Hiob 26

1 Hiob antwortete und sprach:
2 Wie stehest du dem bei, der keine Kraft hat, hilfst dem, der keine Stärke in den Armen hat!
3 Wie gibst du Rat dem, der keine Weisheit hat, und tust kund Verstandes die Fülle!
4 Zu wem redest du? und wes Odem geht von dir aus?
5 Die Toten ängsten sich tief unter den Wassern und denen, die darin wohnen.
6 Das Grab ist aufgedeckt vor ihm, und der Abgrund hat keine Decke.
7 Er breitet aus die Mitternacht über das Leere und hängt die Erde an nichts.
8 Er faßt das Wasser zusammen in seine Wolken, und die Wolken zerreißen darunter nicht.
9 Er verhüllt seinen Stuhl und breitet seine Wolken davor.
10 Er hat um das Wasser ein Ziel gesetzt, bis wo Licht und Finsternis sich scheiden.
11 Die Säulen des Himmels zittern und entsetzen sich vor seinem Schelten.
12 Von seiner Kraft wird das Meer plötzlich ungestüm, und durch seinen Verstand zerschmettert er Rahab.
13 Am Himmel wird's schön durch seinen Wind, und seine Hand durchbohrt die flüchtige Schlange.
14 Siehe, also geht sein Tun, und nur ein geringes Wörtlein davon haben wir vernommen. Wer will aber den Donner seiner Macht verstehen?

Hiob 26 Commentary

Chapter 26

Job reproves Bildad. (1-4) Job acknowledges the power of God. (5-14)

Verses 1-4 Job derided Bildad's answer; his words were a mixture of peevishness and self-preference. Bildad ought to have laid before Job the consolations, rather than the terrors of the Almighty. Christ knows how to speak what is proper for the weary, ( Isaiah 50:4 ) ; and his ministers should not grieve those whom God would not have made sad. We are often disappointed in our expectations from our friends who should comfort us; but the Comforter, the Holy Ghost, never mistakes, nor fails of his end.

Verses 5-14 Many striking instances are here given of the wisdom and power of God, in the creation and preservation of the world. If we look about us, to the earth and waters here below, we see his almighty power. If we consider hell beneath, though out of our sight, yet we may conceive the discoveries of God's power there. If we look up to heaven above, we see displays of God's almighty power. By his Spirit, the eternal Spirit that moved upon the face of the waters, the breath of his mouth, ( Psalms 33:6 ) , he has not only made the heavens, but beautified them. By redemption, all the other wonderful works of the Lord are eclipsed; and we may draw near, and taste his grace, learn to love him, and walk with delight in his ways. The ground of the controversy between Job and the other disputants was, that they unjustly thought from his afflictions that he must have been guilty of heinous crimes. They appear not to have duly considered the evil and just desert of original sin; nor did they take into account the gracious designs of God in purifying his people. Job also darkened counsel by words without knowledge. But his views were more distinct. He does not appear to have alleged his personal righteousness as the ground of his hope towards God. Yet what he admitted in a general view of his case, he in effect denied, while he complained of his sufferings as unmerited and severe; that very complaint proving the necessity for their being sent, in order to his being further humbled in the sight of God.

Chapter Summary

INTRODUCTION TO JOB 26

In this chapter Job, in a very sarcastic manner, rallies Bildad on the weakness and impertinence of his reply, and sets it in a very ridiculous light; showing it to be quite foolish and stupid, and not at all to the purpose, and besides was none of his own, but what he had borrowed from another, Job 26:1-4; and if it was of any avail in the controversy to speak of the greatness and majesty of God, of his perfections and attributes, of his ways and works, he could say greater and more glorious things of God than he had done, and as he does, Job 26:5-13; beginning at the lower parts of the creation, and gradually ascending to the superior and celestial ones; and concludes with observing, that, after all, it was but little that was known of God and his ways, by himself, by Bildad, or by any mortal creature, Job 26:14.

Hiob 26 Commentaries

The Luther Bible is in the public domain.