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Job 40

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1Moreover Jehovah answered Job, and said,

2Shall he that cavilleth contend with the Almighty? He that argueth with God, let him answer it.

3Then Job answered Jehovah, and said,

4Behold, I am of small account; What shall I answer thee? I lay my hand upon my mouth.

5Once have I spoken, and I will not answer; Yea, twice, but I will proceed no further.

6Then Jehovah answered Job out of the whirlwind, and said,

7Gird up thy loins now like a man: I will demand of thee, and declare thou unto me.

8Wilt thou even annul my judgment? Wilt thou condemn me, that thou mayest be justified?

9Or hast thou an arm like God? And canst thou thunder with a voice like him?

10Deck thyself now with excellency and dignity; And array thyself with honor and majesty.

11Pour forth the overflowings of thine anger; And look upon every one that is proud, and abase him.

12Look on every one that is proud, [and] bring him low; And tread down the wicked where they stand.

13Hide them in the dust together; Bind their faces in the hidden [place] .

14Then will I also confess of thee That thine own right hand can save thee.

15Behold now, behemoth, which I made as well as thee; He eateth grass as an ox.

16Lo now, his strength is in his loins, And his force is in the muscles of his belly.

17He moveth his tail like a cedar: The sinews of his thighs are knit together.

18His bones are [as] tubes of brass; His limbs are like bars of iron.

19He is the chief of the ways of God: He [only] that made him giveth him his sword.

20Surely the mountains bring him forth food, Where all the beasts of the field do play.

21He lieth under the lotus-trees, In the covert of the reed, and the fen.

22The lotus-trees cover him with their shade; The willows of the brook compass him about.

23Behold, if a river overflow, he trembleth not; He is confident, though a Jordan swell even to his mouth.

24Shall any take him when he is on the watch, Or pierce through his nose with a snare?

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Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Commentary

Historical, contextual, and verse-level study notes for deeper biblical exploration.

Job 40:1-17 In this Psalm a celebration of God's deliverance is

followed by a profession of devotion to His service. Then follows a prayer for relief from imminent dangers, involving the overthrow of enemies and the rejoicing of sympathizing friends. In Heb 10:5, &c., Paul quotes Ps 40:6-8 as the words of Christ, offering Himself as a better sacrifice. Some suppose Paul thus accommodated David's words to express Christ's sentiments. But the value of his quotation would be thus destroyed, as it would have no force in his argument, unless regarded by his readers as the original sense of the passage in the Old Testament. Others suppose the Psalm describes David's feelings in suffering and joy; but the language quoted by Paul, in the sense given by him, could not apply to David in any of his relations, for as a type the language is not adapted to describe any event or condition of David's career, and as an individual representing the pious generally, neither he nor they could properly use it (see on Ps 40:7, below). The Psalm must be taken then, as the sixteenth, to express the feelings of Christ's human nature. The difficulties pertinent to this view will be considered as they occur. 1-3. The figures for deep distress are illustrated in Jeremiah's history (Jer 38:6-12). Patience and trust manifested in distress, deliverance in answer to prayer, and the blessed effect of it in eliciting praise from God's true worshippers, teach us that Christ's suffering is our example, and His deliverance our encouragement (Heb 5:7, 8; 12:3; 1Pe 4:12-16). inclined--(the ear, Ps 17:6), as if to catch the faintest sigh.

Job 40:1-24 God's Second Address.

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

Job 40:1 Verse 1

the Lord--Hebrew, "Jehovah."

Job 40:2 Verse 2

he that contendeth--as Job had so often expressed a wish to do. Or, rebuketh. Does Job now still (after seeing and hearing of God's majesty and wisdom) wish to set God right? answer it--namely, the questions I have asked.

Job 40:3 Verse 3

a new song--(See on Ps 33:3). fear, and ... trust--revere with love and faith.

Job 40:3 Verse 3

Lord--Jehovah.

Job 40:4 Verse 4

Blessed--(Ps 1:1; 2:12). respecteth--literally, "turns towards," as an object of confidence. turn aside--from true God and His law to falsehood in worship and conduct.

Job 40:4 Verse 4

I am (too) vile (to reply). It is a very different thing to vindicate ourselves before God, from what it is before men. Job could do the latter, not the former. lay ... hand ... upon ... mouth--I have no plea to offer (Job 21:5; Jud 18:19).

Job 40:5 Verse 5

be reckoned up in order--(compare Ps 5:3; 33:14; Isa 44:7), too many to be set forth regularly. This is but one instance of many. The use of the plural accords with the union of Christ and His people. In suffering and triumph, they are one with Him. 6-8. In Paul's view this passage has more meaning than the mere expression of grateful devotion to God's service. He represents Christ as declaring that the sacrifices, whether vegetable or animal, general or special expiatory offerings, would not avail to meet the demands of God's law, and that He had come to render the required satisfaction, which he states was effected by "the offering of the body of Christ" [Heb 10:10], for that is the "will of God" which Christ came to fulfil or do, in order to effect man's redemption. We thus see that the contrast to the unsatisfactory character assigned the Old Testament offerings in Ps 40:6 is found in the compliance with God's law (compare Ps 40:7, 8). Of course, as Paul and other New Testament writers explain Christ's work, it consisted in more than being made under the law or obeying its precepts. It required an "obedience unto death" [Php 2:8], and that is the compliance here chiefly intended, and which makes the contrast with Ps 40:6 clear. mine ears hast thou opened--Whether allusion is made to the custom of boring a servant's ear, in token of voluntary and perpetual enslavement (Ex 21:6), or that the opening of the ear, as in Isa 48:8; 50:5 (though by a different word in Hebrew) denotes obedience by the common figure of hearing for obeying, it is evident that the clause is designed to express a devotion to God's will as avowed more fully in Ps 40:8, and already explained. Paul, however, uses the words, "a body hast thou prepared me" [Heb 10:5], which are found in the Septuagint in the place of the words, "mine ears hast thou opened." He does not lay any stress on this clause, and his argument is complete without it. It is, perhaps, to be regarded rather as an interpretation or free translation by the Septuagint, than either an addition or attempt at verbal translation. The Septuagint translators may have had reference to Christ's vicarious sufferings as taught in other Scriptures, as in Isa 53:4-11; at all events, the sense is substantially the same, as a body was essential to the required obedience (compare Ro 7:4; 1Pe 2:24).

Job 40:5 Verse 5

Once ... twice--oftentimes, more than once (Job 33:14, compare with Job 33:29; Ps 62:11): I have spoken--namely, against God. not answer--not plead against Thee.

Job 40:6 Verse 6

the Lord--Jehovah.

Job 40:7 Verse 7

Then--in such case, without necessarily referring to order of time. Lo, I come--I am prepared to do, &c. in the volume of the book--roll of the book. Such rolls, resembling maps, are still used in the synagogues. written of me--or on me, prescribed to me (2Ki 22:13). The first is the sense adopted by Paul. In either case, the Pentateuch, or law of Moses, is meant, and while it contains much respecting Christ directly, as Ge 3:15; 49:10; De 18:15, and, indirectly, in the Levitical ritual, there is nowhere any allusion to David.

Job 40:7 Verse 7

(See on Job 38:3). Since Job has not only spoken against God, but accused Him of injustice, God challenges him to try, could he govern the world, as God by His power doth, and punish the proud and wicked (Job 40:7-14).

Job 40:8 Verse 8

Wilt thou not only contend with, but set aside My judgment or justice in the government of the world? condemn--declare Me unrighteous, in order that thou mayest be accounted righteous (innocent; undeservingly afflicted).

Job 40:9-10 Verses 9-10

I have preached--literally, "announced good tidings." Christ's prophetical office is taught. He "preached" the great truths of God's government of sinners.

Job 40:9 Verse 9

arm--God's omnipotence (Isa 53:1). thunder--God's voice (Job 37:4).

Job 40:10 Verse 10

See, hast thou power and majesty like God's, to enable thee to judge and govern the world?

Job 40:11 Verse 11

may be rendered as an assertion, that God will not withhold (Ps 16:1).

Job 40:11 Verse 11

rage--rather, pour out the redundant floods of, &c. behold--Try, canst thou, as God, by a mere glance abase the proud (Isa 2:12, &c.)?

Job 40:12 Verse 12

proud--high (Da 4:37). in their place--on the spot; suddenly, before they can move from their place. (See on Job 34:26; Job 36:20).

Job 40:12 Verse 12

evils--inflicted by others. iniquities--or penal afflictions, and sometimes calamities in the wide sense. This meaning of the word is very common (Ps 31:11; 38:4; compare Ge 4:13, Cain's punishment; Ge 19:15, that of Sodom; 1Sa 28:10, of the witch of En-dor; also 2Sa 16:12; Job 19:29; Isa 5:18; 53:11). This meaning of the word is also favored by the clause, "taken hold of me," which follows, which can be said appropriately of sufferings, but not of sins (compare Job 27:20; Ps 69:24). Thus, the difficulties in referring this Psalm to Christ, arising from the usual reading of this verse, are removed. Of the terrible afflictions, or sufferings, alluded to and endured for us, compare Lu 22:39-44, and the narrative of the scenes of Calvary. my heart faileth me--(Mt 26:38), "My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death." cannot look up--literally, "I cannot see," not denoting the depression of conscious guilt, as Lu 18:13, but exhaustion from suffering, as dimness of eyes (compare Ps 6:7; 13:3; 38:10). The whole context thus sustains the sense assigned to iniquities.

