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Easy-to-Read Version

Job 39:29

From there it looks far into the distance, searching for its food.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

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

Dictionaries:

- Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Animals;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Eagle;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Birds;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Knowledge;   Nature;   World;   People's Dictionary of the Bible - Eagle;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Eagle;   The Jewish Encyclopedia - Vulture;  

Parallel Translations

Christian Standard Bible®
From there it searches for prey;its eyes penetrate the distance.
Hebrew Names Version
From there he spies out the prey. His eyes see it afar off.
King James Version
From thence she seeketh the prey, and her eyes behold afar off.
English Standard Version
From there he spies out the prey; his eyes behold it from far away.
New Century Version
From there it looks for its food; its eyes can see it from far away.
New English Translation
From there it spots its prey, its eyes gaze intently from a distance.
Amplified Bible
"From there he spies out the prey; His eyes see it from far away.
New American Standard Bible
"From there he tracks food; His eyes look at it from afar.
World English Bible
From there he spies out the prey. His eyes see it afar off.
Geneva Bible (1587)
From thence she spieth for meate, and her eyes beholde afarre off.
Legacy Standard Bible
From there he spies out food;His eyes see it from afar.
Berean Standard Bible
From there he spies out food; his eyes see it from afar.
Contemporary English Version
where they can look down to spot their next meal?
Complete Jewish Bible
From there it spots its prey, its eyes see it far off.
Darby Translation
From thence he spieth out the prey, his eyes look into the distance;
George Lamsa Translation
He is sustained by his prey, his eyes behold afar off.
Good News Translation
From there it watches near and far for something to kill and eat.
Lexham English Bible
From there it spies out the prey; its eyes look from far away.
Literal Translation
From there he seeks food; his eyes see afar off.
Miles Coverdale Bible (1535)
From thence maye he beholde his praye, and loke farre aboute with his eyes.
American Standard Version
From thence she spieth out the prey; Her eyes behold it afar off.
Bible in Basic English
From there he is watching for food; his eye sees it far off.
JPS Old Testament (1917)
From thence she spieth out the prey; her eyes behold it afar off.
King James Version (1611)
From thence she seeketh the pray, and her eyes behold a farre off.
Bishop's Bible (1568)
From whence he seeketh his praye, and loketh farre about with his eyes.
Brenton's Septuagint (LXX)
Thence he seeks food, his eyes observe from far.
English Revised Version
From thence she spieth out the prey; her eyes behold it afar off.
Wycliffe Bible (1395)
Fro thennus he biholdith mete, and hise iyen loken fro fer.
Update Bible Version
From there she spies out the prey; Her eyes watch it far off.
Webster's Bible Translation
From thence she seeketh the prey, [and] her eyes behold afar off.
New King James Version
From there it spies out the prey; Its eyes observe from afar.
New Living Translation
From there it hunts its prey, keeping watch with piercing eyes.
New Life Bible
From there he looks for his food. His eyes see it from far away.
New Revised Standard
From there it spies the prey; its eyes see it from far away.
J.B. Rotherham Emphasized Bible
From thence, he searcheth out food, far away, his eyes do pierce;
Douay-Rheims Bible
From thence she looketh for the prey, and her eyes behold afar off.
Revised Standard Version
Thence he spies out the prey; his eyes behold it afar off.
Young's Literal Translation
From thence he hath sought food, To a far off place his eyes look attentively,
New American Standard Bible (1995)
"From there he spies out food; His eyes see it from afar.

Contextual Overview

26 "Did you teach the hawk how to spread its wings and fly south? 27 Are you the one who told the eagle to fly high into the sky? Did you tell it to build its nest high in the mountains? 28 It lives high on a peak at the top of a cliff. That is its fortress. 29 From there it looks far into the distance, searching for its food. 30 The eagles gather around dead bodies, and their young eat the blood."

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

she: Job 9:26

her: The eagle is proverbial for her strong and clear sight.

Reciprocal: Luke 17:37 - wheresoever

Gill's Notes on the Bible

From thence she seeketh the prey,.... From the high rock; from whence she can look down into valleys, and even into the sea; and spy what is for her purpose, and descend and seize upon them; as lambs, fawns, geese, shellfish, c. though they may lie in the most hidden and secret places. Wherefore in the original text it is, "she diggeth the prey or food" s as treasure hid in secret is dug or diligently searched for; and for which she is qualified by the sharpness of her sight, as follows:

[and] her eyes behold afar off; from the high rocks and higher clouds, even from the high sky, as Aelianus t expresses it; and who observes that she is the most sharp sighted of all birds; and so, Homer u says, some affirm.

s חפר אכל "fodit escam"; Montanus, Mercerus. t De Animal. l. 2. c. 26. & l. 1. c. 42. Aristot. & Plin. ut supra. (Aristot. Hist. Animal. l. 9. c. 32. Nat. Hist. l. 10. c. 3.) u Iliad. 17. v. 674, 675. so Diodor. Sic. l. 3. p. 145.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

From, thence she seeketh the prey, and her eyes behold afar off - “When far aloft, and no longer discernible by the human eye, such is the wonderful acuteness of its sight, that from the same elevation it will mark a hare, or even a smaller animal, and dart down on it with unerring aim.” “Edin. Ency.” “Of all animals, the eagle has the quickest eye; but his sense of smelling is far inferior to that of the vulture. He never pursues, therefore, but in sight.” “Goldsmith.” This power of sight was early known, and is celebrated by the ancients. Thus, Homer, r’ - . verse 674.

- ὥστ ̓ ἀιετός ὄν ῥά τε φασὶν

Ὀξύσατον δέρκεσθαι ὑπουρανίων πετεηνῶν.

- hōst' aietos on ra te fasin

Oxusaton derkesthai hupouraniōn peteēnōn.

“As the eagle of whom it is said that it enjoys the keenest vision of

All the fowls under heaven.”

So Aelian, II. L. i. 32. Also Horace “Serm.” L. i. Sat. 3:

- tam cernit acutum

Quam aut aquila, aut serpeus Epidaurus.

The Arabic writers say that the eagle can see “four hundred parasangs.” “Damir,” as quoted by Scheutzer. It is now ascertained that birds of prey search out or discern their food rather by the sight than the smell. No sooner does a camel fall and die on the plains of Arabia, than there may be seen in the far-distant sky apparently a black speck, which is soon discovered to be a vulture hastening to its prey. From that vast distance the bird, invisible to human eye, has seen the prey stretched upon the sand and immediately commences toward it its rapid flight.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Job 39:29. Her eyes behold afar off. — The eagle was proverbial for her strong and clear sight. So Horace, lib. i., sat. iii., ver. 25: -

Cum tua pervideas oculis mala lippus inunctis,

Cur in amicorum vitas tam cernis acutum,

Quam aut aquila, aut serpens Epidaurius?

"For wherefore while you carelessly pass by

Your own worst vices with unheeding eye,

Why so sharp-sighted in another's fame,

Strong as an eagle's ken, or dragon's beam?"

FRANCIS.


So AElian, lib. i., cap. 42. And Homer, Iliad xvii., calls the eagle οξυτατον ὑπουρανιων πετεηνων, "The most quick-sighted of all fowls under heaven."


 
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