The hymn to wisdom
Human beings can explore and exploit the depths of the earth, but wisdom is not добыted by skill, wealth, or effort. Only God knows wisdom’s place and nature, and he defines wisdom for mankind as reverent fear of the Lord and turning away from evil.
Commentary
28:1 “Surely there is a mine for silver, and a place where gold is refined.
28:2 Iron is taken from the ground, and rock is poured out as copper.
28:3 Man puts an end to the darkness; he searches the farthest recesses for the ore in the deepest darkness.
28:4 Far from where people live he sinks a shaft, in places travelers have long forgotten, far from other people he dangles and sways.
28:5 The earth, from which food comes, is overturned below as though by fire;
28:6 a place whose stones are sapphires and which contains dust of gold;
28:7 a hidden path no bird of prey knows – no falcon’s eye has spotted it.
28:8 Proud beasts have not set foot on it, and no lion has passed along it.
28:9 On the flinty rock man has set to work with his hand; he has overturned mountains at their bases.
28:10 He has cut out channels through the rocks; his eyes have spotted every precious thing.
28:11 He has searched the sources of the rivers and what was hidden he has brought into the light.
28:12 “But wisdom – where can it be found? Where is the place of understanding?
28:13 Mankind does not know its place; it cannot be found in the land of the living.
28:14 The deep says, ‘It is not with me.’ And the sea says, ‘It is not with me.’
28:15 Fine gold cannot be given in exchange for it, nor can its price be weighed out in silver.
28:16 It cannot be measured out for purchase with the gold of Ophir, with precious onyx or sapphires.
28:17 Neither gold nor crystal can be compared with it, nor can a vase of gold match its worth.
28:18 Of coral and jasper no mention will be made; the price of wisdom is more than pearls.
28:19 The topaz of Cush cannot be compared with it; it cannot be purchased with pure gold.
28:20 “But wisdom – where does it come from? Where is the place of understanding?
28:21 For it has been hidden from the eyes of every living creature, and from the birds of the sky it has been concealed.
28:22 Destruction and Death say, ‘With our ears we have heard a rumor about where it can be found.’
28:23 God understands the way to it, and he alone knows its place.
28:24 For he looks to the ends of the earth and observes everything under the heavens.
28:25 When he made the force of the wind and measured the waters with a gauge.
28:26 When he imposed a limit for the rain, and a path for the thunderstorm,
28:27 then he looked at wisdom and assessed its value; he established it and examined it closely.
28:28 And he said to mankind, ‘The fear of the Lord – that is wisdom, and to turn away from evil is understanding.’” IV. Job’s Concluding Soliloquy (29:1-31:40)
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Historical setting and dynamics
The poem assumes the real-world labor of ancient mining: shafts cut into rock, dangerous descent into darkness, and the pursuit of precious metals and stones in remote places. Those images would have vividly communicated human ingenuity and technological skill in the ancient Near East. The passage then uses that known sphere of mastery to show a sharper limit: people can uncover buried mineral wealth, but they cannot excavate wisdom as though it were a commodity hidden in the earth. The setting of Job’s speeches also matters: this is part of a sustained debate about suffering, justice, and divine governance, not a detached proverb collection.
Central idea
Human beings can explore and exploit the depths of the earth, but wisdom is not добыted by skill, wealth, or effort. Only God knows wisdom’s place and nature, and he defines wisdom for mankind as reverent fear of the Lord and turning away from evil.
Context and flow
Job 28 stands near the center of the book’s dialogue section and functions as a formal reflective pause after the debates over retribution and innocence. It follows Job’s exchanges with his friends and anticipates his final soliloquy in chapters 29–31. The unit moves in three stages: human mining skill (vv. 1–11), wisdom’s inaccessibility and inestimable value (vv. 12–22), and God’s exclusive knowledge and moral definition of wisdom (vv. 23–28).
Exegetical analysis
The poem is built on a deliberate contrast. In vv. 1–11 the poet catalogs human ability to locate and extract hidden mineral wealth. The repeated movement into darkness, remote places, and deep shafts underscores real ingenuity: humans can overturn mountains, cut through rock, and bring concealed things into the light. This is not sarcasm; it is a genuine acknowledgment of human skill under God’s providence.
That praise of human searching becomes the foil for the real question in vv. 12–22: where is wisdom found? The repeated interrogative and the refrain-like “it cannot be found” sharpen the point. Wisdom is not located by geography, not purchased by wealth, and not discovered by ordinary creaturely perception. The poetic catalog of gold, onyx, sapphires, pearls, and topaz functions rhetorically to strip wealth of any power to buy what matters most. The reference to the deep, the sea, Destruction, and Death personifies the farthest reaches of created reality; even there wisdom is not resident, though the realm of death has heard only a rumor of it. The effect is to magnify wisdom’s transcendence and human inability to master it.
