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Job 3:12

Context

3:12 Why did the knees welcome me, 1 

and why were there 2  two breasts 3 

that I might nurse at them? 4 

Job 5:1

Context

5:1 “Call now! 5  Is there anyone who will answer you? 6 

To which of the holy ones 7  will you turn? 8 

Job 6:6

Context

6:6 Can food that is tasteless 9  be eaten without salt?

Or is there any taste in the white 10  of an egg?

Job 11:17-18

Context

11:17 And life 11  will be brighter 12  than the noonday;

though there be darkness, 13 

it will be like the morning.

11:18 And you will be secure, because there is hope;

you will be protected 14 

and will take your rest in safety.

Job 12:5

Context

12:5 For calamity, 15  there is derision

(according to the ideas of the fortunate 16 ) –

a fate 17  for those whose feet slip!

Job 12:14

Context

12:14 If 18  he tears down, it cannot be rebuilt;

if he imprisons a person, there is no escape. 19 

Job 16:18

Context
An Appeal to God as Witness

16:18 “O earth, do not cover my blood, 20 

nor let there be a secret 21  place for my cry.

Job 19:7

Context
Job’s Abandonment and Affliction

19:7 “If 22  I cry out, 23  ‘Violence!’ 24 

I receive no answer; 25 

I cry for help,

but there is no justice.

Job 23:7-8

Context

23:7 There 26  an upright person

could present his case 27  before him,

and I would be delivered forever from my judge.

The Inaccessibility and Power of God

23:8 “If I go to the east, he is not there,

and to the west, yet I do not perceive him.

Job 32:16

Context

32:16 And I have waited. 28  But because they do not speak,

because they stand there and answer no more,

Job 38:26

Context

38:26 to cause it to rain on an uninhabited land, 29 

a desert where there are no human beings, 30 

Job 39:28

Context

39:28 It lives on a rock and spends the night there,

on a rocky crag 31  and a fortress. 32 

1 tn The verb קִדְּמוּנִי (qiddÿmuni) is the Piel from קָדַם (qadam), meaning “to come before; to meet; to prevent.” Here it has the idea of going to meet or welcome someone. In spite of various attempts to connect the idea to the father or to adoption rites, it probably simply means the mother’s knees that welcome the child for nursing. See R. de Vaux, Ancient Israel, 42.

sn The sufferer is looking back over all the possible chances of death, including when he was brought forth, placed on the knees or lap, and breastfed.

2 tn There is no verb in the second half of the verse. The idea simply has, “and why breasts that I might suck?”

3 sn The commentaries mention the parallel construction in the writings of Ashurbanipal: “You were weak, Ashurbanipal, you who sat on the knees of the goddess, queen of Nineveh; of the four teats that were placed near to your mouth, you sucked two and you hid your face in the others” (M. Streck, Assurbanipal [VAB], 348).

4 tn Heb “that I might suckle.” The verb is the Qal imperfect of יָנַק (yanaq, “suckle”). Here the clause is subordinated to the preceding question and so function as a final imperfect.

5 tn Some commentators transpose this verse with the following paragraph, placing it after v. 7 (see E. Dhorme, Job, 62). But the reasons for this are based on the perceived development of the argument and are not that compelling.

sn The imperative is here a challenge for Job. If he makes his appeal against God, who is there who will listen? The rhetorical questions are intended to indicate that no one will respond, not even the angels. Job would do better to realize that he is guilty and his only hope is in God.

6 tn The participle with the suffix could be given a more immediate translation to accompany the imperative: “Call now! Is anyone listening to you?”

7 tn The LXX has rendered “holy ones” as “holy angels” (cf. TEV, CEV, NLT). The LXX has interpreted the verb in the colon too freely: “if you will see.”

8 sn The point being made is that the angels do not represent the cries of people to God as if mediating for them. But if Job appealed to any of them to take his case against God, there would be no response whatsoever for that.

9 tn Heb “a tasteless thing”; the word “food” is supplied from the context.

