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Job 5:1–7:21

Eliphaz’s Response Continues

5 “Call now, is there anyone answering you?

And to which of the holy ones will you turn?

For vexation will slay the fool,

and jealousy will kill the simple.

I have seen a fool taking root,

buta suddenly I cursed his dwelling.

His children are far from deliverance,

and they are crushed in the gate,

and there is no deliverer—

whose harvest the hungry eats,

and he takes it from behindb the thorns;

and the thirsty pants after their wealth.

Indeed,c mischief does not come from the dust,

and trouble does not sprout from the earth.

But a human being is born to trouble,

and they soar aloftd like sparks.e

“But I myselff will seek God,

and to God I would commit my cause.

He is doing great and unsearchableg things,

marvelous things without numberh

10 the one who is giving rain on the surface ofi the earth

and is sending water on the surface ofj the fields,

11 to set the lowly on high,

and those mourning are lifted to safety.

12 He is frustrating the devices of the crafty,

and their hands do not achieve success.

13 He is capturing the wise in their craftiness,

and the schemes of the wily are rushed.

14 In the daytime they meet with darkness,

and they grope at noonk as in the night.

15 Andl he saves from the sword ofm their mouth,

evenn the poor from the hand of the strong.

16 Soo there is hopep for the powerless,

and wickedness shuts its mouth.

17 “Look, happy is the human being whom God reproves;

and you must not despise the discipline of Shaddai,

18 for he himselfq wounds, butr he binds up;

he strikes, buts his hands heal.

19 Fromt six troubles he will deliver you,

and in seven evil shall not touch you.

20 In famine he will redeem you from death,

and in war from the power ofu the sword.

21 From the scourge of the tongue you shall be hidden,

and you shall not be afraid ofv destruction when it comes.

22 At destruction and faminew you shall laugh,

and you shall not fear the wild animals of the earth.

23 For your covenant will be with the stones of the field,

and the wild animalsx of the field will be at peace with you.

24 And you shall know that your tent is safe,

and you will inspect your fold, and you shall not be missing anything.

25 And you shall know that your offspring are many,

and your descendants like the vegetation of the earth.

26 You shall come in maturity to the grave,

as the raising up of a stack of sheaves in its season.

27 “Look, we have searched this out—it is true;

hear it and know it yourself.”y

Job’s Second Speech: A Response to Eliphaz

6 Thena Job answered and said,

“If only my vexation could be well weighed,

and my calamity could be lifted up together with it in the balances,

for then it would be heavier than the sand of the seas;

therefore my words have been rash,

for the arrows of Shaddai are in me;

my spirit drinks their poison;

the terrors of God are arrayed against me.

Does the wild ass bray over grass,

or the ox bellow over its fodder?

Can tasteless food be eaten withoutb salt,

or is there taste in the white of a marshmallow plant?

I refusedc to touch them;

they are like food that will make me ill.d

O thate my request may come,

and that God may grant my hope,

thatf God would decide thatg he would crush me,

that he would let loose his hand and kill me.h

10 Buti it will still be my consolation,

and I would recoil in unrelentingj pain,

for I have not denied the words of the Holy One.

11 What is my strength, that I should wait?

And what is my end, that I should hold out?k

12 Or is my strength like the strength of stones?

Or is my flesh bronze?

13 Indeed,l my help is not in me,

and any success is driven from me.

14 “Loyal lovem should come for the afflicted from his friend,

even ifn he forsakes the fear of Shaddai.

15 My companions are treacherous like a torrent-bed;

like a streambed of wadiso they flow away,

16 which are growing dark because of ice upon them,

it will pile up snow.

17 In time they dry up, they disappear;

when it is hot, they vanish from their place.

18 The paths of their way wind around;

they go up into the wasteland, and they perish.

19 The caravans of Tema looked;

the traveling merchants of Sheba hope for them.

20 They are disappointed, because they trusted;

they came herep and they are confounded.

21 “For now youq have become such;r

you see terrors, and you fear.

22 Is it because I have said, ‘Give to me,’

or,s ‘Offer a bribe for me from your wealth’?

23 or,t ‘Save me from the foe’s hand,’

or,u ‘Ransom me from the tyrants’ hand’?

24 Teach me, and I myselfv will be silent;

and make me understand how I have gone astray.

25 How painful are upright words!w

Butx what does your reproofy reprove?

26 Do you intend to reprove my wordsz

and consider the words of a desperate man as wind?

27 Even over the orphan you would cast the lot,

and you would bargain over your friend.

28 Thereforea be prepared, turn to me,

and I surely will not lie to your face.b

29 Please turn, let no injustice happen;

indeed,c turn, my righteousness is still intact.d

30 Is there injustice on my tongue?

Or can my palate not discern calamity?e

Job’s Second Speech: A Response to Eliphaz

7 “Does not a human beinga have hard serviceb on earth?

And are not hisc days like the days of a laborer?

Like a slave he longs for the shadow,

and like a laborer he waits for his wages.

So I had to inheritd months of worthlessness,

and nights of misery are apportioned to me.

When I lie down, I say,e ‘When shall I rise?’

Butf the night is long,

and I have my fill of tossing until dawn.

My body is clothed with maggots and clods of dust;

my skin hardens, theng it gives way again.

“My days are swifter than a weaver’s shuttle,

and they come to an end without hope.h

Remember that my life is a breath;

my eye will not return to see good.

The eye of the one seeing me will not see me;

your eyes are upon me, buti I will be gone.j

A cloud vanishes, and it goes away,

so he who goes down to Sheol will not come up.

10 He does not return again to his house,

and his place does not recognize him again.

11 “Evenk I will not restrain my mouth;

I will speak in my spirit’s anguish;

I will complain in my inner self’sl bitterness.

12 Am I the sea, or a sea monster,

that you set a guard over me?

13 When I say, ‘My bed will comfort me,

and my couchm will ease my complaint,’

14 thenn you terrify me with dreams,o

and with visions you terrifyp me.

15 Soq my inner selfr will chooses strangling—

death more than my existence.t

16 I loathe my life; I would not live forever;

depart from me, for my days are a breath.

17 “What is a human being that you make him great

and that you fix your mind on him,u

18 so thatv you visit him every morning,w

you test him every moment?x

19 How longy will you not turn away from me?

Or not leave me alone until I swallowz my spit?

20 If I have sinned, what have I done to you, watcher of humanity?

Why have you made me as a target for yourself,

so thata I have become a burden to myself?b

21 And why do you not pardon my transgression

and take away my guilt?

For now I shall lie in the dust,

and you will seek me, butc I will be no more.”d

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