Job 40:13 Verse 13

(Isa 2:10). Abase and remove them out of the sight of men. bind ... faces--that is, shut up their persons [Maurer]. But it refers rather to the custom of binding a cloth over the faces of persons about to be executed (Job 9:24; Es 7:8). in secret--consign them to darkness.

Job 40:13 Verse 13

(Compare Ps 22:19).

Job 40:14 Verse 14

confess--rather, "extol"; "I also," who now censure thee. But since thou canst not do these works, thou must, instead of censuring, extol My government. thine own ... hand ... save--(Ps 44:3). So as to eternal salvation by Jesus Christ (Isa 59:16; 63:5). 15-24. God shows that if Job cannot bring under control the lower animals (of which he selects the two most striking, behemoth on land, leviathan in the water), much less is he capable of governing the world. behemoth--The description in part agrees with the hippopotamus, in part with the elephant, but exactly in all details with neither. It is rather a poetical personification of the great Pachydermata, or Herbivora (so "he eateth grass"), the idea of the hippopotamus being predominant. In Job 40:17, "the tail like a cedar," hardly applies to the latter (so also Job 40:20, 23, "Jordan," a river which elephants alone could reach, but see on Job 40:23). On the other hand, Job 40:21, 22 are characteristic of the amphibious river horse. So leviathan (the twisting animal), Job 41:1, is a generalized term for cetacea, pythons, saurians of the neighboring seas and rivers, including the crocodile, which is the most prominent, and is often associated with the river horse by old writers. "Behemoth" seems to be the Egyptian Pehemout, "water-ox," Hebraized, so-called as being like an ox, whence the Italian bombarino. with thee--as I made thyself. Yet how great the difference! The manifold wisdom and power of God! he eateth grass--marvellous in an animal living so much in the water; also strange, that such a monster should not be carnivorous.

Job 40:14-15 Verses 14-15

The language is not necessarily imprecatory, but rather a confident expectation (Ps 5:11), though the former sense is not inconsistent with Christ's prayer for the forgiveness of His murderers, inasmuch as their confusion and shame might be the very means to prepare them for humbly seeking forgiveness (compare Ac 2:37).

Job 40:15 Verse 15

for a reward--literally, "in consequence of." Aha--(Compare Ps 35:21, 25).

Job 40:16 Verse 16

navel--rather, "muscles" of his belly; the weakest point of the elephant, therefore it is not meant.

Job 40:16 Verse 16

(Compare Ps 35:27). love thy salvation--delight in its bestowal on others as well as themselves.

Job 40:17 Verse 17

like a cedar--As the tempest bends the cedar, so it can move its smooth thick tail [Umbreit]. But the cedar implies straightness and length, such as do not apply to the river horse's short tail, but perhaps to an extinct species of animal (see on Job 40:15). stones--rather, "thighs." wrapped--firmly twisted together, like a thick rope.

Job 40:17 Verse 17

A summary of his condition and hopes. thinketh upon--or provides for me. "He was heard," "when he had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears, unto Him that was able to save him from death" [Heb 5:7]. PSALM 41

Job 40:18 Verse 18

strong--rather, "tubes" of copper [Umbreit].

Job 40:19 Verse 19

Chief of the works of God; so "ways" (Job 26:14; Pr 8:22). can make his sword to approach--rather, "has furnished him with his sword" (harpe), namely, the sickle-like teeth with which he cuts down grain. English Version, however, is literally right.

Job 40:20 Verse 20

The mountain is not his usual haunt. Bochart says it is sometimes found there (?). beasts ... play--a graphic trait: though armed with such teeth, he lets the beasts play near him unhurt, for his food is grass.

Job 40:21 Verse 21

lieth--He leads an inactive life. shady trees--rather, "lotus bushes"; as Job 40:22 requires.

Job 40:22 Verse 22

shady trees--Translate: "lotus bushes."

Job 40:23 Verse 23

Rather, "(Though) a river be violent (overflow), he trembleth not"; (for though living on land, he can live in the water, too); he is secure, though a Jordan swell up to his mouth. "Jordan" is used for any great river (consonant with the "behemoth"), being a poetical generalization (see on Job 40:15). The author cannot have been a Hebrew as Umbreit asserts, or he would not adduce the Jordan, where there were no river horses. He alludes to it as a name for any river, but not as one known to him, except by hearsay.

