Leviathan in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
le-vi'-a-than (liwyathan (Job 41:1-34), from [~lawah, "to
fold"; compare Arabic
name of the wry neck, Iynx torquilla, abu-luwa, from kindred
lawa, "to bend"):
(1) The word "leviathan" also occurs in Isa 27:1, where it
is characterized as "the swift serpent .... the crooked
serpent"; in Ps 104:26, where a marine monster is indicated;
also in Ps 74:14 and Job 3:8. The description in Job 41 has
been thought by some to refer to the whale, but while the
whale suits better the expressions denoting great strength,
the words apply best on the whole to the crocodile.
Moreover, the whale is very seldom found in the
Mediterranean, while the crocodile is abundant in the Nile,
and has been known to occur in at least one river of Israel,
the Zarqa, North of Jaffa. For a discussion of the behemoth
and leviathan as mythical creatures, see EB, under the word
"Behemoth" and "Leviathan." The points in the description
which may well apply to the crocodile are the great
invulnerability, the strong and close scales, the limbs and
the teeth. It must be admitted that there are many
expressions which a modern scientist would not use with
reference to the crocodile, but the Book of Job is neither
modern nor scientific, but poetical and ancient.
(2) See ASTRONOMY, sec. II, 2, 5.
Alfred Ely Day
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