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Text -- Job 16:1-16 (NET)

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Context
Job’s Reply to Eliphaz
16:1 Then Job replied: 16:2 “I have heard many things like these before. What miserable comforters are you all! 16:3 Will there be an end to your windy words? Or what provokes you that you answer? 16:4 I also could speak like you, if you were in my place; I could pile up words against you and I could shake my head at you. 16:5 But I would strengthen you with my words; comfort from my lips would bring you relief.
Abandonment by God and Man
16:6 “But if I speak, my pain is not relieved, and if I refrain from speaking –how much of it goes away? 16:7 Surely now he has worn me out, you have devastated my entire household. 16:8 You have seized me, and it has become a witness; my leanness has risen up against me and testifies against me. 16:9 His anger has torn me and persecuted me; he has gnashed at me with his teeth; my adversary locks his eyes on me. 16:10 People have opened their mouths against me, they have struck my cheek in scorn; they unite together against me. 16:11 God abandons me to evil men, and throws me into the hands of wicked men. 16:12 I was in peace, and he has shattered me. He has seized me by the neck and crushed me. He has made me his target; 16:13 his archers surround me. Without pity he pierces my kidneys and pours out my gall on the ground. 16:14 He breaks through against me, time and time again; he rushes against me like a warrior. 16:15 I have sewed sackcloth on my skin, and buried my horn in the dust; 16:16 my face is reddened because of weeping, and on my eyelids there is a deep darkness,
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Job a man whose story is told in the book of Job,a man from the land of Uz in Edom


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Job | Doubting | Afflictions and Adversities | Blasphemy | Persecution | Gall | Speaking | MOUTH | GNASH | ASSUAGE | HORN | ASUNDER | Sackcloth | GIANTS | JOB, BOOK OF | SKIN | SHADOW OF DEATH | WRINKLE | Gnashing of Teeth | Injustice | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 16:1 In the next two chapters we have Job’s second reply to Eliphaz. Job now feels abandoned by God and by his friends, and so complains that this al...

NET Notes: Job 16:2 The expression uses the Piel participle in construct: מְנַחֲמֵי עָמָ...

NET Notes: Job 16:3 The LXX seems to have gone a different way: “What, is there any reason in vain words, or what will hinder you from answering?”

NET Notes: Job 16:4 The action is a sign of mockery (see Ps 22:7[8]; Isa 37:22; Matt 27:39).

NET Notes: Job 16:5 The verb יַחְשֹׂךְ (yakhsokh) means “to restrain; to withhold.” There is no object, ...

NET Notes: Job 16:6 Some argue that מָה (mah) in the text is the Arabic ma, the simple negative. This would then mean “it does not depart far from...

NET Notes: Job 16:7 In poetic discourse there is often an abrupt change from person to another. See GKC 462 §144.p. Some take the subject of this verb to be God, oth...

NET Notes: Job 16:8 The verb is used in Ps 109:24 to mean “to be lean”; and so “leanness” is accepted here for the noun by most. Otherwise the wor...

NET Notes: Job 16:9 The verb is used of sharpening a sword in Ps 7:12; here it means “to look intently” as an animal looks for prey. The verse describes God&#...

NET Notes: Job 16:10 The verb יִתְמַלָּאוּן (yitmalla’un) is taken from מָ&...

NET Notes: Job 16:11 The word יִרְטֵנִי (yirteni) does not derive from the root רָטָה (...

NET Notes: Job 16:12 Here is another Pilpel, now from פָּצַץ (patsats) with a similar meaning to the other verb. It means “to das...

NET Notes: Job 16:13 This word מְרֵרָתִי (mÿrerati, “my gall”) is found only here. It is close to th...

NET Notes: Job 16:14 Heb “runs.”

NET Notes: Job 16:15 There is no English term that captures exactly what “horn” is meant to do. Drawn from the animal world, the image was meant to convey stre...

NET Notes: Job 16:16 See Job 3:5. Just as joy brings light and life to the eyes, sorrow and suffering bring darkness. The “eyelids” here would be synecdoche, r...

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