Job 41:1; Job 41:2
He taketh it with his eyes - Margin, “Or, will any take him in his sight, or, bore his nose with a gin!” From this marginal reading it is evident...
Job 40:15 to Job 41:34 . Behemoth and Leviathan. Most scholars regard this passage as a later addition to the poem. The point of Job 40:8-14 i...
He taketh it with his eyes: his nose pierceth through snares. He taketh it with his eyes - He looks at the sweeping tide, and defies it. His nose...
He taketh it with his eyes— Who can take him in his streams? Can cords be drawn through his nose? Heath. Can his nose be perforated with hooks?...
Behold now behemoth, which I made with thee; he eateth grass as an ox. God shows that if Job cannot bring under control the lower animals, of...
The Second Speech of the Almighty Job, we know, in his anxiety to prove his integrity had been led into casting doubts on the justice of God's gov...
RV 'Shall any take him when he is on the watch, or pierce through his nose (or, his trunk) with a snare?'
His nose pierceth through snares. — Some render, “Shall any take him with snares? while he is looking, shall any pierce through his nose?” The sens...
XXVIII. THE RECONCILIATION Job 38:1 - Job 42:6 THE main argument of the address ascribed to the Almighty is contained in Chapter s 38 and 39...
“Hast Thou an Arm like God?” Job 40:1-24 God seemed to await Job's reply to His questions. Job had protested that he would fill his mouth with...
There is a pause in the unveiling as Jehovah speaks directly to His servant and asks for an answer to the things that He has said. The answer is full...
(15) В¶ Behold now behemoth, which I made with thee; he eateth grass as an ox. (16) Lo now, his strength is in his loins, and his force is in the nav...
REFLECTIONS MY soul, hast thou read, and pondered duly over, the instances here brought forward of divine power and sovereignty? and shall not the v...
He taketh it with his eyes ,.... Or "can men take him before his eyes?" so Mr. Broughton; and others translate it to the same purpose; no, he is not...
He taketh it with his eyes: [his] nose pierceth through snares. Ver. 24. He taketh it with his eyes ] It, that is, Jordan, which he thinks, when h...
He taketh it with his eyes He imagines, when he sees it, that he can take the whole river and drink it up. His nose pierceth through snares The e...
GOD'S CHALLENGE AND JOB'S RESPONSE (vv.1-5) Job had said that if God would only listen to him, he would present his whole case in showing how Go...
Description of Behemoth. B. C. 1520. ...
According to this translation the sense is this, He taketh, or snatcheth, or draweth up (as was now said, Job 40:23 ) it (to wit, the river Jo...
Notes Job 40:15 . “ Behold turn behemoth .” Various opinions as to what is meant by the term “behemoth.” According to GESENIUS, בְּהֵמוֹת ( behem...
Job 40:4 . Behold, I am vile. Job boldly answered his friends; but when the Lord speaks, he lays his mouth in the dust. Job 40:15 . Behold now...
Moreover, the Lord answered Job, and said. Jehovah’s answer Its language has reached, at times, the “high-water mark” of poetry and beauty. Not...
EXPOSITION Job 40:1-18 Between the first and the second part of the Divine discourse, at the end of which Job wholly humbles himself ( Job...
Job's Weakness Contrasted with the Strength Even of the Hippopotamus
He taketh it with his eyes; his nose pierceth through snares. The Hebrew rather seems a challenging question: Will anyone take him before his eyes, w...
Sight — Can any man take him in his eyes? Openly and by force? Surely not. His strength is too great for man to overcome: and therefore men are for...
24 He taketh it with his eyes: his nose pierceth through snares.