Eliphaz Accuses And Exhorts Job
September 16, 2020
Commentary
Eliphaz made three serious accusations against Job;
Job is a sinner (vv. 1-11). He accuses Job of the sin of pride (vv. 1-5).He accuses Job of covetousness (v. 6).He accuses Job of lack of mercy and compassion (vv. 7-9).He says Job is suffering great trials because of his many sins (vv. 10-11).He is hiding his sins (vv. 12-20). He says Job is a hypocrite. He advised Job to look up (vv. 12-14).He advised Job to look back (vv. 15-18).He said your foes are destroyed (vv. 19-20).He must confess his sins and repent before God can help him (vv. 21-30). Submit to God and be at peace with Him (v. 21).Listen to His Word and obey what He says (v. 22).Put away sin (v. 23).Make God your greatest treasure (vv. 24-25).Delight in the Lord and not in earthly wealth or pleasure (v. 26). Pray and seek God’s face (v. 27).Do His will as He gives direction and light (v. 28).Help others who have fallen (vv. 29-30).
Application
If I like Job am truly seeking God, I can stand up to others accusations as well as my own nagging doubts. If I am falsely accused I shouldn’t get upset, but try to see how the lord wants to use this in my life. If God has forgiven and accepted me I am forgiven indeed and don’t need to be concerned about what others say or think.
Job 22:1– 30 (NET)
1 Then Eliphaz the Temanite answered:
2 “Is it to God that a strong man is of benefit? Is it to him that even a wise man is profitable?
3 Is it of any special benefit to the Almighty that you should be righteous, or is it any gain to him that you make your ways blameless?
4 Is it because of your piety that he rebukes you and goes to judgment with you?
5 Is not your wickedness great and is there no end to your iniquity?
6 “For you took pledges from your brothers for no reason, and you stripped the clothing from the naked.
7 You gave the weary no water to drink and from the hungry you withheld food.
8 Although you were a powerful man, owning land, an honored man living on it,
9 you sent widows away empty-handed, and the arms of the orphans you crushed.
10 That is why snares surround you, and why sudden fear terrifies you,
11 why it is so dark you cannot see, and why a flood of water covers you.
12 “Is not God on high in heaven? And see the lofty stars, how high they are!
13 But you have said, ‘What does God know? Does he judge through such deep darkness?
14 Thick clouds are a veil for him, so he does not see us, as he goes back and forth in the vault of heaven.’
15 Will you keep to the old path that evil men have walked—
16 men who were carried off before their time, when the flood was poured out on their foundations?
17 They were saying to God, ‘Turn away from us,’ and, ‘What can the Almighty do to us?’
18 But it was he who filled their houses with good things— yet the counsel of the wicked was far from me.
19 The righteous see their destruction and rejoice; the innocent mock them scornfully, saying,
20 ‘Surely our enemies are destroyed, and fire consumes their wealth.’
21 “Reconcile yourself with God, and be at peace with him; in this way your prosperity will be good.
22 Accept instruction from his mouth and store up his words in your heart.
23 If you return to the Almighty, you will be built up; if you remove wicked behavior far from your tent,
24 and throw your gold in the dust— your gold of Ophir among the rocks in the ravines—
25 then the Almighty himself will be your gold, and the choicest silver for you.
26 Surely then you will delight yourself in the Almighty, and will lift up your face toward God.
27 You will pray to him and he will hear you, and you will fulfill your vows to him.
28 Whatever you decide on a matter, it will be established for you, and light will shine on your ways.
29 When people are brought low and you say, ‘Lift them up!’ then he will save the downcast;
30 he will deliver even someone who is not innocent, who will escape through the cleanness of your hands.”
Illustration: Lincoln Once Had a Man Draw a Revolver on Him
Lincoln once had a man draw a revolver on him. “What seems to be the matter?” inquired Lincoln, with all the calmness and self-possession he could muster. “Well,” replied the stranger, who did not appear at all excited, “some years ago I swore an oath that if I ever came across an uglier man than myself I’d shoot him on the spot.” A feeling of relief evidently took possession of Lincoln at this point. “Shoot me,” Lincoln said to the stranger, “for if I am an uglier man than you, I don’t want to live.” (Benjamin Botkin – Encyclopedia of Illustrations – #13).