Job 41 (Part 4), Giants, Dragons, and the Days of Noah
When the Book of Giants meets the Dragon of Job
Hello brothers and sisters.
We’ve spent three posts establishing that Job 41 describes a dragon, that ancient translators understood it as such, and that cultures worldwide preserve similar memories. Now we come to the strangest— and perhaps most significant —part of our investigation.
Because the biblical tradition doesn’t just give us dragons. It gives us giants.
If you missed any of the first three posts, you can get caught up below:
According to some ancient sources, those two phenomena are directly connected.
Welcome to the world before the Flood, a world so strange that it took a global deluge to reset it. A world where, according to Scripture and ancient Jewish tradition, what we would call “the normal rules” didn’t apply. A world of Nephilim and megafauna, of giants and dragons, of genetic corruption and violence filling the earth.
If you think Job 41’s dragon is strange, wait until you see what Genesis 6 implies about the world that dragon inhabited.
If you’re reading this in email, be aware that the text is likely to cut off without warning. For a smoother reading experience and all the features Substack has to offer (including audio voiceovers of my posts), you can go HERE or download the app.
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Great! Let’s dig in.
The Scandal of Genesis 6:1-4
Let’s start with one of the most controversial passages in Scripture:
“When man began to multiply on the face of the land and daughters were born to them, the sons of God saw that the daughters of man were attractive. And they took as their wives any they chose. Then the LORD said, ‘My Spirit shall not abide in man forever, for he is flesh: his days shall be 120 years.’ The Nephilim were on the earth in those days, and also afterward, when the sons of God came in to the daughters of man and they bore children to them. These were the mighty men who were of old, the men of renown.” (Genesis 6:1-4)
This text has generated endless debate. Who are “the sons of God”? What are the “Nephilim”? What exactly happened here that warranted divine judgment and a fresh start for the human race?
Modern interpreters often try to soften this passage. The “sons of God,” they suggest, were simply the godly line of Seth intermarrying with the ungodly line of Cain. The Nephilim were just particularly tall or powerful men. Nothing supernatural here, just disobedience and corruption that eventually led to the Flood.
But that’s not how the ancient world understood this text. And it’s not what the text itself most naturally says.
Who Were the Sons of God?
The phrase “sons of God” (בְנֵי־הָאֱלֹהִים, benei ha-elohim) appears in only a few places in the Old Testament:
Job 1:6; 2:1; 38:7 - Where it clearly refers to angelic beings who present themselves before the LORD
Genesis 6:2, 4 - Our passage
Deuteronomy 32:8 (in some manuscripts) - “When the Most High gave to the nations their inheritance, when he divided mankind, he fixed the borders of the peoples according to the number of the sons of God”
In every clear usage, “sons of God” refers to angelic or spiritual beings, not human men. Job 38:7 says the “sons of God shouted for joy” at creation. These are clearly angels, since no humans existed yet.
The Septuagint translators understood this. In Genesis 6:2, they translated “sons of God” as ἄγγελοι τοῦ θεοῦ (angeloi tou theou) in some manuscripts, which literally means “angels of God.”
So we’re talking about spiritual beings— angels —who “came in to the daughters of men” and produced offspring. The text says this plainly. The ancient interpreters understood it plainly. Only later, as theological discomfort set in, did alternative interpretations arise.
The Nephilim: Giants in the Earth
The word נְפִילִים (Nephilim) appears only twice in Scripture—here in Genesis 6:4 and in Numbers 13:33, where the Israelite spies report seeing them in Canaan:
“And there we saw the Nephilim (the sons of Anak, who come from the Nephilim), and we seemed to ourselves like grasshoppers, and so we seemed to them.”
The word Nephilim is related to the Hebrew root נָפַל (naphal), meaning “to fall.” This has led to two interpretations:
“The fallen ones” - Those who fell from heaven (the angelic fathers)
“Those who make others fall” - Those who cause terror and destruction
Either way, the text explicitly connects them to the “sons of God” coming in to human women. The Nephilim are the offspring; hybrid beings, part angelic and part human.
The Septuagint consistently translates Nephilim as γίγαντες (gigantes): giants. Ancient Jewish and Christian interpreters universally understood these to be beings of enormous size and strength.
