Job 22

Job’s sins

1 Then Eliphaz from Teman answered:
2 Can a human being be useful to God? Can an intelligent person bring profit?
3 Does the Almighty delight in your innocence? Does he gain when you perfect your ways?
4 Does he rebuke you for your piety, bring you in for judgment?
5 Isn't your wickedness massive, your iniquity endless?
6 You have taken payments from your family for no reason; stripped the naked, leaving no clothes;
7 denied water to the thirsty, withheld bread from the starving.
8 (The powerful own land; the favored live in it.)
9 You have sent widows away empty; crushed orphans' resources.
10 For this reason, snares surround you; sudden dread brings panic to you
11 or a darkness that you can't see; rushing water will cover you.

God’s activity

12 Isn't God in the heights of heaven; see how high the topmost stars are?
13 You say: "What does God know? Can he judge through thick clouds?
14 Clouds conceal him so he can't see while he walks on heaven's rim."
15 Will you keep the ancient way traveled by sinful persons,
16 who were snatched prematurely when a river flooded their foundations,
17 who say to God, "Turn away from us; what can the Almighty do to us?"
18 Yet he filled their houses with good things; a sinner's logic is beyond me.
19 The righteous see and rejoice; the innocent mock them:
20 our enemies are certainly cut off; fire will devour what's left of them.

Turn to God

21 Get along well with God and be at peace; from this something good will come to you.
22 Receive instruction from his mouth; put his words in your mind.
23 If you return to the Almighty, you will be restored; if you keep wrongdoing out of your tent.
24 Lay your prized possession in the dust, your gold from Ophir on a rock in a desert streambed.
25 The Almighty will be your prized possession, silver piled up for you.
26 Then you will take pleasure in the Almighty; lift up your face to God.
27 You will pray to him, and he will hear you; you will fulfill your solemn promises.
28 If you decree something, it will stand; light will shine on your ways.
29 When they're humbled, you will say: "Cheer up; God will rescue the lowly.
30 He will deliver the guilty; they will be saved by your pure hands."

Job 22 Commentary

Chapter 22

Eliphaz shows that a man's goodness profits not God. (1-4) Job accused of oppression. (5-14) The world before the flood. (15-20) Eliphaz exhorts Job to repentance. (21-30)

Verses 1-4 Eliphaz considers that, because Job complained so much of his afflictions, he thought God was unjust in afflicting him; but Job was far from thinking so. What Eliphaz says, is unjustly applied to Job, but it is very true, that when God does us good it is not because he is indebted to us. Man's piety is no profit to God, no gain. The gains of religion to men are infinitely greater than the losses of it. God is a Sovereign, who gives no account of his conduct; but he is perfectly wise, just, faithful, good, and merciful. He approves the likeness of his own holiness, and delights in the fruits of his Spirit; he accepts the thankful services of the humble believer, while he rejects the proud claim of the self-confident.

Verses 5-14 Eliphaz brought heavy charges against Job, without reason for his accusations, except that Job was visited as he supposed God always visited every wicked man. He charges him with oppression, and that he did harm with his wealth and power in the time of his prosperity.

Verses 15-20 Eliphaz would have Job mark the old way that wicked men have trodden, and see what the end of their way was. It is good for us to mark it, that we may not walk therein. But if others are consumed, and we are not, instead of blaming them, and lifting up ourselves, as Eliphaz does here, we ought to be thankful to God, and take it for a warning.

Verses 21-30 The answer of Eliphaz wrongly implied that Job had hitherto not known God, and that prosperity in this life would follow his sincere conversion. The counsel Eliphaz here gives is good, though, as to Job, it was built upon a false supposition that he was a stranger and enemy to God. Let us beware of slandering our brethren; and if it be our lot to suffer in this manner, let us remember how Job was treated; yea, how Jesus was reviled, that we may be patient. Let us examine whether there may not be some colour for the slander, and walk watchfully, so as to be clear of all appearances of evil.

Footnotes 1

  • [a]. Heb Shaddai or Mountain One; also in 22:25 and 24:1

Chapter Summary

INTRODUCTION TO JOB 22

This chapter contains the third and last reply of Eliphaz to Job, in which he charges him with having too high an opinion of himself, of his holiness and righteousness, as if God was profited by it, and laid thereby under obligation to him, whereas he was not, Job 22:1-3; and as if he reproved and chastised him, because of his fear of him, whereas it was because of his sins, Job 22:4,5; an enumeration of which he gives, as of injustice, oppression, cruelty to the poor, and even of atheism and infidelity, for which snares and fears were around him, and various calamities, Job 22:6-14; and compares his way and course of life to that of the men of the old world, and the inhabitants of Sodom and Gomorrah, and suggests that his end would be like theirs, unless he repented, Job 22:15-20; and then concludes with an exhortation to him to return to God by repentance, and to reform, when he should see happy times again, and enjoy much outward and inward prosperity, and be an instrument of doing much good to many, Job 22:21-30.

Job 22 Commentaries

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