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Ayub 3:16

Konteks

3:16 Or why 1  was 2  I not buried 3 

like a stillborn infant, 4 

like infants 5  who have never seen the light? 6 

Ayub 26:5

Konteks
A Better Description of God’s Greatness 7 

26:5 “The dead 8  tremble 9 

those beneath the waters

and all that live in them. 10 

Ayub 34:14-15

Konteks

34:14 If God 11  were to set his heart on it, 12 

and gather in his spirit and his breath,

34:15 all flesh would perish together

and human beings would return to dust.

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[3:16]  1 tn The verb is governed by the interrogative of v. 12 that introduces this series of rhetorical questions.

[3:16]  2 tn The verb is again the prefix conjugation, but the narrative requires a past tense, or preterite.

[3:16]  3 tn Heb “hidden.” The LXX paraphrases: “an untimely birth, proceeding from his mother’s womb.”

[3:16]  4 tn The noun נֵפֶל (nefel, “miscarriage”) is the abortive thing that falls (hence the verb) from the womb before the time is ripe (Ps 58:9). The idiom using the verb “to fall” from the womb means to come into the world (Isa 26:18). The epithet טָמוּן (tamun, “hidden”) is appropriate to the verse. The child comes in vain, and disappears into the darkness – it is hidden forever.

[3:16]  5 tn The word עֹלְלִים (’olÿlim) normally refers to “nurslings.” Here it must refer to infants in general since it refers to a stillborn child.

[3:16]  6 tn The relative clause does not have the relative pronoun; the simple juxtaposition of words indicates that it is modifying the infants.

[26:5]  7 sn This is the section, Job 26:5-14, that many conclude makes better sense coming from the friend. But if it is attributed to Job, then he is showing he can surpass them in his treatise of the greatness of God.

[26:5]  8 tn The text has הָרְפָאִים (harÿfaim, “the shades”), referring to the “dead,” or the elite among the dead (see Isa 14:9; 26:14; Ps 88:10 [11]). For further discussion, start with A. R. Johnson, The Vitality of the Individual, 88ff.

[26:5]  9 tn The verb is a Polal from חִיל (khil) which means “to tremble.” It shows that even these spirits cannot escape the terror.

[26:5]  10 tc Most commentators wish to lengthen the verse and make it more parallel, but nothing is gained by doing this.

[34:14]  11 tn Heb “he”; the referent (God) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[34:14]  12 tc This is the reading following the Qere. The Kethib and the Syriac and the LXX suggest a reading יָשִׂים (yasim, “if he [God] recalls”). But this would require leaving out “his heart,” and would also require redividing the verse to make “his spirit” the object. It makes better parallelism, but may require too many changes.



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