Job 6:6
Context6:6 Can food that is tasteless 1 be eaten without salt?
Or is there any taste in the white 2 of an egg?
Job 14:7
Context14:7 “But there is hope for 3 a tree: 4
If it is cut down, it will sprout again,
and its new shoots will not fail.
Job 33:23
Context33:23 If there is an angel beside him,
one mediator 5 out of a thousand,
to tell a person what constitutes his uprightness; 6


[6:6] 1 tn Heb “a tasteless thing”; the word “food” is supplied from the context.
[6:6] 2 tn Some commentators are not satisfied with the translation “white of an egg”; they prefer something connected to “slime of purslane” (H. H. Rowley, Job [NCBC], 59; cf. NRSV “juice of mallows”). This meaning is based on the Syriac and Arabic version of Sa`adia. The meaning “white of the egg” comes from the rabbinic interpretation of “slime of the yolk.” Others carry the idea further and interpret it to mean “saliva of dreams” or after the LXX “in dream words.” H. H. Rowley does not think that the exact edible object can be identified. The idea of the slimy glaring white around the yolk of an egg seems to fit best. This is another illustration of something that is tasteless or insipid.
[14:7] 3 tn The genitive after the construct is one of advantage – it is hope for the tree.
[14:7] 4 sn The figure now changes to a tree for the discussion of the finality of death. At least the tree will sprout again when it is cut down. Why, Job wonders, should what has been granted to the tree not also be granted to humans?
[33:23] 5 sn The verse is describing the way God can preserve someone from dying by sending a messenger (translated here as “angel”), who could be human or angelic. This messenger will interpret/mediate God’s will. By “one … out of a thousand” Elihu could have meant either that one of the thousands of messengers at God’s disposal might be sent or that the messenger would be unique (see Eccl 7:28; and cp. Job 9:3).
[33:23] 6 tn This is a smoother reading. The MT has “to tell to a man his uprightness,” to reveal what is right for him. The LXX translated this word “duty”; the choice is adopted by some commentaries. However, that is too far from the text, which indicates that the angel/messenger is to call the person to uprightness.