Numbers 13:33 confirms this: the spies felt like grasshoppers compared to them. Whatever the Nephilim were, they were terrifyingly large.
For a deeper exploration of Genesis 6:1-4, see my post below.
The Antediluvian World: A Different Order
Here’s what Genesis 6 is describing: a time when spiritual beings violated the boundaries of creation, intermixing with humanity and producing offspring that should never have existed. A time when genetic lines were corrupted. A time when “the earth was filled with violence” (Genesis 6:11).
This wasn’t just moral corruption. This was corruption of the created order itself. The phrase “all flesh had corrupted their way” (Genesis 6:12) may imply more than just moral evil. It may suggest genetic or biological corruption.
And here’s the crucial point: if the created order was corrupted before the Flood, that corruption would have extended beyond just humans. The megafauna of the antediluvian world— including creatures like Leviathan —existed in this corrupted environment.
Interestingly, according the the Book of Enoch the Nephilim then procreated with animals, birthing monstrous hybrid creatures. This has been interpreted as pointing to the Nephilim as the source of all monsters in the pre-flood era.
And this, ultimately, is why Noah is told to preserve “every kind” in the ark. God was resetting creation, preserving genetic lines, and starting fresh. But the implication is twofold: first, that Noah was chosen because his bloodline was uncorrupted by angelic influence (one interpretation of being “perfect in his generations”) that before the Flood, the world contained creatures and hybrid beings that God had not originally intended.
The Book of Giants: The Missing Link
Now we get to the really fascinating part. Among the Dead Sea Scrolls discovered at Qumran, archaeologists found fragments of a text called the Book of Giants. This text, dating to the 2nd century B.C. or earlier, expands dramatically on the Genesis 6 narrative.
The Book of Giants is essentially a prequel to the Flood story, telling what happened in those days when “the Nephilim were on the earth.”
What the Book of Giants Says
The fragmentary text describes:
The Watchers’ Descent: Angelic beings called “Watchers” (the גְרִיגוֹרִים, grigori, mentioned in Daniel 4:13, 17) descended to earth and took human wives, producing the giant offspring called Nephilim.
The Giants’ Corruption: These giants were not merely large humans. They were violent, voracious, and corrupt. They consumed all the acquisitions of humanity, and when humans could no longer sustain them, “the giants turned against them and devoured mankind” (from 1 Enoch 7:3-5, which preserves similar tradition).
The Giants’ Dreams: As judgment approached, several giants began having disturbing dreams warning of coming destruction. Two brothers named Ohyah and Hahyah had particularly vivid nightmares about the flood.
The Giants’ Battles: And here’s where it becomes directly relevant to our discussion of dragons. The fragmentary texts explicitly mention giants fighting dragons.
Giants Fighting Dragons
From the Book of Giants fragments:
“Ogias [Ohyah] fought with a draco, and so did Ohya; his enemy was the Leviathan.”
Let that sink in. An ancient Jewish text, predating Christianity, expanding on the Genesis 6 narrative, explicitly states that the giants fought with dragons. And specifically names Leviathan as one of them.
This isn’t later Christian mythology. This isn’t medieval invention. This is a 2nd-century B.C. (or earlier) Jewish text, found among the Dead Sea Scrolls, presenting as historical reality the idea that the antediluvian giants contended with dragons or dragon-like creatures.
The Book of Giants treats both the giants and the dragons as real beings that coexisted in the world before the Flood.
The Manichaean Version
The Book of Giants also survived in a later Manichaean version (from the 3rd-4th century A.D.), where it was adapted to fit Manichean theology. In this version, the names are changed— Ohyah and Hahyah become Sam and Nariman —but the core story remains, including references to the giants battling monsters.
The Manichaean version includes a complete ending, describing how angels led by Michael, Gabriel, Raphael, and Israel subdue the demons and their giant offspring in battle. But the crucial point is that this version also preserves the tradition of giants fighting against dragon-like creatures.
The Biblical Echoes
Once you know about the Book of Giants tradition, you start seeing echoes of it throughout Scripture:
Job 26:5-6: “The dead tremble under the waters and their inhabitants. Sheol is naked before God, and Abaddon has no covering.”
