Comentario sobre Job 39:36
Rashi on Job
mountain goats Estainboc in Old French. It hates its young, and, when preparing to give birth, goes to the top of a high rock, so that its young should fall to the earth and die. But the Holy One, blessed be He, prepares an eagle for it [the young], which receives it on its wings.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Malbim on Job
Like verse 25 in the previous chapter, this verse too was seen by the Talmudic Sages as proof of the 'fine-tuning' of Providence:
The wild goat is heartless towards her young. When she crouches for delivery, she goes to the top of a mountain so that the young shall fall down and be killed, and I [God] prepare an eagle to catch it in its wings and set it before her, and if he were one moment too soon or too late it would be killed...The hind has a narrow womb. When she crouches for delivery, I [God] prepare a serpent that bites her at the opening of the womb, and she is delivered of her offspring; and were it one moment too soon or too late, she would die (TB Baba Batra 16a-16b).
The wild goat is heartless towards her young. When she crouches for delivery, she goes to the top of a mountain so that the young shall fall down and be killed, and I [God] prepare an eagle to catch it in its wings and set it before her, and if he were one moment too soon or too late it would be killed...The hind has a narrow womb. When she crouches for delivery, I [God] prepare a serpent that bites her at the opening of the womb, and she is delivered of her offspring; and were it one moment too soon or too late, she would die (TB Baba Batra 16a-16b).
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
Do you wait for the hinds to calve? Heb. חלל, an expression of (Jer. 6:24), “pain (חיל) as of a woman in travail.” The hind’s womb is narrow, and the young cannot come forth; and, at the time of birth, I prepare a snake for her that bites her womb so that it opens; should it be a moment too early or too late, she would die immediately. I know to distinguish these moments, so should the distinction between Job (אִיוֹב) and enemy (אוֹיֵב) escape Me?
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
they bring forth Their womb splits open and gives forth the young, and their birth pangs...
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
they send forth from themselves in their birth at the moment that I prepare for them.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
and do not return to them When they have grown a little, they are raised on the grain, on seeds and grasses, and they do not require the raising of their father or mother.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
free For no man can raise a wild donkey to teach it the work of cattle.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
who loosed his bands so that the yoke of man is not upon him.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
He spies out the mountains for his pasture He personally spies out for himself a place of pasture.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
wild ox Heb. רֵים, like רְאֵם.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
serve you To serve you.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
to a furrow with his rope (Or did you tie a wild ox because of the furrow of your ox?) rope Heb. עבתו, a rope with which they tie [oxen] to the furrows of the plow.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
will he harrow, prepare the field.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
Will you rely on him to gather your grain because his strength is great and he can bear great burdens?
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
or will you leave your toil for him to gather into the house?
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
The wing of the renanim rejoices This is the name of a huge bird, called in the language of the Mishnah, Bar Yochni (Bechoroth 57b).
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Malbim on Job
Unlike other birds, the ostrich appears not to care for its young. Fleet of foot but unable to fly despite its bounteous plumage, it nests on the ground. It lays a large number of eggs most of which do not hatch, many being consumed by the chicks that emerge from the few that do. An odd bird, proverbially both stupid and heartless,31'...but the daughters of my people are cruel, like ostriches in the desert' (Lamentations 4:3) but it too is part of God’s grand design.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
the winged Heb. אֶבְרָה. Every bird is called אֶבְרָה because it flies; i.e., either the bird named “stork,” or the bird called nozah. Note her behavior.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
For she leaves her eggs on the ground and she goes and warms herself on the dust at a distance.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Malbim on Job
Storks can fly and nest high-up, safe from predators; ostriches cannot.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
She forgets that a foot will crack it Heb. תְּזוּרֶהָ [i.e., it will crack] her egg. [תְּזוּרֶהָ means:] will crack it.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
She is hardened She deals harshly with her young ones, [distancing them] from her heart as though they were not hers.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
her toil is in vain and she is not afraid to lose them.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
Like the time that she goes off on high [When she flies up, she scorns the horse. She is not afraid that he will tread on the eggs and crack them.] Every expression of הַמְרָאָה applies to a man whose heart prompts him to stray from his lifestyle, his upbringing, and his country, to roam in other countries and to try other lifestyles. Similarly (Deut. 21:18), “a stubborn and rebellious (וּמרֶה) son”; and in the language of the Talmud it is אִמְרָאִי: “Rav Zevid’s daughter-in-law rebelled (אִמְרָאִי) and went away” (Kethuboth 63b, Venice edition) (cf. Rashi to Hullin 58b, Baba Mezia 77a).
