What is the meaning of Job 41:20? Smoke billows “Smoke billows …” (Job 41:20) • God pictures a visible cloud rolling out, an image of overwhelming force and mystery, much like the “smoke that went up” when the LORD descended on Sinai (Exodus 19:18) or when “smoke rose from His nostrils” as David sang of deliverance (Psalm 18:8). • For Job, the sight of smoke means something mighty is moving; it warns everyone nearby, just as smoke from Sodom alerted Abraham to devastating judgment (Genesis 19:28). • By opening with smoke, the Lord invites us to feel Leviathan’s menace before hearing a single roar. from his nostrils “… from his nostrils …” • Breath is life, yet in Scripture God sometimes turns breath into a sign of wrath—“Out of His nostrils came smoke” (2 Samuel 22:9). • Leviathan mirrors that picture. The creature exhales what seems to be furnace exhaust, underscoring why “no one is so fierce” as to stir him (Job 41:10). • The detail roots the description in the physical: a literal animal releasing vapor in great bursts. as from a boiling pot “… as from a boiling pot …” • Picture a cauldron at full boil—water rattling the lid, steam escaping every seam. That restless energy fits earlier verses that call Leviathan’s back “rows of shields” (Job 41:15) and his very presence a “king over all the proud” (41:34). • Jeremiah saw a “boiling pot” tipping toward Judah as an omen of invasion (Jeremiah 1:13); the same metaphor signals approaching danger here. • The Lord emphasizes that, like a cauldron, Leviathan’s fury cannot be contained by human effort. over burning reeds “… over burning reeds.” • Reeds ignite quickly and flare hot—an everyday furnace for ancient cooks. Psalm 118:12 compares hostile nations to such a blaze: they “were extinguished as quickly as burning thorns.” • When reeds feed a fire, thick smoke shoots upward. The imagery leaves no doubt: Leviathan’s exhalation is more than mist; it is scalding, suffocating vapor. • By linking the beast to this fiercely stoked fire, God demonstrates His own greater power: the Creator controls even the creature that breathes like a kiln (Job 41:11). summary Job 41:20 paints Leviathan as a living furnace—smoke pouring from nostrils as violently as steam from a boiling pot set on blazing reeds. Each phrase layers intensity: the rolling smoke warns of unstoppable strength, the nostrils personalize that power, the boiling pot illustrates relentless energy, and the burning reeds anchor the scene in fierce heat. The verse assures us that such a terrifying creature exists only under God’s sovereign rule, underscoring His unmatched authority and inviting us to trust the One who commands even the most formidable forces in creation. |