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Text -- Job 10:4-22 (NET)

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Context
Motivations of God
10:4 “Do you have eyes of flesh, or do you see as a human being sees? 10:5 Are your days like the days of a mortal, or your years like the years of a mortal, 10:6 that you must search out my iniquity, and inquire about my sin, 10:7 although you know that I am not guilty, and that there is no one who can deliver out of your hand?
Contradictions in God’s Dealings
10:8 “Your hands have shaped me and made me, but now you destroy me completely. 10:9 Remember that you have made me as with the clay; will you return me to dust? 10:10 Did you not pour me out like milk, and curdle me like cheese? 10:11 You clothed me with skin and flesh and knit me together with bones and sinews. 10:12 You gave me life and favor, and your intervention watched over my spirit. 10:13 “But these things you have concealed in your heart; I know that this is with you: 10:14 If I sinned, then you would watch me and you would not acquit me of my iniquity. 10:15 If I am guilty, woe to me, and if I am innocent, I cannot lift my head; I am full of shame, and satiated with my affliction. 10:16 If I lift myself up, you hunt me as a fierce lion, and again you display your power against me. 10:17 You bring new witnesses against me, and increase your anger against me; relief troops come against me.
An Appeal for Relief
10:18 “Why then did you bring me out from the womb? I should have died and no eye would have seen me! 10:19 I should have been as though I had never existed; I should have been carried right from the womb to the grave! 10:20 Are not my days few? Cease, then, and leave me alone, that I may find a little comfort, 10:21 before I depart, never to return, to the land of darkness and the deepest shadow, 10:22 to the land of utter darkness, like the deepest darkness, and the deepest shadow and disorder, where even the light is like darkness.”
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Dictionary Themes and Topics: Complaint | Job | Philosophy | God | Death | Life | POETRY, HEBREW | Blasphemy | DARKNESS | Cheese | Afflictions and Adversities | Colors | Food | Hunting | ESCHATOLOGY OF THE OLD TESTAMENT | Mankind | Hell | Wicked | SINEW | VISITATION | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 10:4 In this verse Job asks whether or not God is liable to making mistakes or errors of judgment. He wonders if God has no more insight than his friends h...

NET Notes: Job 10:5 The question Job asks concerns the mode of life and not just the length of it (see Job 7:1). Humans spend their days and years watching each other and...

NET Notes: Job 10:6 The imperfect verbs in this verse are best given modal nuances. Does God have such limitations that he must make such an investigation? H. H. Rowley o...

NET Notes: Job 10:7 The fact is that humans are the work of God’s hands. They are helpless in the hand of God. But it is also unworthy of God to afflict his people.

NET Notes: Job 10:8 Heb “together round about and you destroy me.” The second half of this verse is very difficult. Most commentators follow the LXX and conne...

NET Notes: Job 10:9 The text has a conjunction: “and to dust….”

NET Notes: Job 10:10 These verses figuratively describe the formation of the embryo in the womb.

NET Notes: Job 10:11 This verb is found only here (related nouns are common) and in the parallel passage of Ps 139:13. The word סָכַךְ ...

NET Notes: Job 10:12 The noun פְּקָָֻדּה (pÿquddah), originally translated “visitation,” actua...

NET Notes: Job 10:13 The contradiction between how God had provided for and cared for Job’s life and how he was now dealing with him could only be resolved by Job wi...

NET Notes: Job 10:15 The last clause is difficult to fit into the verse. It translates easily enough: “and see my affliction.” Many commentators follow the sug...

NET Notes: Job 10:16 The form is the Hitpael of פָּלָא (pala’, “to be wonderful; to be surpassing; to be extraordinary̶...

NET Notes: Job 10:17 The Hebrew simply says “changes and a host are with me.” The “changes and a host” is taken as a hendiadys, meaning relieving t...

NET Notes: Job 10:18 The two imperfect verbs in this section are used to stress regrets for something which did not happen (see GKC 317 §107.n).

NET Notes: Job 10:19 This means “If only I had never come into existence.”

NET Notes: Job 10:20 The verb בָּלַג (balag) in the Hiphil means “to have cheer [or joy]” (see 7:27; Ps 39:14). The cohorta...

NET Notes: Job 10:21 See Job 3:5.

NET Notes: Job 10:22 The verse multiplies images for the darkness in death. Several commentators omit “as darkness, deep darkness” (כְּמ...

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