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Job's friend Eliphaz speaks to him[a]

Eliphaz, who came from Teman, decided to speak. He said this to Job:

‘Please be patient and listen to what I say.
    Allow me to speak, because I cannot remain quiet.
Listen! You have taught many people.
    You have helped weak people to be strong.
With your words, you have saved people from danger.
    You have helped people who are in trouble to be brave.
But now you are the person who has trouble.
    You yourself are not patient.
    Trouble has come to you and you feel afraid.
But you respect God's authority,
    so you should trust him.
You live in an honest way,
    so you should still hope for better things.
Think about this:
    People who are not guilty of sin do not suddenly die.
    God does not destroy people who do good things.
I will tell you what I have seen.
    Trouble comes to people who do wicked things.
    They receive the punishment that they deserve.
God destroys them with his breath.
    His anger is like a storm that blows them away.
10 Lions are strong animals that roar loudly.
    But if God breaks a lion's teeth, it cannot eat.
11 Even the strongest lion will die if it has nothing to eat.
    The young lions will run away from their mother to find food.[b]

12 One night I heard a quiet voice.
    Someone spoke to me and told me a secret.
13 I was asleep, but my dreams woke me.
14 I was very afraid.
    Even my bones were shaking.
15 A wind was blowing over my face.
    The hair on my skin stood up.
16 Something stopped and it stood in front of me.
    I could not recognize its shape.
Then I heard a quiet voice say:
17 “No human is righteous when he stands in front of God.
    He cannot be pure in front of his Maker.
18 God knows that even his angels make mistakes.
    They may do foolish things.
19 God used clay to make bodies for us who are humans.
    We came from the dust of the earth.
    We are as weak as moths.
20 We are alive in the morning,
    and when evening comes we may be dead.
People disappear for ever.
    No one even knows about it.
21 They no longer have their valuable things.
    They suddenly die and they are still not wise.” ’

Footnotes

  1. 4:1 Now Job's friend Eliphaz tries to explain to Job why bad things have happened. He says that God is kind to good people and he punishes people who are bad. So if bad things have happened, Job must have done wrong things.
  2. 4:11 Eliphaz says that God will destroy wicked people, even if they are very strong.

Eliphaz Speaks Out

Now You’re the One in Trouble

1-6 Then Eliphaz from Teman spoke up:

“Would you mind if I said something to you?
    Under the circumstances it’s hard to keep quiet.
You yourself have done this plenty of times, spoken words
    that clarify, encouraged those who were about to quit.
Your words have put stumbling people on their feet,
    put fresh hope in people about to collapse.
But now you’re the one in trouble—you’re hurting!
    You’ve been hit hard and you’re reeling from the blow.
But shouldn’t your devout life give you confidence now?
    Shouldn’t your exemplary life give you hope?

7-11 “Think! Has a truly innocent person ever ended up on the scrap heap?
    Do genuinely upright people ever lose out in the end?
It’s my observation that those who plow evil
    and sow trouble reap evil and trouble.
One breath from God and they fall apart,
    one blast of his anger and there’s nothing left of them.
The mighty lion, king of the beasts, roars mightily,
    but when he’s toothless he’s useless—
No teeth, no prey—and the cubs
    wander off to fend for themselves.

12-16 “A word came to me in secret—
    a mere whisper of a word, but I heard it clearly.
It came in a scary dream one night,
    after I had fallen into a deep, deep sleep.
Dread stared me in the face, and Terror.
    I was scared to death—I shook from head to foot.
A spirit glided right in front of me—
    the hair on my head stood on end.
I couldn’t tell what it was that appeared there—
    a blur . . . and then I heard a muffled voice:

17-21 “‘How can mere mortals be more righteous than God?
    How can humans be purer than their Creator?
Why, God doesn’t even trust his own servants,
    doesn’t even cheer his angels,
So how much less these bodies composed of mud,
    fragile as moths?
These bodies of ours are here today and gone tomorrow,
    and no one even notices—gone without a trace.
When the tent stakes are ripped up, the tent collapses—
    we die and are never the wiser for having lived.’”