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Text -- Job 5:1-11 (NET)

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Context
5:1 “Call now! Is there anyone who will answer you? To which of the holy ones will you turn? 5:2 For wrath kills the foolish person, and anger slays the silly one. 5:3 I myself have seen the fool taking root, but suddenly I cursed his place of residence. 5:4 His children are far from safety, and they are crushed at the place where judgment is rendered, nor is there anyone to deliver them. 5:5 The hungry eat up his harvest, and take it even from behind the thorns, and the thirsty swallow up their fortune. 5:6 For evil does not come up from the dust, nor does trouble spring up from the ground, 5:7 but people are born to trouble, as surely as the sparks fly upward.
Blessings for the One Who Seeks God
5:8 “But as for me, I would seek God, and to God I would set forth my case. 5:9 He does great and unsearchable things, marvelous things without number; 5:10 he gives rain on the earth, and sends water on the fields; 5:11 he sets the lowly on high, that those who mourn are raised to safety.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Presumption | Eliphaz | Job | Afflictions and Adversities | God | Faith | Philosophy | Envy | Wicked | ELIPHAZ (2) | Sin | Anger | Blessing | Power | Seekers | Righteous | Humility | WRATH, (ANGER) | EXALT | FLY | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 5:1 The point being made is that the angels do not represent the cries of people to God as if mediating for them. But if Job appealed to any of them to ta...

NET Notes: Job 5:2 The two parallel nouns are similar; their related verbs are also paralleled in Deut 32:16 with the idea of “vex” and “irritate.̶...

NET Notes: Job 5:3 A. B. Davidson argues that the verse does not mean that Eliphaz cursed his place during his prosperity. This line is metonymical (giving the effect). ...

NET Notes: Job 5:4 The text simply says “and there is no deliverer.” The entire clause could be subordinated to the preceding clause, and rendered simply ...

NET Notes: Job 5:5 The LXX has several variations for the line. It reads something like the following: “for what they have collected the just shall eat, but they s...

NET Notes: Job 5:6 The previous discussion shows how trouble rises, namely, from the rebelliousness of the fool. Here Eliphaz simply summarizes the points made with this...

NET Notes: Job 5:7 The LXX has the name of a bird here: “the vulture’s young seek the high places.” The Targum to Job has “sons of demons” ...

NET Notes: Job 5:8 The Hebrew simply has “my word”; but in this expression that uses שִׂים (sim) with the meaning of “lay...

NET Notes: Job 5:9 H. H. Rowley (Job [NCBC], 54) notes that the verse fits Eliphaz’s approach very well, for he has good understanding of the truth, but has diffic...

NET Notes: Job 5:10 The Hebrew term חוּצוֹת (khutsot) basically means “outside,” or what is outside. It could refer ...

NET Notes: Job 5:11 The perfect verb may be translated “be set on high; be raised up.” E. Dhorme (Job, 64) notes that the perfect is parallel to the infinitiv...

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