the Week of Proper 11 / Ordinary 16
Click here to join the effort!
Read the Bible
THE MESSAGE
Job 42:13
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- HolmanEncyclopedias:
- InternationalParallel Translations
He also had seven sons and three daughters.
He had also seven sons and three daughters.
He had also seven sons and three daughters.
He had also seven sons and three daughters.
Job also had seven sons and three daughters.
And he also had seven sons and three daughters.
He had seven sons and three daughters.
He also had seven sons and three daughters.
He had also seven sons and three daughters.
He had also seue sonnes, & three daughters.
He also had seven sons and three daughters.
And he also had seven sons and three daughters.
In addition to seven sons, Job had three daughters,
He also had seven sons and three daughters.
And he had seven sons and three daughters.
He also got seven sons and three daughters.
He also had seven sons and three daughters.
He was the father of seven sons and three daughters.
And he had seven sons and three daughters.
And he had seven sons and three daughters.
He had children also: vij. sonnes and iij. doughters.
He had also seven sons and three daughters.
And he had seven sons and three daughters.
He had also seven sons and three daughters.
He had also seuen sonnes, and three daughters.
He had seuen sonnes also, and three daughters.
And there were born to him seven sons and three daughters.
He had also seven sons and three daughters.
And he hadde seuene sones [Note: the formere sones and douytris weren in the weye of saluacioun, and so not deed outirly. ], and thre douytris;
He had also seven sons and three daughters.
He had also seven sons, and three daughters.
He also had seven sons and three daughters.
He also gave Job seven more sons and three more daughters.
He had seven sons and three daughters also.
He also had seven sons and three daughters.
And he came to have seven sons, and three daughters;
And he had seven sons, and three daughters.
He had also seven sons and three daughters.
And he hath seven sons and three daughters;
Let them praise the name of the LORD, For His name alone is exalted; His glory is above earth and heaven.
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
Job 1:2, Psalms 107:41, Psalms 127:3, Isaiah 49:20
Reciprocal: Job 5:25 - thy seed Job 8:7 - thy beginning Job 18:19 - neither Job 29:5 - my children
Cross-References
When Jacob learned that there was food in Egypt, he said to his sons, "Why do you sit around here and look at one another? I've heard that there is food in Egypt. Go down there and buy some so that we can survive and not starve to death."
Joseph was running the country; he was the one who gave out rations to all the people. When Joseph's brothers arrived, they treated him with honor, bowing to him. Joseph recognized them immediately, but treated them as strangers and spoke roughly to them. He said, "Where do you come from?" "From Canaan," they said. "We've come to buy food."
Joseph knew who they were, but they didn't know who he was.
They loaded their food supplies on their donkeys and set off.
When they stopped for the night, one of them opened his sack to get food for his donkey; there at the mouth of his bag was his money. He called out to his brothers, "My money has been returned; it's right here in my bag!" They were puzzled—and frightened. "What's God doing to us?"
When they got back to their father Jacob, back in the land of Canaan, they told him everything that had happened, saying, "The man who runs the country spoke to us roughly and accused us of being spies. We told him, ‘We are honest men and in no way spies. There were twelve of us brothers, sons of one father; one is gone and the youngest is with our father in Canaan.'
As they were emptying their food sacks, each man came on his purse of money. On seeing their money, they and their father were upset.
Their father said to them, "You're taking everything I've got! Joseph's gone, Simeon's gone, and now you want to take Benjamin. If you have your way, I'll be left with nothing."
But Jacob refused. "My son will not go down with you. His brother is dead and he is all I have left. If something bad happens to him on the road, you'll put my gray, sorrowing head in the grave."
They said, "The man pressed us hard, asking pointed questions about our family: ‘Is your father alive? Do you have another brother?' So we answered his questions. How did we know that he'd say, ‘Bring your brother here'?"
Gill's Notes on the Bible
He had also seven sons, and three daughters. The same number of children, and of the same sort he had before, Job 1:2; and according to Nachman the very same he had before, which the additional letter in the word "seven" is with him the notification of; so that the doubting of what he had before, Job 42:10; respects only his substance, and particularly his cattle; though the Targum says he had fourteen sons, and so Jarchi t; others think these may be said to be double to Job in their good qualities, external and internal, in their dispositions, virtues, and graces; and others, inasmuch as his former children were not lost, but lived with God, and would live for ever, they might now be said to be double; and so they consider this as a proof of the immortality of the soul, and of the resurrection of the body; but these senses are not to be trusted to; whether these children were by a former wife or another is uncertain.
t Vid. Balmes. Gram. Strat. 26.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
He had also seven sons and three daughters - The same number which he had before his trials. Nothing is said of his wife, or whether these children were, or were not, by a second marriage. The last mention that is made of his wife is in Job 19:17, where he says that âhis breath was strange to his wife, though he entreated her for the childrenâs sake of his own body.â The character of this woman does not appear to have been such as to have deserved further notice than the fact, that she contributed greatly to increase the calamities of her husband. It falls in with the design of the book to notice her only in this respect, and having done this, the sacred writer makes no further reference to her. The strong presumption is, that the second family of children was by a second marriage. See Prof. Lee on Job, p. 26. It would not, however, have fallen in with the usual manner in which âa wifeâ is mentioned in the Scriptures, to represent her removal as âin any circumstancesâ a felicitous event, and, as it could have been represented in no other light, if it had actually occurred, it is delicately passed over in silence. Even under all these circumstanccs - with a former wife who was impious and unfeeling; who served only to aggravate the woes of her holy and much afflicted husband; who saw him pass through his trials without sympathy and compassion - a second marriage is not mentioned as a desirable event, nor is it referred to as one of the grounds on which Job could felicitate himself on his return to prosperity. The children are mentioned; the whole reference to the second marriage relation, if it occurred, is delicately passed over. Under no circumstances would the sacred penman mention it as an event laying the ground for felicitation.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Job 42:13. Seven sons and three daughters. — This was the same number as before; and so the Vulgate, Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic read: but the Chaldee doubles the sons, "And he had fourteen sons, and three daughters."