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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Job 28:7

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Job 28:7

[There is] a path which no fowl knoweth, and which the vulture’s eye hath not seen:

7. there is a path ] Rather, that path no eagle knoweth, lit. a path which no eagle &c., the words taking up what is said in Job 28:6, the way to the place of sapphires. The sharp-sighted birds of prey have not seen that path.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

There is a path which no fowl knoweth – That is, a path in searching for gold and precious stones. The miner treads a way which is unseen by the bird of keenest vision. He penetrates into the deep darkness of the earth. The object of Job is to show the wisdom and the intrepidity of man in penetrating these dark regions in searching for sapphires and gold. The most far-sighted birds could not find their way to them. The most intrepid and fearless beasts of prey dared not adventure to those dangerous regions. The word rendered fowl ( ayt) means either a ravenous beast, Jer 12:9, or more commonly a ravenous bird; see the notes at Isa 46:11. According to Bochart, Hieroz. P. 11. L. 11. c. viii. p. 195, the word here denotes a rapacious bird of any kind; a bird which has a keen vision.

Which the vultures eye hath not seen – The vulture is distinguished for the remarkable keenness of its vision. On the deserts of Arabia, it is said, when a camel dies, there is almost immediately discerned far in the distant sky, what seems at first to be a mere speck. As it draws nearer it is perceived to be a vulture that had marked the camel as he fell, and that comes to prey upon it. This bird is proverbial for the keenness of its sight.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Verse 7. There is a path which no fowl knoweth] The instinct of birds is most surprising. They traverse vast forests, c., in search of food, at a great distance from the place which they have chosen for their general residence and return in all weathers, never missing their track: they also find their own nest without ever mistaking another of the same kind for it. Birds of passage, also, after tarrying in a foreign clime for six or seven months, return to their original abode over kingdoms and oceans, without missing their way, or deviating in the least from the proper direction; not having a single object of sight to direct their peregrinations. In such cases even the keen scent of the vulture, and the quick, piercing sight of the eagle, would be of no use. It is possible that Job may here refer to undiscovered mines and minerals; that notwithstanding man had already discovered much, yet much remained undiscovered, especially in the internal structure and contents of the earth. Since his time innumerable discoveries have been made; and yet how little do we know! Our various conflicting and contradictory theories of the earth are full proofs of our ignorance, and strong evidences of our folly. The present dogmatical systems of geology itself are almost the ne plus ultra of brain-sick visionaries, and system-mad mortals. They talk as confidently of the structure of the globe, and the manner and time in which all was formed, as if they had examined every part from the centre to the circumference; though not a soul of man has ever penetrated two miles in perpendicular depth into the bowels of the earth.

And with this scanty, defective knowledge, they pretend to build systems of the universe, and blaspheme the revelation of God! Poor souls! All these things are to them a path which no fowl knoweth, which the vulture’s eye hath not seen, on which the lion’s whelps have not trodden, and by which the fierce lion have not passed. The wisdom necessary to such investigations is out of their reach; and they have not simplicity of heart to seek it where it may be found.

One of the Chaldee Targums gives a strange turn to this verse: – “The path of the tree of life Sammael, (Satan,) though flying like a bird, hath not known; nor hath the eye of Eve beheld it. The children of men have not walked in it; nor hath the serpent turned towards it.”

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

A path, to wit, in the dark depths and bowels of the earth. The vulture; whose eye is very quick and strong, and which searcheth all places for its prey, but cannot reach to these places, which yet the wisdom of man by the direction of Gods providence findeth out.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

7. fowlrather, “ravenousbird,” or “eagle,” which is the most sharp-sighted ofbirds (Isa 46:11). A vulturewill spy a carcass at an amazing distance. The miner penetrates theearth by a way unseen by birds of keenest sight.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

[There is] a path which no fowl knoweth,…. A path made by miners to the gold, silver, brass, and iron ores; to the places where gems and precious stones lie; the way to which was never seen, and could never have been discovered by the most sharp-sighted fowl, as “the eagle” d; which some think is particularly intended; and the Greek word for an eagle seems to be derived from the word used in the text: this fowl, the king of birds, as it is the swiftest, it is the most quick-sighted of any; but, though it is eager, and looks out sharp after its prey, and which it beholds at a great distance, and in the most secret lurking places, and flies unto it, and seizes upon it at once, yet it never could look into the bowels of the earth, or discover a track leading thereunto; in this it is outdone by the diligent and laborious miner, who is not at a loss to make his way into the inmost and darkest recesses of the earth:

