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39 Conosci tu il tempo in cui partoriscono le capre delle rocce o hai forse osservato il parto delle cerve?

Sai tu contare i mesi in cui portano a termine la loro gravidanza, o conosci tu il tempo in cui devono partorire?

Si accovacciano e danno alla luce i loro piccoli, mettendo cosí fine alle loro doglie.

I loro piccoli si fanno forti, crescono all'aperto, se ne vanno e non ritornano piú da esse.

Chi lascia andar libero l'onàgro, chi ha sciolto i legami all'asino selvatico,

al quale ho assegnato come dimora il deserto e la terra salata per abitazione?

Egli disprezza il frastuono della città e non ode grida di alcun padrone.

Le ampie distese di montagna sono il suo pascolo, e va in cerca di tutto ciò che è verde.

Il bufalo è forse disposto a servirti o a passare la notte presso la tua mangiatoia?

10 Puoi forse legare il bufalo con la corda per arare nel solco, o erpicherà le valli dietro a te?

11 Ti fiderai di lui, perché la sua forza è grande, o lascerai a lui il tuo lavoro

12 Conterai su di lui per portare a casa il tuo grano e per ammassarlo sull'aia?

13 Le ali dello struzzo sbattono festosamente, ma non sono certo le ali e le piume della cicogna.

14 Esso infatti abbandona le proprie uova per terra e le lascia riscaldare nella polvere,

15 dimenticando che un piede può schiacciarle o una bestia dei campi calpestarle.

16 Tratta duramente i suoi piccoli, come se non fossero suoi; ma la sua fatica senza alcun interesse è vana,

17 perché Dio la privato di sapienza e non gli ha impartito intelligenza.

18 Ma quando si alza in piedi per scappare, si beffa del cavallo e del suo cavaliere.

19 Sei tu che hai dato al cavallo la forza e che hai rivestito il suo collo con una fremente criniera?

20 Sei tu che lo fai saltare come una locusta? Il fiero suo nitrito incute spavento.

21 Scalpita nella valle rallegrandosi nella sua forza; e si slancia in mezzo alla mischia di armi.

22 Sprezza la paura e non teme, né indietreggia davanti alla spada.

23 Su di lui risuona la faretra, la folgorante lancia e il giavellotto.

24 Con ardore e impeto divora le distanze e non sta piú fermo quando suona la tromba.

25 Al primo squillo di tromba dice: "Aha!" e fiuta da lontano la battaglia, la voce tonante dei capitani e il grido di guerra.

26 E' forse per la tua intelligenza che si alza in volo lo sparviero e spiega le sue ali verso il sud?

27 E' al tuo comando che l'aquila si leva in alto e fa il suo nido nei luoghi elevati

28 Abita sulle rocce e rimane su rupi scoscese.

29 Da lassú spia la preda e i suoi occhi scrutano lontano.

30 I suoi piccoli succhiano sangue e dove sono gli uccisi, là essa si trova».

God continues to ask Job questions[a]

39 ‘Job, do you know that time when the goats on the mountains give birth?
    Do you watch the wild deer when their babies are born?
Can you count the number of months that these animals are pregnant?
    How long must they wait until they give birth?
They bend down low to the ground.
    They give birth to the babies that they have carried inside them.
The young animals grow
    and they become strong in the fields.
Then they leave their parents
    and they do not return to them.
Did you send out the wild donkeys
    to go wherever they want?
No! It was me who gave them the desert as their home.
    I let them live in places where the ground has salt.
They stay far away from the busy cities.
    They do not allow anyone to make them work.
Instead, they live on the hills,
    where they find fresh plants to eat.

Can you tell a wild ox to work for you?
    No! At night, it will not stay to feed at your farm.
10 It will not let you tie it to a plough.
    It will not agree to prepare your fields in the valleys.
11 A wild ox is very strong.
    But you cannot trust it to help you with your difficult work.
12 It will not help you to bring in your harvest of grain.
    It will not take the grain to your threshing floor.

13 When an ostrich is happy,
    it waves its wings.
But it cannot use its wings to fly,
    as a stork can do.
14 A mother ostrich leaves her eggs on the ground.
    She lets the sand cause them to be warm.
15 She does not realize that people or wild animals
    might break the eggs with their feet.
16 She does not take care of her babies,
    as if they did not belong to her.
She does not worry that all her work might be useless.
17 This is because I did not give wisdom to ostriches.
    I did not give them minds that understand things.
18 But when an ostrich begins to run,
    it can run very fast.
It can run faster than a horse
    and someone who rides on it.

19 Did you, Job, give horses their strength?
    Did you give them the long hair that they have on their necks?
20 You did not make horses able to jump like locusts.
    They frighten people when they blow air out through their noses.
21 They stamp their feet on the ground,
    as they prepare to go to a battle.
    They are ready to go and attack the enemy.
22 A horse is brave and it is not afraid of anything.
    It does not run away from the enemy's weapons.
23 The soldier who is riding it
    has his arrows ready at the horse's side.
Swords and spears shine brightly in the sun.
24 The horse shakes with joy
    as it runs to the battle.
When the battle trumpet makes its noise,
    the horse wants to run even faster![b]
25 When it hears the sound of the trumpet,
    it makes a happy noise.
From far away, it recognizes the smell of the battle.
    It hears the army officers as they shout their commands.

26 Was it your wisdom, Job, that taught hawks how to fly?
    No! You could not teach them to fly towards the south in winter.
27 Do eagles wait for your command
    to fly high into the sky?
No! You could not teach them how to build their nests
    high up in the mountains.
28 They live among the highest rocks.
    That is where they stay at night.
They are safe on the sharp rocks.
29 From the high rocks,
    eagles look for their food.
They see small animals far away,
    that they can catch and eat.
30 They come together around the bodies of dead animals.
    The young eagles drink the blood.’

Footnotes

  1. 39:1 God continues to ask Job questions. He knows that Job must answer ‘No’ to these questions. Job does not know everything about all the animals that God has made and how they live. God is showing Job that he, God, is the one who knows about all these things. So God knows what is good and right.
  2. 39:24 A soldier would make a noise with a trumpet when the battle was ready to start. Then all the soldiers would know that it was the time for them to attack their enemy.