Lectionary Calendar
Tuesday, July 22nd, 2025
the Week of Proper 11 / Ordinary 16
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Read the Bible

Christian Standard Bible ®

Job 39:4

Their offspring are healthy and grow up in the open field.They leave and do not return.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - God;   Torrey's Topical Textbook - Hart, the;  

Dictionaries:

- Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Animals;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Knowledge;   Liking;   Nature;   World;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Like;  

Parallel Translations

Hebrew Names Version
Their young ones become strong. They grow up in the open field. They go forth, and don't return again.
King James Version
Their young ones are in good liking, they grow up with corn; they go forth, and return not unto them.
English Standard Version
Their young ones become strong; they grow up in the open; they go out and do not return to them.
New Century Version
Their young ones grow big and strong in the wild country. Then they leave their homes and do not return.
New English Translation
Their young grow strong, and grow up in the open; they go off, and do not return to them.
Amplified Bible
"Their young ones become strong, they grow up in the open field; They leave and do not return to them.
New American Standard Bible
"Their offspring become strong, they grow up in the open field; They leave and do not return to them.
World English Bible
Their young ones become strong. They grow up in the open field. They go forth, and don't return again.
Geneva Bible (1587)
Yet their yong waxe fatte, and growe vp with corne: they goe foorth and returne not vnto them.
Legacy Standard Bible
Their children become strong; they grow up in the open field;They leave and do not return to them.
Berean Standard Bible
Their young ones thrive and grow up in the open field; they leave and do not return.
Contemporary English Version
Soon their young grow strong and then leave to be on their own.
Complete Jewish Bible
Their young become strong, growing up in the open; they leave and never return.
Darby Translation
Their young ones become strong, they grow up in the open field, they go forth, and return not unto them.
Easy-to-Read Version
Their babies grow strong out in the wild. Then they leave their mothers and never come back.
George Lamsa Translation
They bring up their young ones, until they grow up and are weaned.
Good News Translation
In the wilds their young grow strong; they go away and don't come back.
Lexham English Bible
Their young ones grow strong; they grow up in the open; they go forth and do not return to them.
Literal Translation
Their sons are strong; they multiply with grain; they go forth and do not return to them.
Miles Coverdale Bible (1535)
How their yoge ones growe vp & waxe greate thorow good fedinge?
American Standard Version
Their young ones become strong, they grow up in the open field; They go forth, and return not again.
Bible in Basic English
Their young ones are strong, living in the open country; they go out and do not come back again.
JPS Old Testament (1917)
Their young ones wax strong, they grow up in the open field; they go forth, and return not again.
King James Version (1611)
Their yong ones are in good liking, they grow vp with corne: they go forth, and returne not vnto them.
Bishop's Bible (1568)
Yet their young ones grow vp, and waxe fatte through good feeding with corne: They go foorth, and returne not againe vnto them.
Brenton's Septuagint (LXX)
Their young will break forth; they will be multiplied with offspring: their young will go forth, and will not return to them.
English Revised Version
Their young ones are in good liking, they grow up in the open field; they go forth, and return not again,
Wycliffe Bible (1395)
Her calues ben departid, and goen to pasture; tho goen out, and turnen not ayen to `tho hyndis.
Update Bible Version
Their young ones become strong, they grow up in the open field; They go forth, and don't return again.
Webster's Bible Translation
Their young ones are in good liking, they grow up with corn; they go forth, and return not to them.
New King James Version
Their young ones are healthy, They grow strong with grain; They depart and do not return to them.
New Living Translation
Their young grow up in the open fields, then leave home and never return.
New Life Bible
Their young ones become strong. They grow up in the open field. They leave and do not return to them.
New Revised Standard
Their young ones become strong, they grow up in the open; they go forth, and do not return to them.
J.B. Rotherham Emphasized Bible
Their young become strong, they grow up in the open field, they go out, and return not unto them.
Douay-Rheims Bible
Their young are weaned and go to feed: they go forth, and return not to them.
Revised Standard Version
Their young ones become strong, they grow up in the open; they go forth, and do not return to them.
Young's Literal Translation
Safe are their young ones, They grow up in the field, they have gone out, And have not returned to them.
New American Standard Bible (1995)
"Their offspring become strong, they grow up in the open field; They leave and do not return to them.

Contextual Overview

1Do you know when mountain goats give birth? 2Can you count the months they are pregnantso you can know the time they give birth? 3They crouch down to give birth to their young;they deliver their newborn. 4Their offspring are healthy and grow up in the open field.They leave and do not return.5Who set the wild donkey free?Who released the swift donkey from its harness? 6I made the desert its home,and the salty wasteland its dwelling. 7It scoffs at the noise of the villageand never hears the shouts of a driver. 8It roams the mountains for its pastureland,searching for anything green. 9Would the wild ox be willing to serve you?Would it spend the night by your feeding trough? 10Can you hold the wild ox to a furrow by its harness?Will it plow the valleys behind you?

