Yahweh's second speech
Yahweh answers Job's challenge to divine justice by showing that only he possesses the majesty, wisdom, and moral authority to govern the world, humble the proud, and subdue what human beings cannot master. Job is thereby exposed as a creature who cannot indict the Creator or save himself, and the s
Commentary
40:6 Then the Lord answered Job from the whirlwind:
40:7 “Get ready for a difficult task like a man. I will question you and you will inform me!
40:8 Would you indeed annul my justice? Would you declare me guilty so that you might be right?
40:9 Do you have an arm as powerful as God’s, and can you thunder with a voice like his?
40:10 Adorn yourself, then, with majesty and excellency, and clothe yourself with glory and honor!
40:11 Scatter abroad the abundance of your anger. Look at every proud man and bring him low;
40:12 Look at every proud man and abase him; crush the wicked on the spot!
40:13 Hide them in the dust together, imprison them in the grave.
40:14 Then I myself will acknowledge to you that your own right hand can save you.
40:15 “Look now at Behemoth, which I made as I made you; it eats grass like the ox.
40:16 Look at its strength in its loins, and its power in the muscles of its belly.
40:17 It makes its tail stiff like a cedar, the sinews of its thighs are tightly wound.
40:18 Its bones are tubes of bronze, its limbs like bars of iron.
40:19 It ranks first among the works of God, the One who made it has furnished it with a sword.
40:20 For the hills bring it food, where all the wild animals play.
40:21 Under the lotus trees it lies, in the secrecy of the reeds and the marsh.
40:22 The lotus trees conceal it in their shadow; the poplars by the stream conceal it.
40:23 If the river rages, it is not disturbed, it is secure, though the Jordan should surge up to its mouth.
40:24 Can anyone catch it by its eyes, or pierce its nose with a snare?
41:1 (40:25) “Can you pull in Leviathan with a hook, and tie down its tongue with a rope?
41:2 Can you put a cord through its nose, or pierce its jaw with a hook?
41:3 Will it make numerous supplications to you, will it speak to you with tender words?
41:4 Will it make a pact with you, so you could take it as your slave for life?
41:5 Can you play with it, like a bird, or tie it on a leash for your girls?
41:6 Will partners bargain for it? Will they divide it up among the merchants?
41:7 Can you fill its hide with harpoons or its head with fishing spears?
41:8 If you lay your hand on it, you will remember the fight, and you will never do it again!
41:9 (41:1) See, his expectation is wrong, he is laid low even at the sight of it.
41:10 Is it not fierce when it is awakened? Who is he, then, who can stand before it?
41:11 (Who has confronted me that I should repay? Everything under heaven belongs to me!)
41:12 I will not keep silent about its limbs, and the extent of its might, and the grace of its arrangement.
41:13 Who can uncover its outer covering? Who can penetrate to the inside of its armor?
41:14 Who can open the doors of its mouth? Its teeth all around are fearsome.
41:15 Its back has rows of shields, shut up closely together as with a seal;
41:16 each one is so close to the next that no air can come between them.
41:17 They lock tightly together, one to the next; they cling together and cannot be separated.
41:18 Its snorting throws out flashes of light; its eyes are like the red glow of dawn.
41:19 Out of its mouth go flames, sparks of fire shoot forth!
41:20 Smoke streams from its nostrils as from a boiling pot over burning rushes.
41:21 Its breath sets coals ablaze and a flame shoots from its mouth.
41:22 Strength lodges in its neck, and despair runs before it.
41:23 The folds of its flesh are tightly joined; they are firm on it, immovable.
41:24 Its heart is hard as rock, hard as a lower millstone.
41:25 When it rises up, the mighty are terrified, at its thrashing about they withdraw.
41:26 Whoever strikes it with a sword will have no effect, nor with the spear, arrow, or dart.
41:27 It regards iron as straw and bronze as rotten wood.
