Job 20:3

3 I hear censure that insults me, and a spirit beyond my understanding answers me.

Job 20:3 Meaning and Commentary

Job 20:3

I have heard the check of my reproach
He took it that Job had reproached him and his friends, by representing them as hardhearted men, and persecuting him wrongly in a violent manner; and he had observed the "check" or reproof given for it, by bidding them beware of the sword, and lest the punishment of it should be inflicted on them; and if that should not be the case, yet there was a righteous judgment they could not escape. Now Zophar heard this, but could not hear it with patience; be could not bear that he and his friends should be insulted, as he thought, in this manner; and therefore it was he was in such baste to return an answer; though some F4 think he here pretends to a divine oracle, like that which Eliphaz makes mention of in the beginning of this dispute, ( Job 4:12 ) which he had from God, and from which he had heard the "correction [of his] reproach" F5, or a full confutation of the thing Job had reproached him with; and being thus divinely furnished, he thought it his duty to deliver it:

and the spirit of my understanding causeth me to answer;
or his rational spirit, his natural understanding, furnished him at once with an answer; he had such a clear insight into the controversy on foot, and such a full view of it, that he thought himself capable of speaking very particularly to the matter in hand, and to the conviction and confusion of Job; nay, his conscience, or the spirit of his conscience, as Mr. Broughton renders it, not only readily dictated to him what he should say, but obliged him to it; though some think he meant the Holy Spirit of God, by which he would be thought to be inspired; that he "out [of his] understanding" F6, enlightened by him, caused him to answer, or would answer for him, or supply him with matter sufficient to qualify him for it; and this he might observe to Job, in order to raise his attention to what he was about to say.


FOOTNOTES:

F4 Schmidt.
F5 (ytmlk rowm) "correctionem ignominiae meae", Pagninus, Montanus; so Schmidt, Michaelis.
F6 (ytnybm) "ex intelligentia mea", Junius & Tremellius, Piscator, Mercerus, Drusius, Schmidt, Michaelis.

Job 20:3 In-Context

1 Then Zophar the Naamathite answered:
2 "Pay attention! My thoughts urge me to answer, because of the agitation within me.
3 I hear censure that insults me, and a spirit beyond my understanding answers me.
4 Do you not know this from of old, ever since mortals were placed on earth,
5 that the exulting of the wicked is short, and the joy of the godless is but for a moment?
New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright 1989, Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.