which the vulture’s eye hath not seen; which is next to the eagle, and some of them are of the species of it, and is a very sharp-sighted creature, even to a proverb, as well as voracious, which makes it diligent to search everywhere for its prey; and yet this creature’s sharp and piercing eye never saw the path the miners make by digging into the earth, in order to get metals and minerals from it. Some understand this path of subterraneous paths in nature, made of God, through which rivers of water pass that were never seen by creatures of the quickest sight; it may rather be applied to the paths of God in providence, which are unsearchable and past finding out, by men of the most sagacious and penetrating capacities, though they will hereafter be made manifest; and also to his paths of love, grace, and mercy towards the sons of men, which are the deep things of God, searched into and revealed by his Spirit, or otherwise could not be known; as well as to the ways and paths of righteousness and holiness, of faith and truth, of the word and ordinances God has revealed, as his mind and will his people should walk in, which otherwise would not be known, and are not by carnal men; and especially to the principal way and path, Christ Jesus, who is the way to the Father, the way to everlasting happiness, the way of life and salvation, the high way and way of holiness, in which men, though fools, shall not err, and of which some things are said in Isa 35:8; which greatly agree with what are said of this path, here and in Job 28:8: this way of peace is not known by carnal men, nor the things of it discerned by natural men, though ever so sagacious; see Ro 3:17.

d “ad id alludit aquiae Graecum vocabulum” , Bochart. Hierozoic par. 1. l. 1. c. 9. col. 59. Broughton renders it “a kite”.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

7. There is a path The path no fowl (rather, bird of prey) hath known it, and the vulture’s eye hath not seen it.

The vulture The ayyah, Tristram supposes to have been the red kite; others, the vulture. So acute and farseeing is its vision, that the Talmud says, “It is in Babylon and seeth a carcass in the land of Israel.” The natural powers of the brute creation excited the astonishment of the ancients, even to the extent of adoration. On the outer cases of Egyptian mummies were painted with other figures those of the hawk or vulture. Mummied vultures remain to the present day. See PETTIGREW’S History of Mummies, chap. 14.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Job 28:7. There is a path which no fowl knoweth As for his path, the eagle knoweth it not: the eye of the vulture hath not pierced it. Heath.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Job 28:7 [There is] a path which no fowl knoweth, and which the vulture’s eye hath not seen:

Ver. 7. There is a path which no fowl knoweth ] That is, say some, those places where this gold lieth are so barren, as they bring forth nothing else but gold, nothing for fowls to feed upon, no, not discernible by the eye of the vulture, which excelleth in seeing afar off, and smelleth out his prey at a very great distance (Albert. Dionys. Aquin.). But men make their ways even here, to dig and find out gold, being herein more perspicacious and sagacious than the very vultures. The covetous would do well to consider, saith a good author, that for the most part those countries that are furnished with gold are destitute of better provision, both temporal and spiritual; that it lieth furthest from heaven, and the best of it in India, furthest from the Church; that though Adam had it in the first paradise, Gen 2:11-12 , yet in the second we shall not need it; but God shall be our gold, and we shall have plenty of that which is better than silver, Job 22:25 . That wise men have esteemed it as the stones of the streets, 2Ch 9:27 , and that the children of wisdom might not possess it in their purses, Mat 10:9 ; that wicked men have the most of it as their portion, Psa 17:14 , and that the devil danceth in rich and pleasant palaces, Isa 13:21-22 , &c.

And which the vulture’s eye hath not seen] Or, the kite’s eye, or the pie’s, or the chough’s, which yet is said to be sitiens auri, desirous of gold, and to hide it when she hath gotten it, though she can make no use of it. Some good interpreters by this path in the text understand the mines themselves, those underground places, as far underground as the fowls fly above ground; and that are by them and the most prey seeking beasts unknown and untrod; yet thither goeth the miners, by his skill and industry, letting in both light and vital air, Quem follibus arte mirifica e sublimi deducit, ut respirent artifices, et alantur lucernae, which with wonderful art he by bellows bringeth from above into those low holes, that the workmen may breathe, and the lights may be kept burning.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

a path: Job 28:21-23, Job 11:6, Job 38:19, Job 38:24, Rom 11:33

Reciprocal: Lev 11:13 – the eagle

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Job 28:7-8. There is a path which no fowl knoweth Namely, in the bowels of the earth. Man by his industry goeth in mines under the earth, in paths where neither bird nor beast has ever entered. Which the vultures eye hath not seen Whose eye is very quick and strong, and searches all places for its prey. The lions whelps Hebrew, , benei shachatz, the sons of the wild beast, have not trodden it The wildest beasts, who search for solitary places, have never made their den there, nor so much as approached it; nor the fierce lion passed by it Which rangeth all places for prey. The birds and beasts have often led men to such places as otherwise they should never have found out; but they could not lead them to these mines; the finding out of them is a special gift of God.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments