Job 17:3-13

3 I am being honest, God. Accept my word. There is no one else to support what I say.
4 You have closed their minds to reason; don't let them triumph over me now.
5 In the old proverb someone betrays his friends for money, and his children suffer for it.
6 And now people use this proverb against me; they come and spit in my face.
7 My grief has almost made me blind; my arms and legs are as thin as shadows.
8 Those who claim to be honest are shocked, and they all condemn me as godless.
9 Those who claim to be respectable are more and more convinced they are right.
10 But if all of them came and stood before me, I would not find even one of them wise.
11 My days have passed; my plans have failed; my hope is gone.
12 But my friends say night is daylight; they say that light is near, but I know I remain in darkness.
13 My only hope is the world of the dead, where I will lie down to sleep in the dark.

Job 17:3-13 Meaning and Commentary

\\INTRODUCTION JOB 17\\

In this chapter Job not only enlarges upon the reason given in the
preceding chapter, why he was desirous of an advocate with God, and one
to plead his cause with him for him, Job 17:1; but adds other reasons
taken from the usage of his friends, from the impossibility of any but
a divine Person being his surety; and of anyone being provided and
appointed as such but by God himself; from the insufficiency of his
friends to judge of his cause, and from the condition and circumstances
he was in, Job 17:2-7; then he takes notice of the effects his present
case would have on good men, that though they might be astonished at
it, they would be filled with indignation against hypocrites, and would
not be moved and stumbled by his afflictions to apostatize from and
desert the good ways of God, Job 17:8,9; after which he addresses his
friends, and either calls upon them to renew the dispute with him, or
repent of their notions, and join with him in his sentiments,
Job 17:10; and lastly describes his state and circumstances, according
to his apprehension of things, observing the shortness of his life, and
the darkness of the dispensation he was under, through one thing and
another, Job 17:11,12; that he had nothing but the grave in view,
which, and its attendants, he had made very familiar with him,
Job 17:13,14; and that he had no hope of restoration to a better
condition, as to his outward circumstances, and that he, and his hopes
his friends would have him entertain, and they also, would go down
together to the grave, and there should lie in the dust, and rest
together till the morning of the resurrection, Job 17:15,16.

Footnotes 1

  • [a]. someone . . . suffer for it; [or] someone entertains his friends while his children go hungry.
Scripture taken from the Good News Translation - Second Edition, Copyright 1992 by American Bible Society. Used by Permission.