This passage about the underworld immediately precedes Job 26:13: “By his wind the heavens were made fair; his hand pierced the fleeing serpent.” The juxtaposition of references to the dead, the underworld, and the piercing of the serpent may preserve memory of antediluvian judgment.
Psalm 74:13-14: “You divided the sea by your might; you broke the heads of the sea monsters on the waters. You crushed the heads of Leviathan; you gave him as food for the creatures of the wilderness.”
God breaking the heads of Leviathan (plural “heads” suggests either multiple creatures or multiple heads on one creature) and giving them as food… but to whom? Perhaps to the “creatures of the wilderness,” or perhaps, as some ancient traditions suggest, to the people (or beings) who existed in those ancient times.
Ezekiel 32:27: Speaking of the mighty fallen warriors in Sheol: “And they do not lie with the mighty, the fallen from among the warriors of old, who went down to Sheol with their weapons of war, whose swords were laid under their heads, and whose iniquities are upon their bones; for the terror of the mighty men was in the land of the living.”
“The warriors of old” (gibborim me-olam): this same phrase appears in Genesis 6:4 to describe the Nephilim: “These were the mighty men who were of old, the men of renown.” Ezekiel seems to be referencing the same tradition of antediluvian giants.
The Post-Flood Survival
Here’s where it gets even more complex: Genesis 6:4 says “The Nephilim were on the earth in those days, and also afterward.”
Also. Afterward.
Somehow, giants survived the Flood or reappeared after it. This is why Moses encounters them in the Conquest:
Numbers 13:33: The spies see the Nephilim in Canaan.
Deuteronomy 2:10-11: “The Emim formerly lived there, a people great and many, and tall as the Anakim. Like the Anakim they are also counted as Rephaim.”
Deuteronomy 2:20-21: “That also is counted as a land of Rephaim. Rephaim formerly lived there... a people great and many, and tall as the Anakim.”
Deuteronomy 3:11: King Og of Bashan, whose bed was nine cubits long (about 13.5 feet), is specifically called “the remnant of the Rephaim.”
The Bible names multiple tribes of giants:
Nephilim (Genesis 6:4; Numbers 13:33)
Rephaim (Genesis 14:5; 15:20; Deuteronomy 2:11, 20; 3:11, 13)
Anakim (Numbers 13:33; Deuteronomy 2:10-11, 21; 9:2; Joshua 11:21-22)
Emim (Deuteronomy 2:10-11)
Zamzummim (Deuteronomy 2:20)
Goliath of Gath, at about nine feet tall (1 Samuel 17:4), came from a line of giants. His brothers are named: Ishbi-benob, Saph, and Lahmi, “whose spear shaft was like a weaver’s beam” (2 Samuel 21:18-22; 1 Chronicles 20:5-8).
If giants survived or reappeared after the Flood, is it not plausible that some of the megafauna— including dragon-like creatures —did as well?
The Days of Noah and the Days of the Son of Man
Jesus Himself referenced this antediluvian period:
“For as were the days of Noah, so will be the coming of the Son of Man. For as in those days before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day when Noah entered the ark, and they were unaware until the flood came and swept them all away, so will be the coming of the Son of Man.” (Matthew 24:37-39)
Jesus treats Noah and the Flood as literal history. He uses the phrase “the days of Noah” to describe a real historical period characterized by certain conditions. And He says those conditions will recur before His return.
What were those conditions? According to Genesis 6:
Spiritual beings violating created boundaries
Hybrid offspring (Nephilim)
Violence filling the earth
Corruption of all flesh
A world so corrupt that God determines to destroy it and start fresh
If the days of Noah included both giants and the creatures they fought— including dragons —then Jesus’ reference to those days takes on additional layers of meaning.
The Theological Framework
Let’s step back and see how all this fits together:
1. Creation (Genesis 1): God creates everything “according to its kind,” including the great sea creatures (tanninim) on Day Five. Leviathan is part of the original creation; good, but wild and powerful.
2. The Fall (Genesis 3): Sin enters through humanity. Creation itself comes under a curse. The serpent becomes the embodiment of evil, but this doesn’t mean all dragon-like creatures are demonic. It simply means that Satan can work through God’s creatures.
