Job 6:29

29 respondete obsecro absque contentione et loquentes id quod iustum est iudicate

Job 6:29 Meaning and Commentary

Job 6:29

Return, I pray you
From the ill opinion you have of me, and from your hard censures, and entertain other sentiments concerning me: or it may be, upon these words of Job his friends might be rising up as usual to take their leave of him, and break off conversation with him; and therefore he entreats they would return to their seats, and resume the debate, and give a friendly hearing of his case:

let it not be iniquity;
either let it not be reckoned an iniquity to return and go on hearing his case; or he entreats that they would take care not to sin in their anger and resentment against him, nor go on to charge him with iniquity: or it may be rendered, "there is no iniquity" {h}; that is, it should be found that there was no such iniquity in him as he was charged with; not that he was free from all sin, which no man is, but from that which his friends judged he was guilty of, hypocrisy:

yea, return again;
he most earnestly importunes them to return and patiently hear him out:

my righteousness [is] in it;
in the whole of this affair before them, and which was the matter of controversy between them; meaning, not his justifying righteousness before God, but the righteousness of his cause before men; he doubted not but, when things were thoroughly searched into, that his righteousness would be as clear as the light, and his judgment as the noonday; that he should appear to be a righteous man, and his cause a just one; and should stand acquitted and free from all charges and imputations.


FOOTNOTES:

F8 (hlwe yht la) "non erit iniquitas", Beza, Mercerus; "nulla", Schultens.

Job 6:29 In-Context

27 super pupillum inruitis et subvertere nitimini amicum vestrum
28 verumtamen quod coepistis explete praebete aurem et videte an mentiar
29 respondete obsecro absque contentione et loquentes id quod iustum est iudicate
30 et non invenietis in lingua mea iniquitatem nec in faucibus meis stultitia personabit
The Latin Vulgate is in the public domain.