Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Job 37:17
How thy garments [are] warm, when he quieteth the earth by the south [wind]?
17. how thy garments are warm ] Rather perhaps, thou Whose garments are warm, when the earth is still because of the south wind. Job 37:15 referred to the storm cloud; Job 37:16-17 refer rather to the sultry summer cloud. The words express how feeble man has no part in causing these wonders, but only passively feels the effect of them. “This sensation of dry, hot clothes is only experienced during the siroccos” (Thomson, Land and the Book). In reference to the stillness of the earth under such a wind, this writer says, “There is no living thing abroad to make a noise. The birds hide in thickest shades, the fowls pant under the walls with open mouth and drooping wings, the flocks and herds take shelter in caves and under great rocks, and the labourers retire from the fields and close the windows and doors of their houses. The very air is too weak and languid to stir the pendent leaves even of the tall poplars.”
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
How thy garments are warm – What is the reason that the garments which we wear produce warmth? This, it would seem, was one of the philosophical questions which were asked at that time, and which it was difficult to explain. Perhaps it has never occurred to most persons to ask this apparently simple question, and if the inquiry were proposed to them, plain as it seems to be, they would find it as difficult to give an answer as Elihu supposed it would be for Job. Of the fact here referred to that the garments became oppressive when a sultry wind came from the south, there could be no dispute. But what was the precise difficulty in explaining the fact, is not so clear. Some suppose that Elihu asks this question sarcastically, as meaning that Job could not explain the simplest matters and the plainest facts; but there is every reason to think that the question was proposed with entire seriousness, and that it was supposed to involve real difficulty. It seems probable that the difficulty was not so much to explain why the garments should become oppressive in a burning or sultry atmosphere, as to show how the heated air itself was produced It was difficult to explain why cold came out of the north Job 37:9; how the clouds were suspended, and the lightnings caused Job 37:11, Job 37:15-16; and it was not less difficult to show what produced uncomfortable heat when the storms from the north were allayed; when the earth became quiet, and when the breezes blowed from the south. This would be a fair question for investigation, and we may readily suppose that the causes then were not fully known.
When he quieteth the earth – When the piercing blast from the north dies away, and the wind comes round to the south, producing a more gentle, but a sultry air. It was true not only that the whirlwind came from the south Job 37:9, but also that the heated burning air came also from that quarter, Luk 12:55. We know the reason to be that the equatorial regions are warmer than those at the north, and especially that in the regions where Job lived the air becomes heated by passing over extended plains of sand, but there is no reason to suppose that this was fully understood at the time referred to here.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Verse 17. How thy garments are warm] What are warmth and cold? How difficult this question! Is heat incontestably a substance, and is cold none? I am afraid we are in the dark on both these subjects. The existence of caloric, as a substance, is supposed to be demonstrated. Much, satisfactorily, has been said on this subject; but is it yet beyond doubt? I fear not. But supposing this question to be set at rest, is it demonstrated that cold is only a quality, the mere absence of heat? If it be demonstrated that there is such a substance as caloric, is it equally certain that there is no such substance as frigoric? But how do our garments keep us warm? By preventing the too great dissipation of the natural heat. And why is it that certain substances, worked into clothing, keep us warmer than others? Because they are bad conductors of caloric. Some substances conduct off the caloric or natural heat from the body; others do not conduct it at all, or imperfectly; hence those keep us warmest which, being bad conductors of caloric, do not permit the natural heat to be thrown off. In these things we know but little, after endless cares, anxieties, and experiments!
But is the question yet satisfactorily answered, why the north wind brings cold, and the south wind heat? If it be so to my readers, it is not so to me; yet I know the reasons which are alleged.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
How and why thy garments keep thee warm; of which as there are some natural causes, so it is certain that they are not sufficient to do it without Gods blessing, as experience shows, Hag 1:6.
The earth, i.e. the air about the earth.
By the south wind; which though sometimes it brings tempests, Job 37:9, yet commonly it ushereth in hot weather, Luk 12:55, as the north wind brings cold, Job 37:9. Or, from the south wind, i.e. from the tempest, which was noted to come out of the south, Job 37:9. Heb. from or
by the south, i.e. by the suns coming into the southern parts, which makes the air quiet and warm.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
17. thy garments, &c.thatis, dost thou know how thy body grows warm, so as to affect thygarments with heat?
south windliterally,”region of the south.” “When He maketh still(and sultry) the earth (that is, the atmosphere) by (during) thesouth wind” (So 4:16).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
How thy garments [are] warm, when he quieteth the earth by the south [wind]?] One should think there is no great difficulty in accounting for this, that a man’s clothes should be warm, and he so hot as not to be able to bear them, but obliged to put them off in the summer season, when only the south wind blows, which brings heat, a serene sky, and fine weather, Lu 12:55; and yet there is something in the concourse of divine Providence attending these natural causes, and his blessing with them, without which the garment of a man will not be warm, or at least not warming to him, Hag 1:6; or
“how thy garments are warm when the land is still from the south,”
as Mr. Broughton renders the words; that is, how it is when the earth is still from the whirlwinds of the south; or when that wind does not blow which brings heat, but northerly winds in the winter time; that then a man’s garments should be warm, and keep him warm.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
17 Thou whose garments became hot,
When the land is sultry from the south:
18 Dost thou with Him spread out the sky,
The strong, as it were molten, mirror?
19 Let us know what we shall say to Him! –
We can arrange nothing by reason of darkness.
20 Shall it be told Him that I speak,
Or shall one wish to be destroyed?
