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Text -- Job 9:1-11 (NET)

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Context
Job’s Reply to Bildad
9:1 Then Job answered: 9:2 “Truly, I know that this is so. But how can a human be just before God? 9:3 If someone wishes to contend with him, he cannot answer him one time in a thousand. 9:4 He is wise in heart and mighty in strength– who has resisted him and remained safe? 9:5 He who removes mountains suddenly, who overturns them in his anger; 9:6 he who shakes the earth out of its place so that its pillars tremble; 9:7 he who commands the sun and it does not shine and seals up the stars; 9:8 he alone spreads out the heavens, and treads on the waves of the sea; 9:9 he makes the Bear, Orion, and the Pleiades, and the constellations of the southern sky; 9:10 he does great and unsearchable things, and wonderful things without number. 9:11 If he passes by me, I cannot see him, if he goes by, I cannot perceive him.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

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


Dictionary Themes and Topics: God | Complaint | Philosophy | Job | Astronomy | Arcturus | Pleiades | Orion | Power | Stars | Depravity of Mankind | Impenitence | Earthquakes | Earth | Heaven | Mountain | Meteorology and Celestial Phenomena | Constellations | Heart | WONDER; WONDERFUL | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 9:1 This speech of Job in response to Bildad falls into two large sections, chs. 9 and 10. In ch. 9 he argues that God’s power and majesty prevent h...

NET Notes: Job 9:2 The point of Job’s rhetorical question is that man cannot be justified as against God, because God is too powerful and too clever – he con...

NET Notes: Job 9:3 This use of the imperfect as potential imperfect assumes that the human is the subject, that in a dispute with God he could not answer one of God̵...

NET Notes: Job 9:4 The use of שָׁלֵם (shalem) in the Qal is rare. It has been translated “remain safe” by E. Dhorme, R...

NET Notes: Job 9:5 This line beginning with the relative pronoun can either be read as a parallel description of God, or it can be subordinated by the relative pronoun t...

NET Notes: Job 9:6 The verb הִתְפַלָּצ (hitfallats) is found only here, but the root seems clearly to mean &#...

NET Notes: Job 9:7 The verb חָתַם (khatam) with בְּעַד (bÿ’ad) before its complement, means ...

NET Notes: Job 9:8 The reference is probably to the waves of the sea. This is the reading preserved in NIV and NAB, as well as by J. Crenshaw, “Wÿdorek `al-ba...

NET Notes: Job 9:9 Heb “and the chambers of the south.”

NET Notes: Job 9:10 There is probably great irony in Job’s using this same verse as in 5:9. But Job’s meaning here is different than Eliphaz.

NET Notes: Job 9:11 Like the mountains, Job knows that God has passed by and caused him to shake and tremble, but he cannot understand or perceive the reasons.

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