’ s "Phys. Sac., in loc ."

And where the slain are, there is she - Hebrew, "the slain;"referring perhaps primarily to a field of battle - where horses, camels, and human beings, lie in confusion. It is not improbable that the Savior had this passage in view when he said, speaking of the approaching destruction of Jerusalem, "For wheresoever the carcase is, there will the eagles be gathered together; "Mat 24:28. Of the fact that they thus assemble, there can be no doubt. The "argument"in proof of the wisdom and majesty of the Almighty in these references to the animal creation, is derived from their strength, their instincts, and their special habits. We may make two remarks, in view of the argument as here stated:

(1) One relates to the remarkable accuracy with which they are referred to. The statements are not vague and general, but are minute and characteristic, about the habits and the instincts of the animals referred to. The very things are selected which are now known to distinguish those animals, and which are not found to exist in the same degree, if at all, in others. Subsequent investigations have served to confirm the accuracy of these descriptions, and they may be taken now as a correct account even to the letter of the natural history of the different animals referred to. If, therefore, as has already been stated, this is to be regarded as an indication of the state of natural science in the time of Job. it shows quite an advanced state; if it is not an indication of the existing state of knowledge in his time, if there was no such acquaintance with the animal creation as the result of observation, then it shows that these were truly the words of God, and are to be regarded as direct inspiration. At all events, the statement was evidently made under the influence of inspiration, and is worthy of the origin which it claims.

(2) The second remark is, that the progress of discovery in the science of natural history has only served to confirm and expand the argument here adverted to. Every new fact in regard to the habits and instincts of animals is a new proof of the wisdom and greatness of God and we may appeal now, with all the knowledge which we have on these subjects, with unanswerable force to the habits and instincts of the wild goats of the rock, the wild ass, the rhinoceros, the ostrich, the horse, the hawk, and the eagle, as each one furnishing some striking and special proof of the wisdom, goodness, superintending providence and power of the great Creator.

Poole: Job 39:20 - -- As a grasshopper which is easily affrighted, and chased away by the least noise of a man. Or, as divers others render the place, Didst thou make him...

As a grasshopper which is easily affrighted, and chased away by the least noise of a man. Or, as divers others render the place, Didst thou make him to move like a grasshopper , skipping and leaping as he goes? So he describes the posture of a gallant and generous horse, who curvets, and pranceth, and as it were danceth as he walks.

The glory of his nostrils that snorting, or sound, and smoke which cometh out of his nostrils, especially when he is enraged and engaged in battle, which is another note of a generous horse, and strikes a terror into his adversary. Or, the vehemency , or majesty , or magnificence of his snorting , or snoring , as this word is rendered, Jer 8:16 .

Poole: Job 39:21 - -- He paweth or, he diggeth . Through courage and wantonness he cannot stand still, but is beating, as it were digging, up the earth with his feet. In...

He paweth or, he diggeth . Through courage and wantonness he cannot stand still, but is beating, as it were digging, up the earth with his feet.

In the valley: this he adds, partly because the ground being there more plain and smooth, he hath the better conveniency for his prancing and pawing with his feet, which in hilly and uneven ground he cannot so well do; and partly because battles use to be pitched in valleys, or low grounds, especially horse battles.

Rejoiceth in his strength making semblance of great pride and complacency in it.

He goeth on to meet the armed men with great readiness and undaunted courage.

Poole: Job 39:22 - -- At fear i.e. at all instruments and objects of terror, as fear is oft used, as Pro 1:26 10:21 . He despiseth what other creatures dread. From the sw...

At fear i.e. at all instruments and objects of terror, as fear is oft used, as Pro 1:26 10:21 . He despiseth what other creatures dread.

From the sword or, because of the sword ; or, for fear of the sword , as this phrase is used, Isa 21:15 31:8 Jer 14:16 1:16 .

Poole: Job 39:23 - -- The quiver or although the quiver &c. So this comes in as an aggravation of his courage, notwithstanding the just causes of fear which are mentione...

The quiver or although the quiver &c. So this comes in as an aggravation of his courage, notwithstanding the just causes of fear which are mentioned in this verse. And the quiver is here put for the arrows contained in it, by a metonymy, very usual in this very case, and in all sorts of authors, which being shot against the horse and rider, make this rattling noise here mentioned.

The glittering spear and the shield or rather, the lance or javelin . For that this was not a defensive, but an offensive weapon, seems plain, both from this place, where it is mentioned among such, and as an object of fear, which the shield is not, and from Jos 8:18 1Sa 17:45 , where it is so used.

Poole: Job 39:24 - -- The sense is either, 1. He is so earnest and eager upon the battle, that he rusheth into it with all speed; and runs over the ground so swiftly, th...

The sense is either,

1. He is so earnest and eager upon the battle, that he rusheth into it with all speed; and runs over the ground so swiftly, that he might seem to have swallowed it tap. Or,

2. He is so full of war-like rage and fury, that he not only champs his bridle, but is ready to tear and devour the very ground on which he goes. And the phrase here used is not unusual, both in Arabic and in other authors; of which see my Latin Synopsis on this place.

He is so pleased with the approach of the battle, and the sound of the trumpet calling to it, that he could scarce believe his cars for gladness: compare Gen 45:26 Luk 24:41 . Or thus, he cannot stand still , or firm , (as this verb and Hie derivative from it is used, not only in the Chaldee and Syriac dialect, but also in the Hebrew, as Deu 28:59 1Sa 2:35 ) when the trumpet soundeth ; his rider can hardly keep him still, but he strives and longs to run to the fight.

Poole: Job 39:25 - -- Ha, ha an expression of joy and alacrity, declared by his proud neighings; whereby he doth in some sort answer the sound of the trumpets, in way of s...

Ha, ha an expression of joy and alacrity, declared by his proud neighings; whereby he doth in some sort answer the sound of the trumpets, in way of scorn and challenge.

He smelleth i.e. he perceiveth, as this phrase is used, Jud 16:9 .

Afar off at some distance, either of place, or rather of time, as the word is most frequently used. He perceives by the motion of the soldiers, and the clattering of the arms, that the battle is at hand, which is very welcome to him.

The thunder of the captains by which he understands, either the military orations which the captains make and deliver with a loud voice to animate their soldiers to the battle; or rather the loud and joyful clamour begun by the commanders, and followed by the soldiers, when they are ready to join battle, that thereby they may both daunt their enemies, and encourage themselves.

Poole: Job 39:26 - -- Doth the hawk fly in so singular a manner, so strongly and steadily, so constantly and unweariedly, so swiftly and speedily, so regularly and cunning...

Doth the hawk fly in so singular a manner, so strongly and steadily, so constantly and unweariedly, so swiftly and speedily, so regularly and cunningly, to catch her prey, by thy wisdom ; didst thou inspire her with that wisdom?

Stretch her wings toward the south which she doth, either.

1. When she casts her old feathers, and gets new ones, which is furthered either by the warmth of southerly winds, or by the heat of the sun, which was southward from Job’ s country, as it is from ours; whence it is, that as wild hawks do this by natural instinct, so the places which men build for the keeping of tame hawks are built towards the south. Or,

2. In or towards winter, when wild hawks fly into warmer countries, as being impatient of cold weather.

Poole: Job 39:27 - -- Mount up fly directly upward, till she be out of thy sight; which no other bird can do. On high in the highest and inaccessible rocks. Compare Jer ...

Mount up fly directly upward, till she be out of thy sight; which no other bird can do.

On high in the highest and inaccessible rocks. Compare Jer 49:16 Oba 1:4 .

Poole: Job 39:28 - -- Which she doth partly for the security of herself and her young; and partly that she may thence have the better prospect to discern her prey, as it ...

Which she doth partly for the security of herself and her young; and partly that she may thence have the better prospect to discern her prey, as it followeth.

Poole: Job 39:29 - -- Her sight is exceeding sharp and strong, so that she is able to look upon the sun with open eyes, and to behold the smallest prey upon the earth or ...

Her sight is exceeding sharp and strong, so that she is able to look upon the sun with open eyes, and to behold the smallest prey upon the earth or sea, when she is mounted out of our sight; which when she spies, she flies to it with incredible swiftness, even like an arrow out of a bow.

Poole: Job 39:30 - -- Blood either of the prey which the eagle hath brought to her nest for them, or of that which themselves catch and kill, being betimes inured to this ...

Blood either of the prey which the eagle hath brought to her nest for them, or of that which themselves catch and kill, being betimes inured to this work by their dams. Naturalists note of the eagle, that she drinketh no water, but blood only.

