Job 39:3

3 and hast reared their young without fear; and wilt thou loosen their pangs?

Job 39:3 Meaning and Commentary

Job 39:3

They bow themselves
That they may bring forth their young with greater ease and more safety: for it seems the hinds bring forth their young with great difficulty; and there are provisions in nature made to lessen it; as thunder, before observed, which causes them to bring forth the sooner; and there is an herb called "seselis", which it is said F9 they feed upon before birth, to make it the easier; as well as they use that, and another called "aros", after the birth, to ease them of their later pains;

they bring forth their young ones;
renting and cleaving asunder the membrane, as the word signifies, in which their young is wrapped;

they cast out their sorrows;
either their young, which they bring forth in pains and which then cease; or the secundines, or afterbirth, in which the young is wrapped, and which the philosopher says F11 they eat, and is supposed to be medical to them. None but a woman seems to bring forth with more pain than this creature; and a wife is compared to it, ( Proverbs 5:19 ) .


FOOTNOTES:

F9 Cicero de Natura Deoram, l. 2. Plin. Nat. Hist. c. 8. 32. Aristot. Hist. Animal. l. 9. c. 5.
F11 Aristot. ib.

Job 39:3 In-Context

1 if thou knowest the time of the bringing forth of the wild goats of the rock, and thou hast marked the calving of the hinds:
2 and thou has hast numbered the full months of their being with young, and thou hast relieved their pangs:
3 and hast reared their young without fear; and wilt thou loosen their pangs?
4 Their young will break forth; they will be multiplied with offspring: will go forth, and will not return to them.
5 And who is he that sent forth the wild ass free? and who loosed his bands?

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