Job 40:24 Verse 24

Rather, "Will any take him by open force" (literally, "before his eyes"), "or pierce his nose with cords?" No; he can only be taken by guile, and in a pitfall (Job 41:1, 2).

Matthew Henry Concise Commentary

Pastoral and devotional reflections focused on spiritual formation and application.

Job 40:1-5 Verses 1-5

Communion with the Lord effectually convinces and humbles a saint, and makes him glad to part with his most beloved sins. There is need to be thoroughly convinced and humbled, to prepare us for remarkable deliverances. After God had shown Job, by his manifest ignorance of the works of nature, how unable he was to judge of the methods and designs of Providence, he puts a convincing question to him; Shall he that contendeth with the Almighty instruct him? Now Job began to melt into godly sorrow: when his friends reasoned with him, he did not yield; but the voice of the Lord is powerful. When the Spirit of truth is come, he shall convince. Job yields himself to the grace of God. He owns himself an offender, and has nothing to say to justify himself. He is now sensible that he has sinned; and therefore he calls himself vile. Repentance changes men's opinion of themselves. Job is now convinced of his error. Those who are truly sensible of their own sinfulness and vileness, dare not justify themselves before God. He perceived that he was a poor, mean, foolish, and sinful creature, who ought not to have uttered one word against the Divine conduct. One glimpse of God's holy nature would appal the stoutest rebel. How, then will the wicked bear the sight of his glory at the day of judgment? But when we see this glory revealed in Jesus Christ, we shall be humbled without being terrified; self-abasement agrees with filial love. (Job 40:6-14)

Job 40:6-14 Verses 6-14

Those who profit by what they have heard from God, shall hear more from him. And those who are truly convinced of sin, yet need to be more thoroughly convinced and more humbled. No doubt God, and he only, has power to humble and bring down proud men; he has wisdom to know when and how to do it, and it is not for us to teach him how to govern the world. Our own hands cannot save us by recommending us to God's grace, much less rescuing us from his justice; and therefore into his hand we must commit ourselves. The renewal of a believer proceeds in the same way of conviction, humbling, and watchfulness against remaining sin, as his first conversion. When convinced of many evils in our conduct, we still need convincing of many more.

Job 40:15-24 Verses 15-24

God, for the further proving of his own power, describes two vast animals, far exceeding man in bulk and strength. Behemoth signifies beasts. Most understand it of an animal well known in Egypt, called the river-horse, or hippopotamus. This vast animal is noticed as an argument to humble ourselves before the great God; for he created this vast animal, which is so fearfully and wonderfully made. Whatever strength this or any other creature has, it is derived from God. He that made the soul of man, knows all the ways to it, and can make the sword of justice, his wrath, to approach and touch it. Every godly man has spiritual weapons, the whole armour of God, to resist, yea, to overcome the tempter, that his never-dying soul may be safe, whatever becomes of his frail flesh and mortal body.

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Animals: Habits of Job 40:20

The hills yield him their produce, while all the beasts of the field play nearby.

Conviction of Sin Job 40:4, 5

“Behold, I am insignificant. How can I reply to You? I place my hand over my mouth. / I have spoken once, but I have no answer—twice, but I have nothing to add.”

Dinosaurs Job 40:15

Look at Behemoth, which I made along with you. He feeds on grass like an ox.

God: Power of Job 40:9

Do you have an arm like God’s? Can you thunder with a voice like His?

God: Unclassified Scriptures Relating To Job 40:1–24

And the LORD said to Job: / “Will the faultfinder contend with the Almighty? Let him who argues with God give an answer.” / Then Job answered the LORD:

Herbs: Reeds Job 40:21

He lies under the lotus plants, hidden among the reeds of the marsh.

Humility: Exemplified Job 40:4, 5

“Behold, I am insignificant. How can I reply to You? I place my hand over my mouth. / I have spoken once, but I have no answer—twice, but I have nothing to add.”

Humility: Job Job 40:4

“Behold, I am insignificant. How can I reply to You? I place my hand over my mouth.

Job: A Man Who Lived in Uz: Submission of, to God Job 40:3–5

Then Job answered the LORD: / “Behold, I am insignificant. How can I reply to You? I place my hand over my mouth. / I have spoken once, but I have no answer—twice, but I have nothing to add.”

Prayer: Confession In Job 40:4, 5

“Behold, I am insignificant. How can I reply to You? I place my hand over my mouth. / I have spoken once, but I have no answer—twice, but I have nothing to add.”

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