Commentaries:
Adam Clarke
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Job 31:26

If I beheld the sun when it shined - In this verse Job clears himself of that idolatrous worship which was the most ancient and most consistent with reason of any species of idolatry; viz., Sabaeism, the worship of the heavenly bodies; particularly the sun and moon, Jupiter and Venus, the two latter being the morning and evening stars, and the most resplendent of all the heavenly bodies, the sun and moon excepted. "Job," says Calmet, "points out three things here:

1.The worship of the sun and moon; much used in his time, and very anciently used in every part of the East; and in all probability that from which idolatry took its rise.

2.The custom of adoring the sun at its rising, and the moon at her change; a superstition which is mentioned in Ezekiel 8:16, and in every part of profane antiquity.

3.The custom of kissing the hand; the form of adoration, and token of sovereign respect." Adoration, or the religious act of kissing the hand, comes to us from the Latin; AD , to , and os, oris , the mouth. The hand lifted to the mouth, and there saluted by the lips.




Other Adam Clarke entries containing Job 31:26:

Genesis 1:3
Job 1:22
Job 31:40

 

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