In vv. 23–27 the poem grounds wisdom in God’s exclusive knowledge and creative rule. God alone “understands the way” to wisdom because he sees everything under heaven and established the natural order itself. The references to wind, waters, rain, and thunderstorm are not random nature poetry; they show that God’s governance of creation and his knowledge of wisdom belong together. He is not guessing about wisdom from outside creation. He is the one who made, measured, and ordered creation, and therefore wisdom is fully known to him.
Verse 28 gives the poem its climactic conclusion. “The fear of the Lord” is not a second-best substitute for true wisdom; it is wisdom. The parallel line, “to turn away from evil is understanding,” shows that wisdom is moral and covenantal in shape. The conclusion answers Job’s whole struggle by denying that wisdom is accessible through human mastery or speculation. Instead, wisdom is received as humble submission to God and expressed in repentance from evil. The line also links intellectual discernment with moral obedience: one cannot claim wisdom while refusing God’s moral claims.
Covenantal and redemptive location
Job 28 stands within the Old Testament wisdom tradition and speaks in broadly creation-based rather than narrowly covenantal terms, though its conclusion is fully compatible with Israel’s fear-of-the-Lord theology. The passage does not appeal to Sinai, sacrificial law, or land promise; instead it presents wisdom as the right human response to the Creator’s sovereign ordering of the world. Canonically, it anticipates later wisdom literature, especially Proverbs, where the fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom, and it prepares for the biblical pattern in which true knowledge of God is revealed rather than self-generated.
Theological significance
The passage teaches that God alone possesses exhaustive knowledge and that human beings are fundamentally limited creatures. It also insists that wisdom is moral before it is intellectual: reverence for God and turning from evil are inseparable from true understanding. Material wealth, technical skill, and experiential reach cannot secure what only God can define and give. The poem therefore rebukes pride, relativizes human accomplishment, and commends humble obedience as the proper posture before the Creator.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No major prophecy, typology, or symbol requires special comment in this unit. The mining imagery is illustrative, not typological. The climax about fear of the Lord is a wisdom summary rather than a direct prophecy, though it coheres with the broader canonical theme that true wisdom is found only in right relation to God.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The poem relies on ancient mining and wealth imagery that would have been immediately intelligible in the ancient Near East. It also uses vivid personification: the deep, the sea, Destruction, and Death speak as if they could testify about wisdom’s location. This is poetic rhetoric, not a claim that these powers possess independent knowledge. The final aphorism reflects a Hebrew wisdom pattern in which true insight is concrete and moral rather than merely abstract or speculative.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In its own setting, the passage defines wisdom as reverent submission to God and moral separation from evil. Within the canon, that line is taken up explicitly in Proverbs and implicitly throughout the wisdom books. Later biblical revelation shows that genuine wisdom is not merely a human achievement but a gift rooted in God’s self-disclosure; the New Testament ultimately presents Christ as the fullness of divine wisdom. That later development should not erase Job’s meaning, but it does show that the poem’s insistence on God as the source of wisdom fits the Bible’s larger redemptive trajectory.
Practical and doctrinal implications
Believers should not confuse expertise with wisdom. The passage calls for humility before God, caution about human claims to mastery, and moral seriousness in the pursuit of understanding. It also teaches that repentance is not peripheral to wisdom but part of it: to turn away from evil is understanding. For pastors and teachers, the unit warns against offering simplistic explanations for suffering and against treating theological knowledge as merely technical or academic.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main interpretive issue is the function of verse 28 as the poem’s climax. It is best read as the author’s intended conclusion to the whole unit, not as a detached proverb added without connection. A minor question is whether the poem is an independent wisdom composition within Job; regardless of compositional history, its canonical function here is clear and integral.
Application boundary note
Do not flatten the mining imagery into a general lesson about hard work, and do not treat the poem as if it promises that all mysteries of providence can be solved by human effort. The final definition of wisdom must be read within Job’s covenantal and literary setting: reverence before God, not vague spirituality, is the point. Also avoid using the verse to dismiss inquiry itself; the poem affirms human skill while limiting it.
Key Hebrew terms
chokmah
Gloss: wisdom
The key term of the poem. Here it is not mere intelligence or technical skill, but the true order of life as known by God and lived rightly before him.
binah
Gloss: understanding, discernment
Pairs with wisdom throughout the poem. It highlights practical discernment, not just abstract knowledge, and shows that wisdom has a moral and relational dimension.
yir'at Adonai
Gloss: reverent fear, awe
The poem’s conclusion defines wisdom theistically. Wisdom begins in humble reverence before God, not autonomous inquiry or mastery.
sur
Gloss: to turn aside, depart
The verb gives wisdom a moral shape: true understanding includes abandoning evil, not merely acquiring correct information.