10 tn Some commentators are not satisfied with the translation “white of an egg”; they prefer something connected to “slime of purslane” (H. H. Rowley, Job [NCBC], 59; cf. NRSV “juice of mallows”). This meaning is based on the Syriac and Arabic version of Sa`adia. The meaning “white of the egg” comes from the rabbinic interpretation of “slime of the yolk.” Others carry the idea further and interpret it to mean “saliva of dreams” or after the LXX “in dream words.” H. H. Rowley does not think that the exact edible object can be identified. The idea of the slimy glaring white around the yolk of an egg seems to fit best. This is another illustration of something that is tasteless or insipid.

11 tn Some translations add the pronoun to make it specifically related to Job (“your life”), but this is not necessary. The word used here has the nuance of lasting life.

12 tn Heb “and more than the noonday life will arise.” The present translation is an interpretation in the context. The connotation of “arise” in comparison with the noonday, and in contrast with the darkness, supports the interpretation.

13 tn The form in the MT is the 3fsg imperfect verb, “[though] it be dark.” Most commentators revocalize the word to make it a noun (תְּעֻפָה, tÿufah), giving the meaning “the darkness [of your life] will be like the morning.” The contrast is with Job 10:22; here the darkness will shine like the morning.

14 tn The Hebrew verb means “to dig”; but this does not provide a good meaning for the verse. A. B. Davidson offers an interpretation of “search,” suggesting that before retiring at night Job would search and find everything in order. Some offer a better solution, namely, redefining the word on the basis of Arabic hafara, “to protect” and repointing it to וְחֻפַרְתָּ (vÿkhufarta, “you will be protected”). Other attempts to make sense of the line have involved the same process, but they are less convincing (for some of the more plausible proposals, see D. J. A. Clines, Job [WBC], 257).

15 tn The first word, לַפִּיד (lapid), could be rendered “a torch of scorn,” but this gives no satisfying meaning. The ל (lamed) is often taken as an otiose letter, and the noun פִּיד (pid) is “misfortune, calamity” (cf. Job 30:24; 31:29).

16 tn The noun עַשְׁתּוּת (’ashtut, preferably עַשְׁתּוֹת, ’ashtot) is an abstract noun from עָשַׁת (’ashat, “to think”). The word שַׁאֲנָן (shaanan) means “easy in mind, carefree,” and “happy.”

17 tn The form has traditionally been taken to mean “is ready” from the verb כּוּן (kun, “is fixed, sure”). But many commentators look for a word parallel to “calamity.” So the suggestion has been put forward that נָכוֹן (nakhon) be taken as a noun from נָכָה (nakhah, “strike, smite”): “a blow” (Schultens, Dhorme, Gordis), “thrust” or “kick” (HALOT 698 s.v. I נָכוֹן).

18 tn The use of הֵן (hen, equivalent to הִנֵּה, hinneh, “behold”) introduces a hypothetical condition.

19 tn The verse employs antithetical ideas: “tear down” and “build up,” “imprison” and “escape.” The Niphal verbs in the sentences are potential imperfects. All of this is to say that humans cannot reverse the will of God.

20 sn Job knows that he will die, and that his death, signified here by blood on the ground, will cry out for vindication.

21 tn The word is simply “a place,” but in the context it surely means a hidden place, a secret place that would never be discovered (see 18:21).

22 tn The particle is used here as in 9:11 (see GKC 497 §159.w).

23 tc The LXX has “I laugh at reproach.”

24 tn The same idea is expressed in Jer 20:8 and Hab 1:2. The cry is a cry for help, that he has been wronged, that there is no justice.

25 tn The Niphal is simply “I am not answered.” See Prov 21:13b.

26 tn The adverb “there” has the sense of “then” – there in the future.

27 tn The form of the verb is the Niphal נוֹכָח (nokkakh, “argue, present a case”). E. Dhorme (Job, 346) is troubled by this verbal form and so changes it and other things in the line to say, “he would observe the upright man who argues with him.” The Niphal is used for “engaging discussion,” “arguing a case,” and “settling a dispute.”

28 tn Some commentators take this as a question: “And shall [or must] I wait because they do not speak?” (A. B. Davidson, R. Gordis). But this is not convincing because the silence of the friends is the reason for him to speak, not to wait.

29 tn Heb “on a land, no man.”

30 tn Heb “a desert, no man in it.”

31 tn Heb “upon the tooth of a rock.”

32 tn 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.



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