Where the slain are where any dead carcasses are, yea, or are like to be; for natural historians write of the eagles, that they can presage or smell a battle some days before it be fought. And although some writers affirm that there are divers eagles who do not feed upon carcasses, and will not meddle with them, yet that many eagles do feed on them is sufficiently evident, by the testimony both of Scripture, as Mat 24:28 , and of divers both ancient and later writers.

There is she to wit, in an instant, flying thither with admirable celerity.

Haydock: Job 39:20 - -- Up. Hebrew, "frighten," (Haydock) or "make him leap." (Bochart) (Calmet) --- Nostrils. Septuagint, "of his chest, or shoulders, is boldness."...

Up. Hebrew, "frighten," (Haydock) or "make him leap." (Bochart) (Calmet) ---

Nostrils. Septuagint, "of his chest, or shoulders, is boldness." (Haydock) ---

This inspires the rider with courage, and the enemy with fear. But the Vulgate is more followed. (Calmet) ----- Frænoque teneri

Impatiens crebros expirat naribus ignes. (Silius vi.)

Haydock: Job 39:21 - -- Hoof. Ploughing, or rather prancing, through impatience. (Calmet) --- Boldly. Hebrew, "he exults in his strength," being sensible of glory and c...

Hoof. Ploughing, or rather prancing, through impatience. (Calmet) ---

Boldly. Hebrew, "he exults in his strength," being sensible of glory and commendation. (Calmet) ---

Non dubie intellectum adhortationis et gloriæ fatentur. (Pliny vii. 43.)

Haydock: Job 39:23 - -- Shield, or lance, Josue viii. 18. (Calmet) --- The din of armour does not disturb the horse, which has been inured to such things. (Haydock) --- ...

Shield, or lance, Josue viii. 18. (Calmet) ---

The din of armour does not disturb the horse, which has been inured to such things. (Haydock) ---

It is of singular courage. (Worthington)

Haydock: Job 39:24 - -- Ground. This expression is still used by the Arabs, to denote velocity. (Grotius) --- Septuagint, "in wrath he will make the earth disappear." (H...

Ground. This expression is still used by the Arabs, to denote velocity. (Grotius) ---

Septuagint, "in wrath he will make the earth disappear." (Haydock) ---

Mox sanguis venis melior calet, ire viarum

Longa volunt latumque fuga consumere campum. (Nemesianus)

--- Account. Hebrew, "believe that," or "stops not when." He is so eager to rush forward to battle.

Si qua sonum procul arma dedere,

Stare loco nescit, micat auribus et tremit artus. (Georg. iii.)

Haydock: Job 39:25 - -- Ha. Literally, "Vah," a sound of joy, (Menochius) or of contempt. Septuagint, The trumpet having given the sign, he will say, Well: Euge. Nothin...

Ha. Literally, "Vah," a sound of joy, (Menochius) or of contempt. Septuagint, The trumpet having given the sign, he will say, Well: Euge. Nothing could be more poetically descriptive of the war-horse. (Haydock)

Haydock: Job 39:26 - -- Feathered. Hebrew, "fly." (Haydock) --- South, at the approach of "winter retiring" to warmer regions. (Pliny x. 8.) --- Septuagint, "spreading...

Feathered. Hebrew, "fly." (Haydock) ---

South, at the approach of "winter retiring" to warmer regions. (Pliny x. 8.) ---

Septuagint, "spreading her wings, looking unmoved, towards the south." The hawk alone can stare at the sun, and fly to a great height. (Ælian x. 14.) ---

Hence the Egyptians consecrated this bird to the sun. (Calmet) ---

The eagle is of the same species, and has the same properties. (Haydock) Aristotle mentions 10, and Pliny 16 species of hawks. (Worthington)

Haydock: Job 39:28 - -- Access. See Abdias iv.; Aristotle, anim. ix. 32.

Access. See Abdias iv.; Aristotle, anim. ix. 32.

Haydock: Job 39:29 - -- Off. The eagle was remarkably (Calmet) quick-sighted, (Worthington) as well as the serpent. (Horace i. Sat. iii.; Homer, Iliad xvii.) --- They say...

Off. The eagle was remarkably (Calmet) quick-sighted, (Worthington) as well as the serpent. (Horace i. Sat. iii.; Homer, Iliad xvii.) ---

They say it can discern a fly or a fish from the highest situation; (Bochart) and if its young seem dazzled with the sun-beams, it hurls them down as spurious. (Pliny x. 3.)

