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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

LEB

About The Lexham English Bible

The Lexham English Bible contains a translation of the original languages into smooth, readable English. It also contains copious footnotes which address translation issues, instances of Old Testament quotations in the New Testament, and various textual-critical issues. This translation also indicates the use of idioms in the Greek and Hebrew text. In cases where a literal rendering of Greek or Hebrew would prevent a smooth English translation, footnotes indicate the literal English translation, accompanied by explanatory notes as necessary.

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