Job 21:7-17

7 "Why do the wicked go on living, grow old and keep increasing their power?
8 They see their children settled with them, their posterity assured.
9 Their houses are safe, with nothing to fear; God's rod is not on them.
10 Their bulls are fertile without fail, their cows get pregnant and don't miscarry.
11 They produce flocks of babies, and their children dance around.
12 They sing with tambourines and lyres and rejoice to the sound of the pipe.
13 They spend their days in prosperity and go down to the grave in peace.
14 "Yet to God they said, 'Leave us alone! We don't want to know about your ways.
15 What is Shaddai, that we should serve him? What do we gain if we pray to him?'
16 Isn't their prosperity already theirs? The plans of the wicked are far from me.
17 "How often is the lamp of the wicked put out? How often does their calamity come upon them? How often does [God] deal out pain in his anger,

Job 21:7-17 Meaning and Commentary

INTRODUCTION TO JOB 21

This chapter contains Job's reply to Zophar's preceding discourse, in which, after a preface exciting attention to what he was about to say, Job 21:1-6; he describes by various instances the prosperity of wicked men, even of the most impious and atheistical, and which continues with them as long as they live, contrary to what Zophar had asserted in Job 20:5, Job 21:7-15; as for himself, he disapproved of such wicked men as much as any, and owns that destruction comes upon them sooner or later, and on their posterity also, Job 21:16-21; but as God is a God of knowledge, and needs no instruction from any, and is a sovereign Being, he deals with men in different ways; some die in great ease, and peace, and prosperity, and others in bitterness and distress, but both are alike brought to the dust, Job 21:22-26; and whereas he was aware of their censures of him, and their objections to what he had said, he allows that the wicked are reserved to the day of destruction, which is future, and in the mean while lie in the grave, where all must follow; yet they are not repaid or rewarded in this life, that remains to be done in another world, Job 21:27-33; and concludes, that their consolation with respect to him was vain, and falsehood was in their answers, Job 21:34.

Complete Jewish Bible Copyright 1998 by David H. Stern. Published by Jewish New Testament Publications, Inc. All rights reserved. Used by permission.