Haydock: Job 39:30 - -- Blood, gushing forth from the animals, which the eagle brings. (Menochius) --- St. Chrysostom explains this of the vulture, (Matthew xxiv. 28.; Cal...

Blood, gushing forth from the animals, which the eagle brings. (Menochius) ---

St. Chrysostom explains this of the vulture, (Matthew xxiv. 28.; Calmet) which is of the same species. (Menochius) ---

Some eagles will not touch carcasses, but others are greedy of them. (Pliny x. 3.) (Proverbs xxx. 17.) ---

There. Our Saviour quotes this passage, Luke xvii. 37. (Calmet)

Gill: Job 39:20 - -- Canst thou make him afraid as a grasshopper?.... Which is frightened at every noise, and at any approach of men; but not so the horse; or canst thou m...

Canst thou make him afraid as a grasshopper?.... Which is frightened at every noise, and at any approach of men; but not so the horse; or canst thou move him, or cause him to skip and jump, or rather leap like a grasshopper? that is, hast thou given, or canst thou give him the faculty of leaping over hedges and ditches, for which the horse is famous? so Neptune's war horses are said q to be ευσκαρθμοι, good leapers;

the glory of his nostrils is terrible: which may be understood of his sneezing, snorting, pawing, and neighing, when his nostrils are broad, spread, and enlarged; and especially when enraged and in battle, when he foams and fumes, and his breath comes out of his nostrils like smoke r, and is very terrible.

Gill: Job 39:21 - -- He paweth in the valley,.... Where armies are usually pitched and set in battle army, and especially the cavalry, for which the valley is most conveni...

He paweth in the valley,.... Where armies are usually pitched and set in battle army, and especially the cavalry, for which the valley is most convenient; and here the horse is impatient of engaging, cannot stand still, but rises up with his fore feet and paws and prances, and, as the word signifies, digs the earth and makes it hollow, by a continual striking upon it; so generally horses are commonly described in this manner s;

and rejoiceth in his strength; of which he is sensible, and glories in it; marches to the battle with pride and stateliness, defying, as it were, the enemy, and as if sure of victory, of which he has knowledge when obtained; for Lactantius says t of horses, when conquerors they exult, when conquered they grieve; it has its name in the Hebrew language from rejoicing u;

he goeth on to meet the armed men; without any fear or dread of them, as follows.

Gill: Job 39:22 - -- He mocketh at fear, and is not affrighted,.... At those things which cause fear and fright to men; as arms, though ever so terrible, and armies, thoug...

He mocketh at fear, and is not affrighted,.... At those things which cause fear and fright to men; as arms, though ever so terrible, and armies, though never so numerous;

neither turneth he back from the sword; the naked sword, when it is drawn against him, and ready to be thrust into him; the horse being so bold and courageous was with the Egyptians a symbol of courage and boldness v.

Gill: Job 39:23 - -- The quiver rattleth against him,.... The quiver is what arrows are put into and carried in, and seems here to be put for arrows, which being shot by t...

The quiver rattleth against him,.... The quiver is what arrows are put into and carried in, and seems here to be put for arrows, which being shot by the enemy come whizzing about him, but do not intimidate him; unless this is to be understood of arrows rattling in the quiver when carried by the rider "upon him", so some render the last word; and thus Homer w and Virgil x speak of the rattling quiver and sounding arrows in it, as carried on the back or shoulder; but the first sense seems best, in which another poet uses it y;

the glittering spear and the shield; the lance or javelin, as Mr. Broughton renders it, and others; that is, he does not turn back from these, nor is he frightened at them when they are pointed to him or flung at him; so Aelianus z speaks of the Persians training their horses and getting them used to noises, that in battle they might not be frightened at the clashing of arms, of swords and shields against each other; in like manner as our war horses are trained, not to start at the firing of a gun, or the explosion of a cannon.

Gill: Job 39:24 - -- He swalloweth the ground with fierceness and rage,.... Being so eager for the battle, and so full of fierceness and rage, he bounds the plain with suc...