41:28 Arrows do not make it flee; slingstones become like chaff to it.
41:29 A club is counted as a piece of straw; it laughs at the rattling of the lance.
41:30 Its underparts are the sharp points of potsherds, it leaves its mark in the mud like a threshing sledge.
41:31 It makes the deep boil like a cauldron and stirs up the sea like a pot of ointment,
41:32 It leaves a glistening wake behind it; one would think the deep had a head of white hair.
41:33 The likes of it is not on earth, a creature without fear.
41:34 It looks on every haughty being; it is king over all that are proud.” Job’s Confession
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.
Context notes
Continuation of Yahweh's reply from the whirlwind after Job's prior protest; the speech moves from direct moral challenge to the display of two untamable creatures, then prepares for Job's confession in the next chapter.
Historical setting and dynamics
In the wisdom setting of Job, the Lord answers a righteous sufferer who has pressed his case against divine governance. The whirlwind theophany frames the speech as a courtroom challenge and a revelation of Creator sovereignty. The argument assumes a world in which human rulers, warriors, and hunters can exert real power, but only the Creator can set the moral order, humble the proud, and master creatures that remain beyond human control. Behemoth and Leviathan are presented in highly stylized poetic terms: they most naturally evoke formidable real creatures while also drawing on wider chaos imagery, but the description is intentionally enlarged to stress that no creature escapes God's hand.
Central idea
Yahweh answers Job's challenge to divine justice by showing that only he possesses the majesty, wisdom, and moral authority to govern the world, humble the proud, and subdue what human beings cannot master. Job is thereby exposed as a creature who cannot indict the Creator or save himself, and the speech presses him toward humility before God's unmatched rule.
Context and flow
This unit is the climax of Yahweh's answer to Job after the long cycle of human speeches. It follows the first divine speech, in which Job was already overwhelmed by God's wisdom and power, and it leads directly to Job's final response and confession. The structure moves from direct rebuke (40:6-14) to two extended creature portraits (Behemoth and Leviathan), each reinforcing the same point: human beings cannot rival or govern God.
Exegetical analysis
The speech opens with a sharp judicial challenge: "Get ready like a man" summons Job to answer as one summoned before the court, not as one who can share divine prerogatives. The first issue is moral, not merely philosophical: would Job annul God's justice in order to vindicate himself? The questions in 40:9-14 are a reductio ad absurdum. If Job can display divine strength, thunder with divine voice, clothe himself with majesty, and execute judgment on the proud and wicked, then he may claim to save himself. The point is not that people should imitate God's unique judicial role, but that only God has the right and ability to govern the moral order.
Behemoth (40:15-24) and Leviathan (41:1-34) then function as massive demonstrations of creaturely power under God's hand. Behemoth is described as a creature God made, like Job, stressing common creatureliness, yet its strength and invulnerability exceed human control. The description may point to a real land animal, but the emphasis is poetic and nontechnical: untamable strength, not species identification.
Leviathan is developed more fully. The repeated questions about hooks, ropes, bargaining, and domestication mock the idea that a human can treat this creature like a fish, pet, or commodity. The fire and smoke language in 41:18-21 is stylized and hyperbolic, heightening terror rather than forcing literal zoological conclusions. The divine aside in 41:11 is the theological hinge: if no one can confront Leviathan as an equal, no one can confront the Creator as though he were answerable to human demands. The final line about Leviathan's relation to the proud is best read as reinforcing the defeat of haughty strength, whether by personifying the beast itself or by describing its dominance over arrogant beings. Either way, the unit's purpose is the same: to dismantle Job's presumption and leave him with humble submission before the Lord's wisdom and justice.
Covenantal and redemptive location
Job stands outside the explicit covenant history of Israel, but not outside the Creator's moral rule. This speech belongs to the wisdom tradition's probing of righteous suffering and divine justice within the created order. It reaches back to creation, before Sinai or David, and insists that God's right to govern the world does not depend on human approval. In the larger redemptive storyline, the passage prepares for later biblical answers that will preserve God's justice while also revealing His saving purposes more fully. Here, however, the emphasis remains on the Creator-creature distinction and the necessity of humble trust.