3. Antediluvian Corruption (Genesis 6): The “sons of God” violate boundaries, producing Nephilim. The created order is corrupted. Giants and megafauna coexist in a violent world. According to the Book of Giants tradition, they battle each other.
4. The Flood (Genesis 6-9): God judges the corrupted world. Only Noah’s family and pairs of animals are saved. This resets creation, preserving genetic lines but destroying the corruption.
5. Post-Flood World (Genesis 10+): Giants somehow reappear or survive. Some megafauna, including possibly dragon-like creatures, continue to exist but become increasingly rare. God’s covenant with Noah ensures no global flood again, but local judgments continue.
6. The Conquest (Joshua-Judges): Israel encounters and defeats the giant tribes. This is presented as finishing what the Flood started; removing the genetic corruption from the Promised Land.
7. Job’s World (Job 1-42): Job, probably living in the early post-Flood world (given his patriarchal lifespan and wealth structure), exists in a time when creatures like Behemoth and Leviathan still roam. God points to these creatures as examples of His creative power.
8. The Prophets (Isaiah 27:1, etc.): Later prophets use Leviathan symbolically to represent chaos, evil empires, and ultimately Satan himself. But the symbolic usage depends on the literal reality. You can’t effectively symbolize evil with a creature everyone knows is mythological.
9. The End Times (Revelation 12-13): Dragon imagery reappears as John describes Satan and his agents. The dragon cast out of heaven and the beast from the sea use the ancient imagery to describe spiritual realities. But again, the symbolism works because the imagery is rooted in remembered reality.
Evidence for Ancient Megafauna
The idea that enormous, now-extinct creatures coexisted with early humans isn’t scientifically problematic. In fact, it’s scientifically documented:
Dinosaurs and pterosaurs: We know enormous reptiles once existed. The standard evolutionary timeline places their extinction 65 million years before humans. But what if that timeline is wrong? What if humans and large reptiles overlapped in the relatively recent past?
Megafauna extinction: We know that massive creatures— mammoths, mastodons, giant sloths, cave bears, dire wolves, saber-tooth cats —lived until very recently (10,000-4,000 years ago by conventional dating). Many went extinct during or shortly after the Flood period on a young-earth timeline.
Dragon legends worldwide: As we explored in Part 3, cultures globally describe similar creatures. If these were all just invented folklore, why are they so consistent? The simpler explanation is that they’re based on real encounters. And according to Occam’s Razor (or The Principle of Parsimony), the simplest answer is usually the correct one. Trying to allegorize or explain away all the dragon stories creates more problems than it solves.
Historical accounts: Reports of dragon-like creatures appear in historical documents well into the medieval period. Marco Polo, Herodotus, and various other ancient historians mention them as real creatures, not myths.
Anatomical plausibility: Modern biochemistry has shown that creatures could theoretically produce combustible chemicals (the bombardier beetle does exactly this). Bioluminescence exists in many species. Extreme size existed in ancient creatures. The characteristics described in Job 41 are individually attested in nature, so who are we to say they couldn’t all be combined in one creature?
Why This Matters for Job 41
Understanding the Genesis 6 context transforms how we read Job 41:
It explains the detail: God isn’t waxing poetic about a metaphor. He’s describing a real creature from a real category of creatures that still existed in Job’s time.
It explains Job’s response: Job doesn’t say “God, that’s just mythology.” He’s humbled because he knows such creatures exist and knows he’s powerless against them.
It explains the rhetorical force: God’s argument— “If you can’t handle Leviathan, how can you challenge Me?” —only works if Leviathan is real.
It connects to judgment themes: Just as the Nephilim and their world were judged in the Flood, so God will judge all evil. Leviathan, which survived that judgment, will not survive the final one (Isaiah 27:1).
It validates ancient interpretation: The LXX translators calling it a dragon, the Book of Giants mentioning dragons, the consistency of global dragon traditions… all of this makes sense only if real creatures are being described.
The Megafauna Extinction Question
If dragons and giants both existed, why don’t we find their fossils everywhere? Why don’t they exist today?
Several factors explain this:
1. Rarity: Even in ancient times, these creatures appear to have been rare. Job 41 presents Leviathan as exceptional, not common. The Book of Giants suggests giants fought these creatures, which implies they were dangerous adversaries, not everyday animals.
2. Habitat: Large aquatic creatures, especially those dwelling in deep ocean or large lakes, rarely fossilize. Fossilization requires specific conditions that don’t typically occur in deep water.
3. Recent extinction: If these creatures survived until relatively recently (last 2,000-4,000 years), there hasn’t been time for fossilization. Most fossils form over much longer periods. And even if they did fossilize quickly (recent science has shown fossils can form over timespans as short as days under ideal conditions), the surface of the Earth has not dramatically changed since the Flood, ergo these fossils would likely be in the deep ocean where we are extremely unlikely to find them.
4. Hunting: Both human hunting and climate change following the Flood would have reduced populations of large creatures. Giants, if they survived the Flood, were systematically eliminated by Israel during the Conquest.
5. Reduced lifespans and size: This is highly conjectural, but bear with me. After the Flood, human lifespans decreased dramatically (from 900+ years to 120-70 years). Genesis 6:3 suggests this was a deliberate divine limitation. If the same environmental changes affected all life, megafauna may have gradually decreased in size and vigor, or remaining populations may have died out entirely.
The Scandal of Taking It Literally
Here’s the real challenge for modern readers: taking Genesis 6 and Job 41 literally requires accepting that:
Angels violated created boundaries by mating with humans
This produced hybrid offspring of enormous size
The antediluvian world contained both giants and megafauna
These included creatures we would call dragons
Giants and dragons fought each other
The Flood was necessary to reset the corrupted creation
Some of these elements survived or reappeared post-Flood
Creatures like Leviathan existed into historical times
The biblical text accurately describes all of this
That’s a lot to accept. It challenges naturalistic assumptions. It requires believing in supernatural intervention in human genetics. It means taking ancient texts at face value when modern scholarship has taught us to be skeptical.
But here’s the question: Is it more reasonable to dismiss all of this as primitive mythology— requiring that dozens of ancient cultures independently invented the same myths, that biblical authors wrote fiction while claiming history, and that Jesus Himself referenced fictional events as if they were real —or to accept that the ancient world was stranger and more wondrous than we’ve been taught to believe?
The Choice Before Us
We have two options:
Option 1: Rationalize or Allegorize
Genesis 6 is poetic or mythological
The Nephilim were just tall humans or tribal chiefs
Job 41 is exaggerated poetry about a crocodile or metaphor for chaos
Ancient dragon traditions are universal psychological archetypes
The Book of Giants is entertaining fiction
Everyone in the ancient world was mistaken about megafauna
We modern skeptics know better than ancient eyewitnesses
Option 2: Take Seriously
Genesis 6 describes actual historical events
The Nephilim were literal hybrid giants
Job 41 describes a real dragon
Ancient dragon traditions are cultural memories
The Book of Giants preserves authentic traditions
The antediluvian world contained both giants and megafauna
Ancient people accurately described what they encountered
I’m not telling you which option to choose. I’m simply laying out what each requires you to believe.
But I will say this: the text of Scripture, consistently interpreted by ancient readers, supported by cross-cultural traditions, and attested in extrabiblical Jewish sources, all points in one direction.
Maybe— just maybe —the days of Noah really were days when giants walked the earth and dragons ruled the seas.
Maybe Job 41 describes exactly what it appears to describe.
Maybe God was showing Job a creature so fearsome, so powerful, so utterly beyond human ability to control, that it still served as an object lesson in divine sovereignty.
And maybe, when we dismiss all of this as mythology, we’re not being more sophisticated than ancient people. Perhaps we’re just being less willing to accept that God’s creation is far stranger and more wonderful than our naturalistic assumptions allow.
The Dragon in Context
Over these four parts, we’ve journeyed from Job 41’s detailed description to ancient translations, from global dragon traditions to the strange world of Genesis 6. What have we found?
We’ve found consistency: The biblical text, ancient translations, Jewish traditions, and global cultural memories all point to the same conclusion; creatures we call dragons existed and were encountered by ancient peoples.
We’ve found context: The Leviathan of Job 41 makes sense when placed in the larger biblical narrative of creation, corruption, judgment, and restoration. It’s not an isolated oddity but part of a coherent worldview.
We’ve found courage: The ancient translators and interpreters weren’t embarrassed by dragons and giants. They read the text plainly, translated it faithfully, and passed on traditions about a world far stranger than ours.
We’ve found a challenge: We modern readers must decide whether to trust ancient testimony or modern assumptions, whether to read texts literally or explain them away, whether to accept that creation might include creatures beyond our current experience.
The dragon in Job 41 isn’t going away. It’s there in the text, described in remarkable detail over 34 verses. The ancient world understood what it was. Cultures worldwide remembered similar creatures. The question is: will we?
When God wanted to humble Job, He didn’t point to a metaphor. He pointed to a dragon.
And maybe— just maybe —that’s because dragons were real.
Final Note: This series has presented evidence for a literal reading of Job 41 and related passages. Faithful Christians disagree on these interpretations. Whatever view you hold on giants and dragons, the central truth remains: God is sovereign over all creation, nothing escapes His authority, and Job’s proper response— humble worship —is ours as well. Whether Leviathan was dragon or crocodile, whether Nephilim were giants or tyrants, the theological point stands firm: God alone is God, and we are called to trust Him even when we don’t understand His ways.
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Coming Up Next
Preparing for Christmas
We’ve been exploring some of the darker corners of Scripture lately; dragons, Leviathan, the cosmic battle between God and the forces of chaos. We’ve seen how Job 41 points us toward a greater reality: that God alone has power over the sea monster, that He alone can defeat the chaos that threatens creation, that He alone is worthy of our trust when the world seems overwhelming.
But here’s the question that’s been on my mind as we head deeper into Advent: Why did God wait so long to send the dragon-slayer?
From the moment sin entered the world in Genesis 3, when the serpent deceived Eve and plunged humanity into chaos, God promised a Redeemer. He promised that the seed of the woman would crush the serpent’s head. He promised Abraham that through his offspring all nations would be blessed. He promised David an eternal kingdom.
And then... silence. Centuries of waiting. Generations living under the weight of sin and death, crying out for deliverance, longing for the Messiah.
But God wasn’t silent. He was preparing.
Next week, we’re going to explore something I’ve been wanting to dig into for a long time: How did God prepare the world to receive the Messiah?
Specifically, we’re going to look at how the Septuagint laid the groundwork for the Gospel to spread to the ends of the earth.
When the apostles proclaimed Jesus as “the Christ,” they weren’t inventing a new title. They were declaring that the Christos (Χριστός, the Anointed One) that Greek-speaking Jews had been reading about in their Scriptures for centuries had finally arrived.
We’re going to explore:
What “Messiah” actually meant in the Hebrew Scriptures, and how it transformed when translated into Greek as “Christos”
How key messianic prophecies in the Septuagint pointed to Jesus with stunning clarity
Why the timing of the Septuagint’s creation— just as Greek became the universal language of the known world —was providential, not coincidental
What this tells us about God’s character and His faithfulness to His promises
This is important because Christmas isn’t just about a baby in a manger. It’s about the culmination of centuries of promises, prophecies, and preparation. It’s about God keeping His word. It’s about the dragon-slayer finally arriving to crush the serpent’s head once and for all.
And understanding how God prepared the world to receive His Son helps us understand why we celebrate Christmas and why it matters that we celebrate it at all.
We’re in Advent now, the season of waiting and anticipation. And I can’t think of a better way to prepare our hearts for Christmas than to explore the nature of the Messiah Himself; who He is, why He came, and how God orchestrated centuries of history to make sure the world would be ready to receive Him.
So next week, we’re diving deep into the messianic prophecies of the Septuagint. We’ll see how God gave the world the word “Christos” long before Jesus was born. We’ll see how prophecies like Isaiah 7:14, Psalm 22, and Isaiah 53 were preserved in Greek for the early church. And we’ll see how God’s long game— His patient, meticulous preparation —proves that Christmas wasn’t an afterthought. It was the plan all along.
I’m excited about this one. This is what Advent is for, preparing our hearts to celebrate the Messiah, the Anointed One, the dragon-slayer who came to rescue us from chaos, sin, and death.
See you next week.
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