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

Reciprocal: Genesis 1:30 - General

Cross-References

Genesis 15:2
But Abram said, “Lord God, what can you give me, since I am childless and the heir of my house is Eliezer of Damascus?”
Genesis 18:3
and said, “My lord, if I have found favor with you, please do not go on past your servant.
Genesis 19:19
Your servant has indeed found favor with you, and you have shown me great kindness by saving my life. But I can’t run to the mountains; the disaster will overtake me, and I will die.
Genesis 24:2
Abraham said to his servant, the elder of his household who managed all he owned, “Place your hand under my thigh,
Genesis 32:5
I have oxen, donkeys, flocks, and male and female slaves. I have sent this message to inform my lord, in order to seek your favor.’”
Genesis 33:8
So Esau said, “What do you mean by this whole procession I met?”
Genesis 33:10
But Jacob said, “No, please! If I have found favor with you, take this gift from me. For indeed, I have seen your face, and it is like seeing God’s face, since you have accepted me.
Genesis 39:4
Joseph found favor with his master and became his personal attendant. Potiphar also put him in charge of his household and placed all that he owned under his authority.
Genesis 39:5
From the time that he put him in charge of his household and of all that he owned, the Lord blessed the Egyptian’s house because of Joseph. The Lord’s blessing was on all that he owned, in his house and in his fields.
Genesis 39:8
But he refused. “Look,” he said to his master’s wife, “with me here my master does not concern himself with anything in his house, and he has put all that he owns under my authority.

Gill's Notes on the Bible

Their young ones are in good liking,.... Plump, fat, and sleek, as fawns are:

they grow up with corn; by which they grow, or without in the field, as the word also signifies; and their growth and increase is very quick, as Aristotle observes l;

they go forth, and return not unto them: they go forth into the fields, and shift and provide for themselves, and trouble their dams no more; and return not to them, nor are they known by them.

l Ib. (Aristot. Hist. Animal.) l. 6. c. 29.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

Their young ones are in good liking - Hebrew “they are fat;” and hence, it means that they are strong and robust.

They grow up with corn - Herder, Gesenius, Noyes, Umbreit, and Rosenmuller render this, “in the wilderness,” or “field.” The proper and usual meaning of the word used here (בר bâr) is corn (grain); but in Chaldee it has the sense of open fields, or country. The same idea is found in the Arabic, and this sense seems to be required by the connection. The idea is not that they are nurtured with grain, which would require the care of man, but that they are nurtured under the direct eye of God far away from human dwellings, and even when they go away from their dam and return no more to the place of their birth. This is one of the instances, therefore, in which the connection seems to require us to adopt a signification that does not elsewhere occur in the Hebrew, but which is found in the cognate languages.

They go forth, and return not unto them - God guards and preserves them, even when they wander away from their dam, and are left helpless. Many of the young of animals require long attention from man, many are kept for a considerable period by the side of the mother, but the idea here seems to be, that the young of the wild goat and of the fawn are thrown early on the providence of God, and are protected by him alone. The particular care of Providence over these animals seems to be specified because there are no others that are exposed to so many dangers in their early life. “Every creature then is a formidable enemy. The eagle, the falcon, the osprey, the wolf, the dog, and all the rapacious animals of the cat kind, are in continual employment to find out their retreat. But what is more unnatural still, the stag himself is a professed enemy, and she, the hind, is obliged to use all her arts to conceal her young from him, as from the most dangerous of her pursuers.” “Goldsmith’s Nat. His.”

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Job 39:4. In good liking — After the fawns have sucked for some time, the dam leads them to the pastures, where they feed on different kinds of herbage; but not on corn, for they are not born before harvest-time in Arabia and Palestine, and the stag does not feed on corn, but on grass, moss, and the shoots of the fir, beech, and other trees: therefore the word bar, here translated corn, should be translated the open field or country. See Parkhurst. Their nurslings bound away. - Mr. Good. In a short time they become independent of the mother, leave her, and return no more. The spirit of the questions in these verses appears to be the following: - Understandest thou the cause of breeding of the mountain goats, &c.? Art thou acquainted with the course and progress of the parturition, and the manner in which the bones grow, and acquire solidity in the womb? See Mr. Good's observations.

Houbigant's version appears very correct: (Knowest thou) "how their young ones grow up, increase in the fields, and once departing, return to them no more?"


 
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