Most expositors connect Job 37:17 with Job 37:16: (Dost thou know) how it comes to pass that … ; but after signifies quod , Exo 11:7, not quomodo , as it sometimes occurs in a comparing antecedent clause, instead of , Exo 14:13; Jer 33:22. We therefore translate: thou whose … , – connecting this, however, not with Job 37:16 (vid., e.g., Carey), but as Bolduc. and Ew., with Job 37:18 (where before is then the less missed): thou who, when the land (the part of the earth where thou art) keeps rest, i.e., in sultriness, when oppressive heat comes (on this Hiph. vid., Ges. 53, 2) from the south (i.e., by means of the currents of air which come thence, without signifying directly the south wind), – thou who, when this happens, canst endure so little, that on the contrary the heat from without becomes perceptible to thee through thy clothes: dost thou now and then with Him keep the sky spread out, which for firmness is like a molten mirror? Elsewhere the hemispheric firmament, which spans the earth with its sub-celestial waters, is likened to a clear sapphire Exo 24:10, a covering Psa 104:2, a gauze Isa 40:22; the comparison with a metallic mirror ( here not from , Job 37:10; Job 36:16, but from ) is therefore to be understood according to Petavius: Coelum areum dicitur non a naturae propria conditione, sed ab effectu, quod perinde aquas separet, ac si murus esset solidissimus . Also in lies the notion both of firmness and thinness; the primary notion (root ) is to beat, make thick, stipare (Arab. rq , to stop up in the sense of resarcire , e.g., to mend stockings), to make thick by pressure. The joined with is nota acc.; we must not comp. Job 8:8; Job 21:22, as well as Job 5:2; Job 19:3.
Therefore: As God is the only Creator (Job 9:8), so He is the all-provident Preserver of the world – make us know ( , according to the text of the Babylonians, Keri of ) what we shall say to Him, viz., in order to show that we can cope with Him! We cannot arrange, viz., anything whatever (to be explained according to , Job 32:14, comp. “to place,” Job 36:19), by reason of darkness, viz., the darkness of our understanding, ; is much the same as Job 23:17, but different from Job 17:12, and different from both passages, viz., as it is often used in the New Testament, of intellectual darkness (comp. Ecc 2:14; Isa 60:2). The meaning of Job 37:20 cannot now be mistaken, if, with Hirz., Hahn, and Schlottm., we call to mind Job 36:10 in connection with : can I, a short-sighted man, enshrouded in darkness, wish that what I have arrogantly said concerning and against Him may be told to God, or should one earnestly desire ( , a modal perf., as Job 35:15) that ( an jusserit s. dixerit quis ut ) he may be swallowed up, i.e., destroyed (comp. , Job 2:3)? He would, by challenging a recognition of his unbecoming arguing about God, desire a tribunal that would be destructive to himself.
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
(17) When he quieteth the earth.Or, When the earth is still.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
17. How . Some of the best critics link the three verses (16-18) in one continuous thought, and read Thou whose garments are warm, etc. Shall he who suffers from heat which he does not understand exalt himself to a joint makership of the vault of the skies? The Authorized Version is quite as satisfactory, with which Hitzig agrees. The oppressive, murky sultriness which immediately precedes the outburst of a heavy thunder-storm may have suggested the thought to Elihu.
When he quieteth the earth Or, according to some, “when the earth is quiet” or sultry. The experience of Dr. Thomson ( Land and Book, 2:312) furnishes a fit illustration: “The sirocco to-day is of the quiet kind. Pale lightnings played through the air like forked tongues of burnished steel, but there was no thunder and no wind. The heat, however, became intolerable, and I escaped from the burning highway into a dark vaulted room at the lower Bethhoron. This sensation of dry, hot clothes is only experienced during the siroccos, and on such a day, too, one understands the other effects mentioned by the prophet, (Isa 25:5,) bringing down the noise, and quieting the earth. There is no living thing abroad to make a noise. No one has energy enough to make a noise, and the very air is too weak and languid to stir the pendant leaves of the tall poplars.” Compare Isa 18:4.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Job 37:17 How thy garments [are] warm, when he quieteth the earth by the south [wind]?
Ver. 17. How thy garments are warm, when he, &c. ] Canst thou give a reason of the extreme heat that is about the summer solstice, when the warm south winds blow so gently, that they are scarce felt at all, and thy clothes heated by thy body are a burden to thee, so that thou art ready to cast them off, and, but for common honesty, thou couldst go naked? Brentius thinks, that although one of the winds only is here instanced, yet the disposing of them all is intended; wherein much of God may be seen; for it is he alone who holdeth them in his fist, hideth them in his treasures, sendeth them out as his posts, rideth upon them, as his chariot, 2Sa 22:10 Psa 104:3 , checks them at his pleasure (whence they concluded Christ’s Deity, Mat 8:27 ), makes them pace orderly, appointing them their motion, &c., Job 28:24-27 Nos motum sentimus, modum nescimus. Joh 3:8 , Thou hearest the sound of the wind, but knowest not whence it cometh, nor whither it goeth. Now if in these common matters men are so blind, how much more in the deep judgments of the Most High.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
he: Job 6:17, Job 38:31, Psa 147:18, Luk 12:55
Reciprocal: Ecc 1:6 – The wind Joh 3:8 – wind Act 27:13 – the south
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
37:17 How thy garments [are] {n} warm, when he quieteth the earth by the south [wind]?
(n) Why your clothes should keep you warm when the south wind blows rather than when any other wind blows?