Job 27:5-15

5 I will never admit you are in the right; till I die, I will not deny my integrity.
6 I will maintain my innocence and never let go of it; my conscience will not reproach me as long as I live.
7 “May my enemy be like the wicked, my adversary like the unjust!
8 For what hope have the godless when they are cut off, when God takes away their life?
9 Does God listen to their cry when distress comes upon them?
10 Will they find delight in the Almighty? Will they call on God at all times?
11 “I will teach you about the power of God; the ways of the Almighty I will not conceal.
12 You have all seen this yourselves. Why then this meaningless talk?
13 “Here is the fate God allots to the wicked, the heritage a ruthless man receives from the Almighty:
14 However many his children, their fate is the sword; his offspring will never have enough to eat.
15 The plague will bury those who survive him, and their widows will not weep for them.

Job 27:5-15 Meaning and Commentary

INTRODUCTION TO JOB 27

Though Job's friends were become silent, and dropped the controversy with him, he still continued his discourse in this and the four following chapters; in which he asserts his integrity; illustrates and confirms his former sentiments; gives further proof of his knowledge of things, natural and divine; takes notice of his former state of prosperity, and of his present distresses and afflictions, which came upon him, notwithstanding his piety, humanity, and beneficence, and his freedom from the grosser acts of sin, both with respect to God and men, all which he enlarges upon. In this chapter he gives his word and oath for it, that he would never belie himself, and own that he was an hypocrite, when he was not, but would continue to assert his integrity, and the righteousness of his cause, as long as he lived, Job 27:1-6; for to be an hypocrite, and to attempt to conceal his hypocrisy, would be of no advantage to him, either in life, or in death, Job 27:7-10; and was this his character and case, upon their principles, he could expect no other than to be a miserable man, as wicked men are, who have their blessings turned into curses, or taken away from them, and they removed out of the world in the most awful and terrible manner, and under manifest tokens of the wrath and displeasure of God, Job 27:11-23.

Cross References 17

  • 1. S Job 2:9; S Job 10:7; S Job 32:2; Job 13:15
  • 2. Job 29:14; Psalms 119:121; Psalms 132:9; Isaiah 59:17; Isaiah 61:10
  • 3. S Acts 23:1; Romans 2:15
  • 4. S Job 2:3; S Job 10:7; S Job 23:10; S Job 34:17
  • 5. S Job 8:22
  • 6. Job 31:35
  • 7. S Job 8:13
  • 8. S Numbers 16:22; S Job 8:22; S Job 11:20; Luke 12:20
  • 9. S Deuteronomy 1:45; S 1 Samuel 8:18; S Job 15:31; Job 35:12; Proverbs 1:28; Isaiah 1:15; Jeremiah 14:12; Micah 3:4
  • 10. S Job 22:26
  • 11. Job 36:23
  • 12. ver 13
  • 13. S Job 15:20; Job 16:19; S Job 20:29
  • 14. S Job 5:4
  • 15. Deuteronomy 28:41; S Job 15:22; S Lamentations 2:22; Hosea 9:13
  • 16. S Job 4:11; Job 20:10
  • 17. Psalms 78:64
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