Theological significance
The passage reveals that God alone possesses exhaustive wisdom, moral authority, and uncontested power. Human beings may suffer without understanding, but they do not therefore gain the standing to indict God or to demand that He justify Himself. The text also presents chaos, danger, and proud strength as real but bounded realities under God's rule. Divine holiness is not a fragile ideal; it is expressed in God's right to judge, humble the arrogant, and govern what humans cannot tame.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No direct prophecy is present. Behemoth and Leviathan function as vivid poetic symbols of untamable strength and, by extension, chaos and pride under God's rule. Later Scripture reuses Leviathan imagery for God's victory over evil, but in Job the emphasis is not prediction; it is theological demonstration.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The speech uses courtroom language, honor-shame logic, and royal sovereignty imagery. It also draws on the ancient logic of hunting and taming: what is wild cannot be domesticated, purchased, or enlisted as a servant. The Leviathan imagery reflects a wider ancient Near Eastern awareness of sea-monster and chaos language, but Scripture here subordinates that cultural motif to the absolute supremacy of the Creator.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In the canon, this passage contributes to the biblical claim that the Lord alone rules creation, chaos, and death. Later texts such as Isaiah 27:1 will use Leviathan imagery for God's final judgment on evil, and the New Testament will present Christ as exercising divine authority over wind, sea, demons, and death itself. The passage does not directly predict Christ, but it strengthens the larger biblical witness that only God can finally master the forces that terrify humanity.
Practical and doctrinal implications
Believers should not confuse limited perspective with moral authority. The passage calls for humility before God's wisdom, patience under suffering, and repentance where we have accused God of injustice. It also strengthens confidence that no force of chaos, pride, or violence lies outside God's sovereign control. Pastoral use should lead sufferers away from self-justifying protest and toward reverent trust in the Lord who rules what they cannot.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment. The only practical note is the Hebrew/English verse division at the start of Leviathan's speech.
Interpretive cruxes
The main cruxes are the identity of Behemoth and Leviathan, the force of the fire-breathing imagery, and the final line about Leviathan's relation to the proud. The strongest reading is that the text refers to formidable real creatures or well-known creaturely archetypes and enlarges them poetically to display God's unmatched rule; the passage does not require a mythological demon reading or a precise zoological identification.
Application boundary note
Do not flatten this speech into a generic lesson that God is simply bigger than humans. Its specific target is Job's challenge to God's justice and humanity's inability to rule, judge, or tame creation as God does. Also avoid speculative end-times coding of Behemoth and Leviathan, demonology that exceeds the text, or direct one-to-one application to modern political symbols; the passage is primarily theological and poetic.
Key Hebrew terms
mishpat
Gloss: justice / judgment
In 40:8 Job is asked whether he would annul God's justice. The term anchors the speech in the issue of divine moral rule, not merely raw power.
zeroa
Gloss: arm, strength
The question about God's 'arm' in 40:9 contrasts creaturely weakness with the Lord's effective power to govern and judge.
ga'on
Gloss: majesty / pride
In 40:10 the speech ironically commands Job to clothe himself with divine majesty, exposing the absurdity of any human claim to God's prerogatives.
behemoth
Gloss: a great beast
Behemoth functions as a picture of immense, untamable creaturely power under God's creative hand. The exact identification is debated, so the poetic force should not be reduced to a single animal reference.
liwyatan
Gloss: Leviathan, sea monster
Leviathan represents a creature beyond human capture or control and likely also evokes chaos imagery. The passage uses it to magnify God's exclusive sovereignty.
Interpretive cautions
The imagery is intentionally compressed; avoid forcing precise zoological or symbolic identifications.