This section contains Job's praise to God, emphasizing his belief in the big view of God controlling his world, although he cannot understand how his suffering can be part of God's good plan. God's authority covers even the dead people, which cannot hide from God (explained using three different terms for the dead: "shades/ghost" (verse 5a; cf. Proverbs 2:18; 9:18; Psalm 88:10), "Sheol" (verse 6a, "place of the dead") and "Abaddon" (verse 6b, "the place of destruction")). God also controls the mythological forces of chaos, such as "Rahab" (verse 12b; cf. Job 9:13) and the fleeing serpent (verse 13b), in anticipation of
YHWH's second speech (chapters 40–41). Job knows that his knowledge of God is so little (just the "outskirts" or like a "whisper" (verse 14).
Verse 14 :[Job said:]
"Behold, these are but the outskirts of his ways, ::
and how small a whisper do we hear of him! ::
But the thunder of his power who can understand?" • "The outskirts of his ways": in Hebrew literally "the ends of his ways", referring to "the fringes". • "How small a whisper": in Hebrew literally "how little is the word"; with "little" here meaning a "fraction" or an "echo". ==See also==