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												Verse 1Job 26:1. But Job answered and 
												said — Job, finding his friends 
												quite driven from their strong 
												hold, and reduced to give up the 
												argument, now begins to triumph, 
												Job 26:2-3. He tells them, if 
												the business was to celebrate 
												the power and wisdom of the 
												Almighty, he could produce as 
												many shining instances of it as 
												they could; but, at the same 
												time, he intimates that their 
												behaviour was mean, after so 
												great a parade of wisdom as they 
												had exhibited, to shelter 
												themselves at last behind the 
												power of God, rather than 
												generously give up an argument 
												which they were unable to 
												maintain, and acquit him of a 
												suspicion which they were not 
												capable of supporting by a 
												conviction. — Heath.
 
 Verse 2
 Job 26:2. How hast thou helped 
												him, that is without power? — 
												Thou hast helped excellently! It 
												is an ironical expression, 
												implying quite the contrary, 
												that he had not helped at all. 
												As if he had said, I am a poor 
												helpless creature, my strength 
												and spirits are quite broken 
												with the pains of my body, and 
												the perplexities of my mind; and 
												humanity and religion should 
												have taught thee to support and 
												comfort me, with representations 
												of the goodness and promises of 
												God, and not to terrify and 
												overwhelm me with displaying his 
												sovereign majesty, his glorious 
												holiness, and inflexible 
												justice, the thoughts whereof 
												are already so discouraging and 
												dreadful to me.
 
 Verse 3
 Job 26:3. How hast thou 
												counselled him that hath no 
												wisdom? — Me, whom thou takest 
												to be void of understanding, and 
												whom, therefore, thou oughtest 
												to have instructed with 
												wholesome counsels, instead of 
												those impertinent discourses 
												which thou hast delivered. But, 
												as the words, him that hath, are 
												not in the original, the text 
												would be better rendered, Why 
												dost thou counsel without 
												wisdom? And how hast thou 
												plentifully declared the thing 
												as it is? — And the essence, 
												truth, or substance, (so the 
												word ותושׁיה, vethushiah, 
												signifies,) namely, of the thing 
												in question between us, in 
												abundance thou hast made known; 
												thou hast spoken the whole 
												truth, and nothing but the 
												truth, and all that can be said 
												in the matter! A most wise and 
												profound discourse thou hast 
												made, and much to the purpose! 
												An ironical expression as 
												before. But the word לרב, 
												la-rob, which we translate, 
												plentifully, or, in abundance, 
												may be read, la-rib, to 
												contention: and then the clause 
												will bear a clearer sense, thus: 
												Why dost thou discover truth or 
												wisdom for the sake of 
												contention?
 
 Verse 4
 Job 26:4. To whom hast thou 
												uttered words — For whose 
												instruction hast thou uttered 
												these things? For mine? Dost 
												thou think I do not know that 
												which the meanest persons are 
												not unacquainted with; that God 
												is incomparably greater and 
												better than his creatures? Whose 
												spirit came from thee — Who 
												inspired thee with this profound 
												discourse of thine?
 
