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Job 4:1-11

Listen to Job 4:1-11

Eliphaz Speaks

1 Then Eliphaz the Temanite replied:
2 Should anyone try to speak with you when you are exhausted? Yet who can keep from speaking?
3 Look! You have instructed many and have strengthened weak hands.
4 Your words have steadied the one who was stumbling, and braced the knees that were buckling.[a]
5 But now that this has happened to you, you have become exhausted. It strikes[b] you, and you are dismayed.
6 Isn't your piety your confidence, and the integrity of your life[c] your hope?[d]
7 Consider: who has perished when he was innocent? Where have the honest been destroyed?[e]
8 In my experience, those who plow injustice and those who sow trouble reap the same.[f]
9 They perish at a [single] blast[g] from God and come to an end by the breath of His nostrils.[h]
10 The lion may roar and the fierce lion[i] growl, but the fangs of young lions are broken.[j]
11 The strong lion dies if [it catches] no prey, and the cubs of the lioness are scattered.[k]

Job 4:1-11 Meaning and Commentary

INTRODUCTION TO JOB 4

Job's sore afflictions, and his behaviour under them, laid the foundation of a dispute between him and his three friends, which begins in this chapter, and is carried on to the end of the thirty first; when Elihu starts up as a moderator between them, and the controversy is at last decided by God himself. Eliphaz first enters the list with Job, Job 4:1; introduces what he had to say in a preface, with some show of tenderness, friendship, and respect, Job 4:2; observes his former conduct in his prosperity, by instructing many, strengthening weak hands and feeble knees, and supporting stumbling and falling ones, Job 4:3,4; with what view all this is observed may be easily seen, since he immediately takes notice of his present behaviour, so different from the former, Job 4:5; and insults his profession of faith and hope in God, and fear of him, Job 4:6; and suggests that he was a bad man, and an hypocrite; and which he grounds upon this supposition, that no good man was ever destroyed by the Lord; for the truth of which he appeals to Job himself, Job 4:7; and confirms it by his own experience and observation, Job 4:8-11; and strengthens it by a vision he had in the night, in which the holiness and justice of God, and the mean and low condition of men, are declared, Job 4:12-21; and therefore it was wrong in Job to insinuate any injustice in God or in his providence, and a piece of weakness and folly to contend with him.

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Footnotes 11

  • [a] Jb 26:2; 29:21-23; Heb 12:12
  • [b] Jb 2:5; 3:25; 19:21
  • [c] Lit ways
  • [d] Jb 1:8; Gn 6:9; Ps 27:3
  • [e] Jb 8:20; Ps 37:25; 91:9-10
  • [f] Ps 7:15; Pr 22:8; Hs 8:7
  • [g] Jb 37:10; Isa 30:33
  • [h] Ex 15:8-10; 2 Th 2:8
  • [i] Jb 4:10; 10:16; Hs 5:14
  • [j] Ps 35:17; 58:6
  • [k] Jb 5:4; Ps 34:10
Holman Christian Standard Bible ® Copyright © 2003, 2002, 2000, 1999 by Holman Bible Publishers.  Used by permission.  All rights reserved.

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