Job
Summary
Job Chapter 21 is Job’s direct challenge to the friends' theory of immediate divine retribution. He asks why the wicked often live long, grow old, and increase in power, while their children dance and their houses are at peace. Job observes that many wicked people die in full strength and prosperity, apparently without any divine judgement. He argues that the friends' comfort is nothing but "falsehood" because their basic premise does not match the observed reality of the world. This chapter marks a significant point where Job questions the very structure of the justice his friends are defending.
Then Job replied:
"Listen carefully to my words; let this be the comfort you give me."
"Bear with me while I speak, and after I have spoken, you may keep on mocking."
"Is my complaint directed to a mortal? Why should I not be impatient?"
"Look at me and be appalled; clap your hand over your mouth."
"When I think about this, I am terrified; trembling seizes my body."
"Why do the wicked live on, growing old and increasing in power?"
"They see their descendants established around them, their offspring before their eyes."
"Their homes are safe and free from fear; the rod of God is not on them."
"Their bulls never fail to breed; their cows calve and do not miscarry."
"They send forth their children as a flock; their little ones dance about."
"They sing to the music of timbrel and harp; they make merry at the sound of the pipe."
"They spend their years in prosperity and go down to the grave in peace."
"Yet they say to God, 'Leave us alone! We have no desire to know your ways."
"'Who is the Almighty, that we should serve him? What would we gain by praying to him?'"
"But their prosperity is not in their own hands. Far be from me the counsel of the wicked."
"Yet how often is the lamp of the wicked snuffed out? How often does calamity come upon them, the fate God allots in his anger?"
"How often are they like straw before the wind, like chaff swept away by a gale?"
"It is said, 'God stores up a man’s punishment for his children.' Let him repay the man himself, so that he will know it!"
"Let his own eyes see his destruction; let him drink the cup of the wrath of the Almighty."
"For what does he care about the family he leaves behind when his allotted months come to an end?"
"Can any one teach knowledge to God, since he judges even the highest?"
"One man dies in full vigour, completely secure and at ease,"
"his body well nourished and his bones rich with marrow."
"Another man dies in bitterness of soul, never having enjoyed anything good."
"Side by side they lie in the dust, and worms cover them both."
"I know very well what you are thinking, the schemes by which you would wrong me."
"You say, 'Where now is the nobleman’s house, the tents where the wicked dwelt?'"
"Have you never questioned those who travel? Have you paid no attention to their reports, "
"that the wicked man is spared from the day of calamity, that he is delivered from the day of wrath?"
"Who denounces his conduct to his face? Who repays him for what he has done?"
"He is carried to the grave, and a watch is kept over his tomb."
"The soil in the valley is sweet to him; everyone follows after him, and a countless throng goes before him."
"So how can you console me with such empty words? Your answers are nothing but falsehood!"