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Text -- Job 13:23-28 (NET)

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Context
13:23 How many are my iniquities and sins? Show me my transgression and my sin. 13:24 Why do you hide your face and regard me as your enemy? 13:25 Do you wish to torment a windblown leaf and chase after dry chaff? 13:26 For you write down bitter things against me and cause me to inherit the sins of my youth. 13:27 And you put my feet in the stocks and you watch all my movements; you put marks on the soles of my feet. 13:28 So I waste away like something rotten, like a garment eaten by moths.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: JOB, BOOK OF | Complaint | Reasoning | Job | HOW | Moth | Sin | Blasphemy | Stocks | JUSTICE | Life | Self-examination | Repentance | STRAW; STUBBLE | CONSUME | BITTER; BITTERNESS | LEPER; LEPROSY | PRINT; PRINTING; PRINTED | Leaf | STOCK | more
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Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 13:23 Job uses three words for sin here: “iniquities,” which means going astray, erring; “sins,” which means missing the mark or the...

NET Notes: Job 13:24 The anthropomorphism of “hide the face” indicates a withdrawal of favor and an outpouring of wrath (see Ps 30:7 [8]; Isa 54:8; Ps 27:9). S...

NET Notes: Job 13:25 The word קַשׁ (qash) means “chaff; stubble,” or a wisp of straw. It is found in Job 41:20-21 for that which is so ...

NET Notes: Job 13:26 Job acknowledges sins in his youth, but they are trifling compared to the suffering he now endures. Job thinks it unjust of God to persecute him now f...

NET Notes: Job 13:27 The verb תִּתְחַקֶּה (titkhaqqeh) is a Hitpael from the root חָק&#...

NET Notes: Job 13:28 The word רָקָב (raqav) is used elsewhere in the Bible of dry rot in a house, or rotting bones in a grave. It is used in ...

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