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Job

Chapter 4

Summary

Job Chapter 4 begins the first cycle of speeches, with Eliphaz the Temanite taking the lead. Although initially gentle, Eliphaz questions how Job, who once encouraged others in their trouble, can now be so overwhelmed. He presents his central argument: that the innocent never truly perish and only those who sow trouble reap it. Eliphaz also recounts a mysterious night vision he received, emphasizing the insignificance of mortal man before the holiness of God. His speech aims to bring Job to repentance but ignores the possibility of righteous suffering.

1

Then Eliphaz the Temanite replied:

2

"If someone ventures a word with you, will you be impatient? But who can keep from speaking?"

3

"Think how you have instructed many, how you have strengthened feeble hands."

4

"Your words have supported those who stumbled; you have strengthened faltering knees."

5

"But now trouble comes to you, and you are impatient; it strikes you, and you are dismayed."

6

"Should not your piety be your confidence and your blameless ways your hope?"

7

"Consider now: Who, being innocent, ever perished? Where were the upright ever destroyed?"

8

"As I have observed, those who plough evil and those who sow trouble reap it."

9

"At the breath of God they perish; at the blast of his anger they are consumed."

10

"The lions may roar and growl, yet the teeth of the great lions are broken."

11

"The old lion perishes for lack of prey, and the cubs of the lioness are scattered."

12

"A word was secretly brought to me, my ears caught a whisper of it."

13

"Amid disquieting visions in the night, when deep sleep falls on people,"

14

"fear and trembling seized me and made all my bones shake."

15

"A spirit glided past my face, and the hair on my body stood on end."

16

"It stopped, but I could not tell what it was. A form stood before my eyes, and I heard a hushed voice:"

17

"'Can a mortal be more righteous than God? Can a man be more pure than his Maker?"

18

"'If God places no trust in his servants, if he charges his angels with error,"

19

"'how much more those who live in houses of clay, whose foundations are in the dust, who are crushed more readily than a moth!"

20

"'Between dawn and dusk they are broken to pieces; unnoticed, they perish forever."

21

"'Are not the cords of their tent pulled up, so that they die without wisdom?'"