Job’s Answer to Eliphaz

Topic: Trust
Passage: Job 6:1–30

January 31, 2022

Commentary

In this chapter we find Job’s first reply to Eliphaz. In Job’s reply to Eliphaz he emphasizes three key points (vv. 1-7):
You are giving me all of this advice but with no sympathy for my situation.Your criticisms are not based on fact but only on your own experience.In all that you have said, you have never answered my basic question as to why I’m suffering.Job repeats his wish to die that he also voiced in Job 3:20-23, 7:15, 10:18-19 and Job 14:13. He feels that his misery would end if God would just “let loose his hand, and cut him off” (vv. 8-11). The word “loose” carries the idea of setting prisoners free, and “cut off” pictures a weaver cutting a thread. One consolation that Job has in all of his pain is that he was innocent of defying God.
Having voiced his disappointment in his friends’ lack of help (vv. 12-23), Job pleads with them to tell him where he has gone wrong (vv. 24-27). He asks them to produce evidence as to where he has sinned. He wants them to stop making unjust and false accusations. He seems to be responding more to the tone of what Eliphaz has said than to the content. He wanted them to note his honesty, and to quit making false accusations. Job doesn’t claim to be guiltless. He admits he has sinned, but why would he be selected for this special attack as a notorious sinner (vv. 28-30?

Application

My tendency, like Job, is to want to give up when the going gets tough. It is commendable to trust God in the good times, but to trust Him in difficult times is a true exercise of my faith.

Job 6:1– 30 (NET)

1 Then Job responded:

2 “Oh, if only my grief could be weighed, and my misfortune laid on the scales too!

3 But because it is heavier than the sand of the sea, that is why my words have been wild.

4 For the arrows of the Almighty are within me; my spirit drinks their poison; God’s sudden terrors are arrayed against me.

5 “Does the wild donkey bray when it is near grass? Or does the ox bellow over its fodder?

6 Can food that is tasteless be eaten without salt? Or is there any taste in the white of an egg?

7 I have refused to touch such things; they are like loathsome food to me.

8 “Oh that my request would be realized, and that God would grant me what I long for!

9 And that God would be willing to crush me, that he would let loose his hand and kill me.

10 Then I would yet have my comfort, then I would rejoice, in spite of pitiless pain, for I have not concealed the words of the Holy One.

11 What is my strength, that I should wait? And what is my end, that I should prolong my life?

12 Is my strength like that of stones? Or is my flesh made of bronze?

13 Is not my power to help myself nothing, and has not every resource been driven from me?

14 “To the one in despair, kindness should come from his friend even if he forsakes the fear of the Almighty.

15 My brothers have been as treacherous as a seasonal stream, and as the riverbeds of the intermittent streams that flow away.

16 They are dark because of ice; snow is piled up over them.

17 When they are scorched, they dry up, when it is hot, they vanish from their place.

18 Caravans turn aside from their routes; they go into the wasteland and perish.

19 The caravans of Tema looked intently for these streams; the traveling merchants of Sheba hoped for them.

20 They were distressed, because each one had been so confident; they arrived there, but were disappointed.

21 For now you have become like these streams that are no help; you see a terror, and are afraid.

22 “Have I ever said, ‘Give me something, and from your fortune make gifts in my favor’?

23 Or, ‘Deliver me from the enemy’s power, and from the hand of tyrants ransom me’?

24 “Teach me and I, for my part, will be silent; explain to me how I have been mistaken.

25 How painful are honest words! But what does your reproof prove?

26 Do you intend to criticize mere words, and treat the words of a despairing man as wind?

27 Yes, you would gamble for the fatherless, and auction off your friend.

28 “Now then, be good enough to look at me; and I will not lie to your face!

29 Relent, let there be no falsehood; reconsider, for my righteousness is intact!

30 Is there any falsehood on my lips? Can my mouth not discern evil things?

Illustration: Flag Placed on Mount McKinley by Alaskan Miners

One day in 1909 a group of Alaskan miners, popularly called Sourdoughs, were sitting in a saloon in Fairbanks talking about outsiders such as Dr. Frederick Cook climbing “their” Mount McKinley. Convinced that Cook’s ascent had never been made, some of the miners decided to prove it the only way they knew how-by doing it themselves. After a long climb, three miners left their base camp and raced for the North Peak, carrying some doughnuts, thermoses of hot chocolate, and a 14-foot wooden flagpole. As simply as they went up, the Sourdoughs returned to camp. But when they returned to Fairbanks, nobody believed them-and nobody could see the flagpole. But in June 1913, when some professional climbers reached the summit, to their surprise they found the flagpole planted by the Sourdoughs. (Today in the Word, July 1995, p. 8).

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