He swalloweth the ground with fierceness and rage,.... Being so eager for the battle, and so full of fierceness and rage, he bounds the plain with such swiftness that he seems rather to swallow up the ground than to run upon it;

neither believeth he that it is the sound of the trumpet; for joy at hearing it; or he will not trust to his ears, but will see with his eyes whether the battle is ready, and therefore pushes forward. Mr. Broughton and others read it, "he will not stand still at the noise of the trumpet"; and the word signifies firm and stable, as well as to believe; when he hears the trumpet sound, the alarm of war, as a preparation for the battle, he knows not how to a stand; there is scarce any holding him in, but he rushes into the battle at once, Jer 8:6.

Gill: Job 39:25 - -- He saith among the trumpets, ha, ha,.... As pleased with the sound of them, rejoicing thereat, and which he signifies by neighing; and he smelleth ...

He saith among the trumpets, ha, ha,.... As pleased with the sound of them, rejoicing thereat, and which he signifies by neighing;

and he smelleth the battle afar off; which respects not so much the distance of place as of time; he perceives beforehand that it is near, by the preparations making for it, and particularly by what follows; so Pliny b says of horses, they presage a fight. The thunder of the captains, and the shouting; they understand an engagement is just about to start by the loud and thundering voice of the captains, exhorting and spiralling up their men, and giving them the word of command; and by the clamorous shout of the soldiers echoing to the speech of their captains; and which are given forth upon an onset, both to animate one another, and intimidate the enemy. Bootius c observes, that Virgil d and Oppianus e say most of the same things in praise of the horse which are here said, and seem to have taken them from hence; and some f give the horse the preference to the lion, which, when it departs from a fight, never returns, whereas the horse will. This is an emblem both of good men, Zec 10:3; and of bad men, Jer 8:6.

Gill: Job 39:26 - -- Doth the hawk fly by thy wisdom,.... With so much swiftness, steadiness, and constancy, until she has seized her prey. The Vulgate Latin version and s...

Doth the hawk fly by thy wisdom,.... With so much swiftness, steadiness, and constancy, until she has seized her prey. The Vulgate Latin version and some others read, "does she become feathered", or "begin to have feathers?" and so Bochart: either when first fledged; or when, as it is said d she casts her old feathers and gets new ones, and this every year. Now neither her flight nor her feathers, whether at one time or the other, are owing to men, but to the Lord, who gives both;

and stretch her wings towards the south? Being a bird of passage, she moves from colder climates towards the winter, and steers her course to the south towards warmer ones e; which she does by an instinct in nature, put into her by the Lord, and not through the instruction of man. Or, as some say, casting off her old feathers, she flies towards the south for warmth; and that her feathers may be cherished with the heat, and grow the sooner and better. Hence it is, perhaps, as Aelianus reports f, that this bird was by the Egyptians consecrated to Apollo or the sun; it being able to look upon the rays of it wistly, constantly, and easily, without being hurt thereby. Porphyry g says, that this bird is not only acceptable to the sun; but has divinity in it, according to the Egyptians; and is no other than Osiris, or the sun represented by the image of it h. Strabo i speaks of a city of the hawks, where this creature is worshipped. It has its name in Greek from the sacredness of it; and according to Hesiod k, is very swift, and has large wings. It is called ωκυπτερος, swift in flying, by Manetho l; and by Homer, ωκιστος πετεηνων, the swiftest of fowls m. It has its name from נצה, to "fly", as Kimchi observes n. Cyril of Jerusalem, on the authority of the Greek version, affirms o, that by a divine instinct or order, the hawk, stretching out its wings, stands in the midst of the air unmoved, looking towards the south. All accounts show it to be a bird that loves warmth, which is the reason of the expression in the text.

Gill: Job 39:27 - -- Doth the eagle mount up at thy command,.... No; but by an instinct which God has placed in it, and a capacity he has given it above all other birds. T...

Doth the eagle mount up at thy command,.... No; but by an instinct which God has placed in it, and a capacity he has given it above all other birds. They take a circuit in their flight, and bend about before they soar aloft: but the eagle steers its course directly upwards towards heaven, till out of sight; and, as Apuleius says p, up to the clouds, where it rains and snows, and beyond which there is no place for thunder and lightning;

and make her nest on high? so the philosopher says q; eagles make their nests not in plains, but in high places, especially in cragged rocks, as in Job 39:28.

Gill: Job 39:28 - -- She dwelleth and abideth on the rock, upon the crag of the rock, and the strong place. Where she and her young are safe: so Pliny r says, eagles make ...

