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Text -- Job 6:24-30 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
No Sin Discovered
6:24 “Teach me and I, for my part, will be silent; explain to me how I have been mistaken. 6:25 How painful are honest words! But what does your reproof prove? 6:26 Do you intend to criticize mere words, and treat the words of a despairing man as wind? 6:27 Yes, you would gamble for the fatherless, and auction off your friend.
Other Explanation
6:28 “Now then, be good enough to look at me; and I will not lie to your face! 6:29 Relent, let there be no falsehood; reconsider, for my righteousness is intact! 6:30 Is there any falsehood on my lips? Can my mouth not discern evil things?
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Afflictions and Adversities | Job | Complaint | JOB, BOOK OF | REPROOF; REPROVE | RIGHT | TONGUE | Barter | Orphan | PERVERSE | FATHERLESS | EVIDENCE; EVIDENT; EVIDENTLY | IMAGINE | INIQUITY | PEACE | LEASING | DESPAIR | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Job 6:24 The verb שָׁגָה (shagah) has the sense of “wandering, getting lost, being mistaken.”

NET Notes: Job 6:25 The LXX again paraphrases this line: “But as it seems, the words of a true man are vain, because I do not ask strength of you.” But the re...

NET Notes: Job 6:26 This, in the context, is probably the meaning, although the Hebrew simply has the line after the first half of the verse read: “and as/to wind t...

NET Notes: Job 6:27 The verb תִכְרוּ (tikhru) is from כָּרָה (karah), which is found in 40:3...

NET Notes: Job 6:28 The construction uses אִם (’im) as in a negative oath to mark the strong negative. He is underscoring his sincerity here. See ...

NET Notes: Job 6:29 The text has simply “yet my right is in it.” A. B. Davidson (Job, 49, 50) thinks this means that in his plea against God, Job has right on...

NET Notes: Job 6:30 The final word, הַוּוֹת (havvot) is usually understood as “calamities.” He would be asking if he...

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