Job 6:5

5 A donkey is content when eating grass, and a cow is quiet when eating hay.

Job 6:5 Meaning and Commentary

Job 6:5

Doth the wild ass bray when he hath grass? or loweth the ox
over his fodder?
] No, they neither of them do, when the one is in a good pasture, and the other has a sufficiency of provender; but when they are in want of food, the one will bray, and the other will low, which are tones peculiar to those creatures, and express their mournful complaints; wherefore Job suggests, that should he make no moan and complaint in his sorrowful circumstances, he should be more stupid and senseless than those brute creatures: and he may have some respect to the different circumstances of himself and his friends; he himself, when he was in prosperity, made no complaints, as the wild ass brays not, and the ox lows not, when they have both food enough; but now, being in distress, he could not but utter his sorrow and trouble, as those creatures when in lack of food; and this may serve as an answer to his different conduct now and formerly, objected to him, ( Job 4:3-5 ) ; and so his friends; they lived in great tranquillity and prosperity, as Aben Ezra observes, and roared and grieved not, which doubtless they would, were they in the same circumstances he was; though it became them, as things were, to have uttered words of condolence to their friend in distress, instead of sharp reproofs and hard censures.

Job 6:5 In-Context

3 they would weigh more than the sands of the sea, so my wild words should not surprise you.
4 Almighty God has shot me with arrows, and their poison spreads through my body. God has lined up his terrors against me.
5 A donkey is content when eating grass, and a cow is quiet when eating hay.
6 But who can eat flat, unsalted food? What taste is there in the white of an egg?
7 I have no appetite for food like that, and everything I eat makes me sick.
Scripture taken from the Good News Translation - Second Edition, Copyright 1992 by American Bible Society. Used by Permission.