Job 15:2

2 Will a wise man give for answer a breath of wisdom? and does he fill up the pain of his belly,

Job 15:2 Meaning and Commentary

Job 15:2

Should a wise man utter vain knowledge
As Job had been thought to be, or as he himself thought he was, which he might say sarcastically; or as he really was, not worldly wise, nor merely wise in things natural, but in things divine; being one that had the fear of God, which is the beginning of wisdom, and wisdom itself; believed in Christ, and walked wisely and circumspectly before men; now it is not becoming such a man to utter vain knowledge, or such knowledge as is like the wind, or, as the Targum, windy knowledge; empty, not solid, nor satisfying, but swells and puffs up, and is knowledge falsely so called; but it does not appear that Job did utter such vain and fruitless things as deserved to be compared to the wind:

and fill his belly with the east wind;
which is noisy and blusterous, rapid and forcible, bearing all before it, and very infectious in hot countries; and such notions Job, according to Eliphaz, satisfied himself with, and endeavoured to insinuate them into others; which were nothing but great swelling words of vanity, and tended to subvert the faith of men, and overthrow all religion, and were very unwholesome, infectious, and ruinous to the minds of men, as suggested.

Job 15:2 In-Context

1 Then Eliphaz the Thaemanite answered and said,
2 Will a wise man give for answer a breath of wisdom? and does he fill up the pain of his belly,
3 reasoning with improper sayings, and with words wherein is no profit?
4 Hast not thou moreover cast off fear, and accomplished such words before the Lord?
5 Thou art guilty by the words of thy mouth, neither hast thou discerned the words of the mighty.

The Brenton translation of the Septuagint is in the public domain.