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Malbim on Job
Providence did not endow the ostrich with the instinct to nurture its young. Instead God determined that it should lay about thirty eggs so that even if some perish, a sufficient number will be left to perpetuate the species on Earth...However, the stork lays only a few eggs so they must be carefully tended.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
fierceness Heb. רעמה, an expression of thunder and fright, like (Ezek. 27:35), “Their faces are as though thunderstruck (רעמו).”
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Malbim on Job
God also created animals for man’s use. For example, the horse, man's accomplice and ally in that most singular of his activities - warfare.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
like a locust He skips and leaps like a locust and shakes himself all over.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
his snorting When he blows with his nostrils, it is with an awesome sound.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
They spy in the valley Heb. יחפרו, like (Deut. 1:22), “that they may spy out (ויחפרו) the land for us,” for it is the habit of the horsemen to lie in wait in the valleys and in the ravines.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
and rejoices with strength The horse rejoices and goes forth toward the weapons.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
and is not dismayed He will not be frightened.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
The quiver...rattles [i.e., the quiver that is] full of arrows, and they knock against each other so that their sound is heard.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
the blade of the spear An iron utensil (and an iron spear) is called לַהַב, as in (Jud. 3:22), “and the haft also went in after the blade (הלהב).”
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
he hollows out the ground Heb. יגמא. He makes holes (גומות) with his feet. Another explanation: יְגַמֶא is like (Gen. 24:17), “Let me please swallow (הגמיאיני).”
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
and he does not believe out of the great joy that he longs for battle.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
that it is the sound of a shofar of battle.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
To many shofaroth Heb. בדי, an expression of (Lev. 25:28), “sufficient (די) to get it back,” to many shofaroth.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
he says, ‘Hurrah!’ An expression that (the passersby) (the slaves—Berechiah) say when they are happy, much as they say, ‘Woe!’ out of pain.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
the hawk grows a wing Heb. יאבר, the hawk grows a wing. That is an angel resembling a hawk, who stays the severity of the south wind by spreading out his wings, lest it destroy the world.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
Or is it by your order that the eagle flies high [This refers to] the Shechinah, as it is said (Deut. 32:11): “As an eagle first stirs up its nest.” He would remove His court so that they should not injure Aaron when he entered the sanctuary on Yom Kippur.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
He dwells on the rock and lodges Aaron was confident when he placed the censer with the incense on the foundation stone [in the Holy of Holies].
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
From there he searches for food He would pray for the needs of the entire year, and after all this honor he saw the death of his two eaglets, Nadab and Abihu, who died so that My name might be sanctified through them, for My fear fell upon those who remained.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
gulp down Heb. יעלעו. Only according to the measure that one is able to swallow of blood or water, but it appears as if one swallows much, in imitation of the sound “al al.” Similarly, in the language of the Sages, concerning the suspected adulteress [who must] drink [the cursing water] (Sotah 20a), “they make her swallow (מערערין) and drink against her will.” [Here too, the sound “ar ar” is alluded to.] Similarly (Isa. 15:5), “a cry of destruction they shall raise (יעוערו),” the prophet using the onomatopoetic word in imitation of the sound produced by the throat.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Malbim on Job
To summarize. God has explained to Job how His Providence extends over every species: over their food, their reproduction, the nurture of their young and their habitats. How much more must it encompass man, the loftiest of all species; the one crowned with intelligence, created in the image of God.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on Job
and where there are slain, there he is to eat. Our Sages explain this entire passage as an allegory applying to Aaron, in the Pesikta to Acharei Moth (Pesikta Rabbathi, ch. 48, Meir Ayin edition, ch. 47).
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy