Job 22:4

4 “Is it for your piety that he rebukes you and brings charges against you?

Job 22:4 in Other Translations

KJV
4 Will he reprove thee for fear of thee? will he enter with thee into judgment?
ESV
4 Is it for your fear of him that he reproves you and enters into judgment with you?
NLT
4 Is it because you’re so pious that he accuses you and brings judgment against you?
MSG
4 Do you think it's because he cares about your purity that he's disciplining you, putting you on the spot?
CSB
4 Does He correct you and take you to court because of your piety?

Job 22:4 Meaning and Commentary

Job 22:4

Will he reprove thee for fear of thee?
&c.] That is, chastise, correct, and afflict, for fear that hurt should be done unto him; no, he will not; for as the goodness of men does not profit him, the sinfulness of men does not hurt him, see ( Job 35:6 Job 35:8 ) . Kings and civil magistrates sometimes chastise offenders, not only to do justice to them, but through fear of them, lest, if spared or connived at, they should be hurtful to the state, and overturn it; but though sin is an act of hostility against God, and strikes at his being and government, yet he is in no fear of being ruined or dethroned, or of having his government taken out of his hands, and therefore does not chastise men on that account: or "for thy fear" F13, for thy fear of God, thy piety; or "for thy religion", as Mr. Broughton translates the word. Job had often suggested that good men, such that truly feared God, are afflicted by him, and therefore his own afflictions were no objection to his character, as a man that feared God, and eschewed evil, ( Job 1:1 ) ; and in this sense Eliphaz uses the word, ( Job 4:6 ) ; and here he intimates, as if, according to the notion of Job, that God afflicted him, and other good men, because they feared him, and which he observes, as a great absurdity; whereas, on the contrary, he chastised him for his sins, as ( Job 22:5 ) shows; but though God does not afflict men for their goodness, but for sins, yet they are only such that fear him, and whom he loves, that he chastises in a fatherly way, see ( Hebrews 12:6 Hebrews 12:7 ) ;

will he enter with thee into judgment?
that is, will he, in reverence to thee, out of respect to so great a person (speaking ironically), in condescension to one of so much consequence, will he regard thy request, so often made, as to come into judgment with thee, and to admit of thy cause being pleaded before him, and to give the hearing of it, and decide the affair in controversy? or rather, will he not plead against thee, and condemn thee for thy sins, as follow? in this sense it is to be deprecated, and not desired, see ( Psalms 143:2 ) .


FOOTNOTES:

F13 (Ktarymh) "an de religione tua", Junius & Tremellius; "ob timorem tuum", so some in Drusius; "num ob pietatem tuam", others in Michaelis.

Job 22:4 In-Context

2 “Can a man be of benefit to God? Can even a wise person benefit him?
3 What pleasure would it give the Almighty if you were righteous? What would he gain if your ways were blameless?
4 “Is it for your piety that he rebukes you and brings charges against you?
5 Is not your wickedness great? Are not your sins endless?
6 You demanded security from your relatives for no reason; you stripped people of their clothing, leaving them naked.

Cross References 1

  • 1. S Job 9:3; Job 14:3; Job 19:29; Psalms 143:2; Isaiah 3:14; Ezekiel 20:35
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