Job 37:3

3 His dominion is under the whole heaven, and his light is at the extremities of the earth.

Job 37:3 Meaning and Commentary

Job 37:3

He directeth it under the whole heaven
His voice of thunder, which rolls from one end of the heaven to the other: he charges the clouds with it, and directs both it and them where they shall go and discharge; what tree, house, or man, it shall strike; and where the rain shall fall when the clouds burst: yet Pliny F24 atheistically calls thunder and lightning chance matters. Thus the ministers of the word, who are compared to clouds, ( Isaiah 5:6 ) , are charged with it by the Lord: they are directed by him what they shall say, where they shall go and declare it, and he directs where it shall fall with power and weight; yea, he directs it into the very hearts of men, where it pierces and penetrates, and is a discerner and discoverer of their thoughts and intents;

and his lightning unto the ends of the earth:
it cometh out of the east, and shineth to the west, ( Matthew 24:27 ) ; and swiftly move to the further parts of the earth: and such a direction, motion, and extent, has the Gospel had; the glorious light of it, comparable to lightning, it first broke forth in the east, where Christ, his forerunner and his disciples, first preached it, and Christian churches were formed; and from thence it spread into the western parts of the world, and before the destruction of Jerusalem it was preached unto all nations; it had a free course, ran, and was glorified; the sound of the voice of it went into all the earth, and the words and doctrines of the apostles unto the ends of the world.


FOOTNOTES:

F24 Nat. Hist. l. 2. c. 43.

Job 37:3 In-Context

1 At this also my heart is troubled, and moved out of its place.
2 Hear thou a report by the anger of the Lord's wrath, and a discourse shall come out of his mouth.
3 His dominion is under the whole heaven, and his light is at the extremities of the earth.
4 After him shall be a cry with a voice; he shall thunder with the voice of his excellency, yet he shall not cause men to pass away, for one shall hear his voice.
5 The Mighty One shall thunder wonderfully with his voice: for he has done great things which we knew not;

The Brenton translation of the Septuagint is in the public domain.