Job 32:6

6 This is what Elihu, son of Barakel the Buzite, said: "I'm a young man, and you are all old and experienced. That's why I kept quiet and held back from joining the discussion.

Job 32:6 Meaning and Commentary

Job 32:6

And Elihu the son of Barachel the Buzite answered and said,
&c.] Since there was no answer in them, he takes upon him to give one himself; but first makes an apology on account of his youth:

I [am] young, and ye [are] very old;
or "few of days"; a few days, comparatively speaking, had he lived in the world; or "small", or "little as two days" F13; he had been but a little time in it, and so could be thought to have but little knowledge and experience; whereas they were old, even very old; with them were the aged and the grayheaded, ( Job 15:10 ) ; in whom it might have been expected was much wisdom and knowledge:

wherefore I was afraid, and durst not show mine opinion;
declare what knowledge he had of the things in dispute, lest it should appear mean, small, and contemptible; or give his sentiments concerning them, lest he should speak wrongly, and not only give offence, but do more harm than good: the first of these words, in the Arabic language F14, as Aben Ezra observes, signifies to go back; it is used of worms, which, through fear, withdraw themselves from men; so mean an opinion had he of himself, and such a sense of his own weakness, that it not only kept him back, but even caused him to draw back, and keep out of the dispute, and at a distance from it, instead of being forward to engage in it: one Jewish commentator F15 paraphrases it

``I humbled myself as one that goes on his belly;''

referring to worms that go low and creep upon their belly, or to the prostrate posture of men that humble themselves to their superiors.


FOOTNOTES:

F13 (Mymyl yna ryeu) "minimus ego diebus", Montanus; "parvus diebus sum", Mercerus.
F14 <arabic> "recessit suo loco", Castel. col. 1036.
F15 Sephorno.

Job 32:6 In-Context

4 Elihu had waited with Job while they spoke because they were all older than he.
5 But when he saw that the three other men had exhausted their arguments, he exploded with pent-up anger.
6 This is what Elihu, son of Barakel the Buzite, said: "I'm a young man, and you are all old and experienced. That's why I kept quiet and held back from joining the discussion.
7 I kept thinking, 'Experience will tell. The longer you live, the wiser you become.'
8 But I see I was wrong - it's God's Spirit in a person, the breath of the Almighty One, that makes wise human insight possible.
Published by permission. Originally published by NavPress in English as THE MESSAGE: The Bible in Contemporary Language copyright 2002 by Eugene Peterson. All rights reserved.