She dwelleth and abideth on the rock, upon the crag of the rock, and the strong place. Where she and her young are safe: so Pliny r says, eagles make their nests in rocks, even in the precipices of them, as the philosopher quoted in the preceding verse; and here on the tooth, edge, or precipice of the rock, which is inaccessible, and so like a strong fortified place.

Gill: Job 39:29 - -- From thence she seeketh the prey,.... From the high rock; from whence she can look down into valleys, and even into the sea; and spy what is for her p...

From thence she seeketh the prey,.... From the high rock; from whence she can look down into valleys, and even into the sea; and spy what is for her purpose, and descend and seize upon them; as lambs, fawns, geese, shellfish, &c. though they may lie in the most hidden and secret places. Wherefore in the original text it is, "she diggeth the prey or food" s; as treasure hid in secret is dug or diligently searched for; and for which she is qualified by the sharpness of her sight, as follows:

and her eyes behold afar off; from the high rocks and higher clouds, even from the high sky, as Aelianus t expresses it; and who observes that she is the most sharp sighted of all birds; and so, Homer u says, some affirm.

Gill: Job 39:30 - -- Her young ones also suck up blood,.... As well as herself, being brought up to it by her. The eagle cares not for water, but drinks the blood of her p...

Her young ones also suck up blood,.... As well as herself, being brought up to it by her. The eagle cares not for water, but drinks the blood of her prey; and so her young ones after her, as naturalists report w. And Aelianus says x the same of the hawk, that it eats no seeds, but devours flesh and drinks blood, and nourishes her young ones with the same.

And where the slain are, there is she; where there has been a battle, and carcasses left on the field, the eagles will gather to them. This is particularly true of that kind of eagles called vulture eagles, as Aristotle y and Pliny z observe; see Mat 24:28. Now since Job was so ignorant of the nature of these creatures, and incapable of governing and directing them; and what they had of any excellency were of God, and not of him, nor of any man; how unfit must he be to dispute with God, and contend with him about his works of providence? which to convince him of was the design of this discourse about the creatures; and which had its intended effect, as appears in the next chapter.

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 39:20 The word could mean “snorting” as well (see Jer 8:16). It comes from the root “to blow.” If the horse is running and breathing...

NET Notes: Job 39:21 Or “in strength.”

NET Notes: Job 39:23 This may be the scimitar (see G. Molin, “What is a kidon?” JSS 1 [1956]: 334-37).

NET Notes: Job 39:24 The use of אָמַן (’aman) in the Hiphil in this place is unique. Such a form would normally mean “to believe....

NET Notes: Job 39:26 This word occurs only here. It is connected to “pinions” in v. 13. Dhorme suggests “clad with feathers,” but the line suggests...

NET Notes: Job 39:27 Heb “your mouth.”

NET Notes: Job 39:28 The word could be taken as the predicate, but because of the conjunction it seems to be adding another description of the place of its nest.

NET Notes: Job 39:29 Heb “food.”

NET Notes: Job 39:30 The word חֲלָלִים (khalalim) designates someone who is fatally wounded, literally the “pierced o...

Geneva Bible: Job 39:21 He ( n ) paweth in the valley, and rejoiceth in [his] strength: he goeth on to meet the armed men. ( n ) He beats with his hoof.

Geneva Bible: Job 39:24 He ( o ) swalloweth the ground with fierceness and rage: neither believeth he that [it is] the sound of the trumpet. ( o ) He so rides the ground tha...

Geneva Bible: Job 39:26 Doth the hawk fly by thy wisdom, [and] stretch her wings toward the ( p ) south? ( p ) That is, when cold comes, to fly into the warm countries.

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 39:19-25 - -- God, having displayed his own power in those creatures that are strong and despise man, here shows it in one scarcely inferior to any of them in str...

Matthew Henry: Job 39:26-30 - -- The birds of the air are proofs of the wonderful power and providences of God, as well as the beasts of the earth; God here refers particularly to t...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 39:19-25 - -- 19 Dost thou give to the horse strength? Dost thou clothe his neck with flowing hair? 20 Dost thou cause him to leap about like the grasshopper? ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Job 39:26-30 - -- 26 Doth the hawk fly by thy wisdom, Doth it spread its wings towards the south? 27 Or is it at thy command that the eagle soareth aloft, And buil...

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 #15: Use the Strong Number links to learn about the original Hebrew and Greek text. [ALL]
created in 0.25 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA