Job 38:28

28 Who is [the] father of (the) rain, either who engendered the drops of dew?

Job 38:28 Meaning and Commentary

Job 38:28

Hath the rain a father?
&c.] None but God; hence the Heathens themselves call God (getiov) F25, and (ombriov) F26; see ( Jeremiah 14:22 ) ; he that is our Father in heaven is the Father of rain, and him only; whatever secondary causes there be, God only is the efficient cause, parent, and producer of it: so the Gospel is not of men but of God, is a gift of his, comes down from heaven, tarries not for men, and is a great blessing, as rain is;

or who hath begotten the drops of the dew?
which are innumerable; he that is the parent of the rain is of the dew also, and he only F1; to which sometimes not only the word of God, and his free favour and good will, but the people of God themselves are compared for their number, influence, and use; see ( Psalms 110:3 ) ( Micah 5:7 ) ; and their new birth is similar to the generation of dew, it being not of the will of man, but of God, according to his abundant mercy, free favour, and good will, is from above, from heaven, and is effected silently, secretly, suddenly, at an unawares; ( John 1:13 ) ( John 3:3 John 3:5 John 3:8 ) .


FOOTNOTES:

F25 Aristot. de Mundo, c. 7.
F26 Pausan. Attica, sive, l. 1. p. 60.
F1 Though a certain poet (Alcman Lyricus apud Macrob. Saturnal. l. 7. c. 16.) says that dew is the offspring of the air and of the moon; but these can only at most be reckoned but secondary causes. The Arabs speak of an angel over dew. Abulpharag, Hist. Dynast. p. 75.

Job 38:28 In-Context

26 That it should rain on the earth without man, in desert, where none of deadly men dwelleth? (So that it would rain on the earth where there is no one, yea, in the wilderness, where no person liveth?)
27 That it should [ful]fill a land without (a) way and desolate, and should bring forth green herbs?
28 Who is [the] father of (the) rain, either who engendered the drops of dew?
29 Of whose womb went out ice, and who begat frost from heaven? (Out of whose womb went out the ice, and who begat the frost from the heavens?)
30 (The) Waters be made hard in the likeness of [a] stone, and the over-part of [the] ocean is constrained together (and the face of the ocean is altogether frozen).
Copyright © 2001 by Terence P. Noble. For personal use only.