Job 8:11

11 Can mighty pine trees grow tall without soil? Can luscious tomatoes flourish without water?

Job 8:11 Meaning and Commentary

Job 8:11

Can the rush grow up without mire?
&c.] No, at least not long, or so as to lift up his head on high, as the word signifies F1; the rush or bulrush, which seems to be meant, delights in watery places, and has its name in Hebrew from its absorbing or drinking up water; it grows in moist and watery clay, or in marshy places, which Jarchi says is the sense of the word here used; the Septuagint understands it of the "paper reed", which, as Pliny F2 observes, grows in the marshy places of Egypt, and by the still waters of the river Nile:

can the flag grow without water?
or "the sedge" F3; which usually grows in moist places, and on the banks of rivers; this unless in such places, or if without water, cannot grow long, or make any very large increase, or come to maturity; so some F4 render it, "if the rush should grow up without" then it would be with it as follows.


FOOTNOTES:

F1 (hagyh) "an attollit se", Junius & Tremellius, Piscator, Cocceius; "an superbiet", so some; Beza, Schultens.
F2 Nat. Hist. l. 13. c. 11.
F3 (wxa) "carectum", V. L. "ulva", Junius & Tremellius, Piscator, Schmidt, Michaelis, Schultens.
F4 Sic Bar Tzemach & Belgae.

Job 8:11 In-Context

9 For we're newcomers at this, with a lot to learn, and not too long to learn it.
10 So why not let the ancients teach you, tell you what's what, instruct you in what they knew from experience?
11 Can mighty pine trees grow tall without soil? Can luscious tomatoes flourish without water?
12 Blossoming flowers look great before they're cut or picked, but without soil or water they wither more quickly than grass.
13 That's what happens to all who forget God - all their hopes come to nothing.
Published by permission. Originally published by NavPress in English as THE MESSAGE: The Bible in Contemporary Language copyright 2002 by Eugene Peterson. All rights reserved.