 Verse 5
 Job 26:5. Dead things, &c. — 
												That is, according to several 
												interpreters, those seeds which 
												are sown and die in the earth 
												quicken again and grow. Or, as 
												R. Levi rather thinks, an 
												allusion is made to those 
												vegetables, stones, or metals, 
												which are found in the earth 
												under the waters. The Hebrew 
												word here for dead things is 
												רפאים, rephaim, which is 
												generally rendered dead men; 
												thus, Psalms 88:10, we read, 
												Wilt thou show wonders to methim, 
												the dead? Shall rephaim, the 
												dead, arise and praise thee? 
												Isaiah 26:14. The dead, methim, 
												shall not live: the deceased, 
												rephaim, shall not rise. In 
												these passages, therefore, and 
												many others that might be 
												produced, methim and rephaim are 
												both translated dead or 
												deceased. Instead of this, 
												however, the LXX., the Vulgate 
												Latin, and the Targum, render 
												rephaim, giants, or mighty men. 
												“Their interpretation is very 
												just,” says Chappelow, “if, as 
												R. Bechai writes, they were so 
												named because their countenance 
												was so austere, that whoever 
												looked on them, manus ejus 
												remissę fuerunt, his hands were 
												weakened with the terror that 
												was upon him, (Buxtorf in rapha.) 
												From hence it is that our 
												learned Mede explains rephaim, 
												in Proverbs 21:16, not of the 
												dead, but of the giants or 
												rebels against God, of whom we 
												read, Genesis 6., namely, those 
												mighty men of the old world, 
												whose wickedness was so great as 
												to occasion the deluge. 
												Therefore, to ‘remain in the 
												congregation of rephaim,’ is the 
												same as to go and keep them 
												company; that is, to go to that 
												accursed place and condition in 
												which they are. Thus, S. 
												Jarchi’s gloss is, In cœtu 
												rephaim, that is, in cœtu 
												gehinnom, the congregation of 
												those in hell. His gloss is the 
												very same on our text here in 
												Job. Again, Proverbs 9:17-18, 
												‘He knoweth not that rephaim, 
												the dead, (the mighty ones,) are 
												there, and that her (the 
												harlot’s) guests are in the 
												depths of hell,’ that is, she 
												will bring them, who frequent 
												her, to hell, to keep the 
												apostate giants company. From 
												all which we conclude, with the 
												ingenious author above 
												mentioned, that the place before 
												us, and the verse following, 
												seem to be no other than a 
												description of hell.” Peters, 
												Dodd, and many other critics, 
												view the passage in the same 
												light. Houbigant renders it, 
												Behold the giants tremble 
												beneath the waters in their 
												habitations; and, he says, “Job 
												means those giants who were 
												overwhelmed with the flood; 
												having their overthrow as 
												immediately present before his 
												eyes, because the deluge at this 
												time was fresh in the memory of 
												men.” Poole, whose note on the 
												passage is well worth the 
												reader’s attention, comprehends 
												all the forementioned 
												particulars in his 
												interpretation, thus: Job, 
												having censured Bildad’s 
												discourse, proceeds to show how 
												little he needed his information 
												in that point. He shows that the 
												power and providence of God 
												reach not only to the things we 
												see, but also to the invisible 
												parts of the world; not only to 
												the heavens above and their 
												inhabitants, and to men upon 
												earth, of which Bildad 
												discoursed, Job 25:2-3, but also 
												to such persons or things as are 
												under the earth, or under the 
												waters; which are out of our 
												sight and reach, yet not out of 
												the view of Divine Providence: 
												including, 1st, dead or lifeless 
												things, such as amber, pearl, 
												coral, metals, or other 
												minerals, which are formed or 
												brought forth, by the almighty 
												power of God, from under the 
												waters; either in the bottom of 
												the sea, or within the earth, 
												which is the lowest element, and 
												in the Scripture and other 
												authors spoken of as under the 
												waters. And, 2d, dead men, and 
												the worst of them, such as died 
												in their sins, and after death 
												were condemned to further 
												miseries; of whom this very word 
												seems to be used, (Proverbs 
												2:18; Proverbs 9:18,) who are 
												here said to mourn or groan from 
												under the waters, from the lower 
												parts of the earth; or from 
												under those subterranean waters 
												which are supposed to be within 
												and under the earth; and from 
												under the inhabitants thereof; 
												either of the waters or of the 
												earth, under which these waters 
												are; or with the other 
												inhabitants thereof; of that 
												place under the waters; namely, 
												the apostate spirits. So the 
												sense is, that God’s dominion is 
												over all men, yea, even the 
												dead, and the worst of them, 
												who, though they would not own 
												God, nor his providence, while 
												they lived, yet now are forced 
												to acknowledge and feel that 
												power which they despised, and 
												bitterly mourn under the sad 
												effects of it in their infernal 
												habitations.
 
 Verse 6
 Job 26:6. Hell is naked before 
												him — Is in his presence, and 
												under his providence. Hell 
												itself, that place of utter 
												darkness, is not hid from his 
												sight. Destruction — The place 
												of destruction, hath no covering 
												— Such as can conceal it from 
												his view.
 
 Verse 7
 Job 26:7. He stretcheth out the 
												north — The northern part of the 
												heavens, which he particularly 
												mentions, and puts for the whole 
												visible heavens, because Job and 
												his friends lived in a northern 
												climate; over the empty space — 
												Hebrew, על תהו, gnal tohu, over 
												the vacuity, or emptiness; the 
												same word which Moses uses, 
												Genesis 1:2, which does not 
												prove that the author of this 
												book lived after Moses wrote the 
												book of Genesis, and had seen 
												that book, but only that Moses’s 
												account of the creation is the 
												ancient and true account, well 
												known in the days of Job and his 
												friends, and therefore alluded 
												to here. And hangeth the earth 
												upon nothing — Upon its own 
												centre, which is but an 
												imaginary thing, and, in truth, 
												nothing; or, he means, upon no 
												props, or pillars, but his own 
												power and providence. Bishop 
												Patrick’s paraphrase is, “By his 
												wonderful power and wisdom he 
												stretches out the whole world 
												from the one pole to the other, 
												which he alone sustains; as he 
												doth this globe of earth hanging 
												in the air, without any thing to 
												support it.”
 
 Verse 8
 Job 26:8. He bindeth up the 
												waters — Those fluid and heavy 
												bodies, pressing downward with 
												great force; in his thick clouds 
												— As it were in bags, keeping 
												them there suspended often for a 
												long time; and the cloud is not 
												rent under them — But sustains 
												them, notwithstanding their 
												great weight, so that they do 
												not burst forth all at once, and 
												fall suddenly and violently upon 
												the earth, but distil in dews, 
												drops, and showers, to moisten, 
												refresh, and fertilize it in due 
												season.
 
 Verse 9
 Job 26:9. He holdeth back — 
												Namely, from our view, that its 
												effulgent brightness may not 
												dazzle our sight; the face of 
												his throne — The heaven of 
												heavens: where he dwells, its 
												light and glory being too great 
												for mortal eyes; and spreadeth 
												his clouds upon it — And thereby 
												mercifully hides from our eyes 
												those overpowering splendours 
												which we could not bear to 
												behold. Bishop Patrick, however, 
												understands this merely of God’s 
												covering the face of the sky 
												with clouds, to prevent “the 
												beams of the sun from scorching 
												the earth.”
 
 Verse 10
 Job 26:10. He hath compassed the 
												waters — Namely, of the sea; for 
												of the waters of the clouds he 
												had just spoken; with bounds — 
												With rocks and shores, and 
												principally his own decree, 
												formed at the creation, and 
												renewed after the deluge, 
												(Genesis 9:11; Genesis 9:15,) 
												that the waters should not 
												overwhelm the earth; until the 
												day and night come to an end — 
												Until the end of the world, for 
												so long these vicissitudes of 
												day and night are to continue.
 
 Verse 11
 Job 26:11. The pillars of heaven 
												tremble — Perhaps the mountains, 
												which by their height and 
												strength seem to reach and 
												support the heavens. And are 
												astonished at his reproof — When 
												God reproveth not them, but men 
												by them, manifesting his 
												displeasure by thunders or 
												earthquakes.
 
 Verse 12
 Job 26:12. He divideth the sea 
												with his power — “By his power 
												he raises tempests, which make 
												great furrows in the sea, and 
												divideth, as it were, one part 
												of it from another;” and by his 
												understanding he smiteth through 
												the proud — “And, such is his 
												wisdom, he knows how to appease 
												it again, and repress its proud 
												waves into the deadest calm.” — 
												Bishop Patrick. Waterland and 
												Schultens render רגע הים, ragang 
												hajam, he shaketh the sea. 
												Bishop Warburton tells us, that 
												the destruction of Pharaoh and 
												his host in the Red sea is here 
												plainly referred to, and that 
												רהב, rahab, rendered proud, 
												signifies Egypt. But Mr. Peters 
												justly observes, “Others may see 
												nothing more in it than the 
												description of a storm or 
												tempest. The Hebrew word 
												translated divide, is not the 
												same that is used, Exodus 14., 
												of the Red sea, but signifies a 
												violent breaking and tossing of 
												the waves as in a storm. And if 
												the former part of the sentence 
												means that God sometimes, by his 
												power, raises a violent storm at 
												sea, the latter may well enough 
												be understood of the pride and 
												swelling of the sea itself, 
												allayed again by the same divine 
												power and will which raised it.”
 
 Verse 13
 Job 26:13. By his Spirit — 
												Either, 1st, By his divine 
												virtue or power, called his 
												Spirit, Zechariah 4:6; Matthew 
												12:28. Or, 2d, By his Holy 
												Spirit, to which the creation of 
												the world is ascribed, Genesis 
												1:2; Job 33:4. He hath garnished 
												the heavens — Adorned or 
												beautified them with those 
												glorious lights, the sun, moon, 
												and stars. His hand hath formed 
												the crooked serpent — By which 
												he may mean all kinds of 
												serpents, with fishes and 
												monsters of the sea. It is the 
												same word that is used for 
												leviathan, Isaiah 27:1, of which 
												the Targum understands it, and 
												perhaps may be intended of the 
												whale or crocodile. Chappelow, 
												who gives us divers senses of 
												the word ברח, bariach, here 
												rendered crooked, and used as an 
												epithet to designate the kind of 
												serpent intended, observes that, 
												in any of those senses, it is 
												applicable to the great dragon, 
												that old serpent called the 
												devil and Satan, which deceiveth 
												the whole world, Revelation 
												12:9; Revelation 20:2. For (to 
												allude to those senses of the 
												word) that crooked, apostate 
												serpent was formed, was brought 
												forth, was wounded even to 
												death, by God, fled from his 
												vengeance, grieved, and 
												trembled. “It may well be 
												asked,” says the learned Bishop 
												Sherlock, who is of the same 
												mind, and thinks that by the 
												crooked serpent here is meant 
												that apostate spirit who tempted 
												Eve under the form of a serpent, 
												“how come these disagreeable 
												ideas to be joined together? How 
												comes the forming of a crooked 
												serpent to be mentioned as an 
												instance of almighty power, and 
												to be set, as it were, upon an 
												equal footing with the creation 
												of the heavens, and all the host 
												of them? When you read the whole 
												chapter, all the images in which 
												are great and magnificent, can 
												you possibly imagine that the 
												forming the crooked serpent, in 
												this place, means no more than 
												that God created snakes and 
												adders? This surely cannot be 
												the case. If we consider the 
												state of religion in the world 
												when this book was penned, it 
												will help to clear this matter 
												up. The oldest notion in 
												opposition to the supremacy of 
												the Creator is that of two 
												independent principles; and the 
												only kind of idolatry mentioned 
												in the book of Job, and it was 
												of all others the most ancient, 
												is the worship of the sun and 
												moon, and heavenly host. From 
												this Job vindicates himself, Job 
												31:26, &c. Suppose Job now to be 
												acquainted with the fall of man, 
												and the part ascribed to the 
												serpent of the introduction of 
												evil; and see how aptly the 
												parts cohere. In opposition to 
												the idolatrous practice of his 
												time, he asserts God to be the 
												Maker of all the hosts of 
												heaven. By his Spirit hath he 
												garnished the heavens — In 
												opposition to the false notion 
												of two independent principles, 
												he asserts God to be the Maker 
												of him who was the first author 
												of evil; his hand hath formed 
												the crooked serpent — You see 
												how properly the garnishing of 
												the heavens and the forming of 
												the serpent are joined together. 
												That this is the ancient 
												traditionary explanation of this 
												place we have undeniable 
												evidence from the translation of 
												the LXX., who render the latter 
												part of this verse, which 
												relates to the serpent, in this 
												manner: By a decree he destroyed 
												the apostate dragon. The Syriac 
												and Arabic versions are to the 
												same effect. These translators 
												apply the place to the 
												punishment inflicted on the 
												serpent, and it comes to the 
												same thing; for the punishing 
												the serpent is as clear an 
												evidence of God’s power over the 
												author of evil as the creating 
												him.”
 
 Verse 14
 Job 26:14. Lo, these are parts 
												of his ways — But very small 
												parcels even of those of his 
												works which are visible to us. 
												For it would be a vain and 
												fruitless labour should I 
												undertake to speak of all the 
												wonders of the Creator. His 
												works are so many, so great, and 
												so far surpassing our narrow 
												conceptions, that we can never 
												hope to arrive at a perfect 
												knowledge of them all, or even 
												of any of them. We must be 
												content to stand, as it were, at 
												a distance, and, with profound 
												reverence, take a short, 
												imperfect view of a few mere 
												sketches of the effects of his 
												wonder-working power. But how 
												little a portion is heard of 
												him? — Of his wisdom, and power, 
												and providence. If these his 
												external and visible works be so 
												stupendous, how glorious then 
												must be his invisible, and more 
												internal perfections and 
												operations! For what we see or 
												know of him is nothing in 
												comparison of what we do not 
												know, and of what is in him, or 
												is done by him. But the thunder 
												of his power who can understand? 
												— Either, first, Of his mighty 
												and terrible thunder, which is 
												often mentioned as an eminent 
												work of God. Or, second, Of his 
												almighty power, which is 
												properly compared to thunder, in 
												regard of its irresistible 
												force, and the terror which it 
												causes to wicked men.
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