Job Chapter 9 verse 13 Holy Bible

ASV Job 9:13

God will not withdraw his anger; The helpers of Rahab do stoop under him.
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BBE Job 9:13

God's wrath may not be turned back; the helpers of Rahab were bent down under him.
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DARBY Job 9:13

+God withdraweth not his anger; the proud helpers stoop under him:
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KJV Job 9:13

If God will not withdraw his anger, the proud helpers do stoop under him.
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WBT Job 9:13

If God will not withdraw his anger, the proud helpers do stoop under him.
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WEB Job 9:13

"God will not withdraw his anger; The helpers of Rahab stoop under him.
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YLT Job 9:13

God doth not turn back His anger, Under Him bowed have proud helpers.
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 13. - If God will not withdraw his anger, the proud helpers do stoop under him. There is no "if" in the original; and the passage is best taken categorically: "God does not withdraw his anger;" i.e. the anger which he feels against those who resist him. "The helpers of Rahab do stoop [or, 'are prostrate'] under him." Rahab in this passage, and also in Job 26:12, as well us in Isaiah 51:9, seems to be used as the proper name of some great power of evil Such a power was recognized in the mythology of Egypt, under the names of Set (or Typhon) and of Apophia, the great serpent, continually represented as pierced by Horus (Rawlinson's 'Herodotus,' vol. 2. p. 257; 'History of Ancient Egypt,' vol. 1. p. 395). In the earlier Aryan myths there is a similar personification of evil in Vitre, called Dasiya, "the Destroyer," and at perpetual enmity with Indra and Agni ('Religions of the Ancient World,' p. 114). The Babylonians and Assyrians had a tradition of a great "war in heaven" ('Records of the Past,' vol. 5. pp. 133-136). carried on by seven spirits, who were finally reduced to subjection. All these seem to be distorted reminiscences of that great conflict, whereof the only trustworthy account is the one contained in the Revelation of St. John, "There was war in heaven: Michael and his angels fought against the dragon; and the dragon fought and his angels" - the "helpers" of the present passage - "and prevailed not; neither was their place found any more in heaven" (Revelation 12:7, 8). Job, it seems, had inherited one of such traditions, one in which the power of evil was known as Rahab, "the Proud One;" and he means here to say that God not only holds men in subjection, but also beings much more powerful than man, as Rahab and his helpers, who had rebelled and made war on God, and been east down from heaven, and were now prostrate under God's feet.

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(13) Proud helpers.--Literally, helpers of Rahab. (See Isaiah 30:7; Psalm 87:4.) But whether Rahab was Egypt, or a poetical name for the lost archangel, it is impossible to say. If the former, then there is a probable allusion here to the overthrow of Pharaoh and his hosts; but we lack evidence to make it plain. The phrase is evidently used as expressing the very ideal of strength--the race of the giants.