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Job Answers Bildad

Then Job answered:

“Yes, I know that this is true.
    But how can man be right in the presence of God?
A person might want to argue with God.
    But he could not answer God one time out of a thousand.
God’s wisdom is deep, and his power is great.
    No one can fight God without being hurt.
God moves mountains without anyone knowing it.
    He turns mountains over when he is angry.
God shakes the earth out of its place.
    And he makes the earth’s foundations shake.
God commands the sun not to shine.
    He shuts off the light of the stars.
God alone stretches out the skies.
    And he walks on the waves of the sea.
It is God who made the Bear, Orion and the Pleiades[a]
    and the groups of stars in the southern sky.
10 God does wonderful things that people cannot understand.
    He does so many miracles they cannot be counted.
11 When he passes me, I cannot see him.
    When he goes by me, I cannot recognize him.
12 If God snatches something away, no one can stop him.
    No one can say to him, ‘What are you doing?’
13 God will not hold back his anger.
    Even the helpers of the monster Rahab lie at God’s feet in fear.
14 So how can I argue with God?
    I cannot find words to argue with him.
15 Even if I was right, I could not answer him.
    I could only beg God, my Judge, for mercy.
16 I might call to him. But even if he answered,
    I still would not believe he would listen to me.
17 God would crush me with a storm.
    He would multiply my hurts for no reason.
18 He would not let me catch my breath.
    He would overwhelm me with misery.
19 When it comes to strength, God is stronger than I.
    And when it comes to justice, no one can accuse him!
20 Even if I were right, my own mouth would say I was wrong.
    If I were innocent, my mouth would say I was guilty.

21 “I am innocent.
    But I don’t think about myself.
    I hate my own life.
22 It is all the same. That is why I say,
    ‘God destroys both the innocent and the evil people.’
23 A whip may bring sudden death.
    And God will laugh when good people suffer.
24 When land falls into the hands of evil people,
    God covers the judges’ faces so they can’t see it.
    If it is not God who does this, then who is it?

25 “My days go by faster than a runner.
    They fly away without my seeing even a little joy.
26 They glide past like boats made of papyrus plants.
    My days are like eagles that swoop down on animals they attack.
27 I might say, ‘I will forget my complaint.
    I will change the look on my face, and smile.’
28 But I will still dread all my suffering.
    I know you will hold me guilty.
29 I have already been found guilty.
    So why should I struggle for no reason?
30 I might wash myself with soap.
    And I might even wash my hands with strong soap.
31 But you would push me into a dirty pit.
    And even my clothes would hate me.

32 “God is not a man like me. So I cannot answer him.
    We cannot meet each other in court.
33 I wish there was someone to make peace between us.
    I wish someone could decide our case.
34 I wish someone could remove God’s punishment from me.
    Then his terror would not frighten me anymore.
35 Then I could speak up without being afraid of God.
    But I am not able to do that.

Footnotes

  1. 9:9 Bear . . . Pleiades Names of well-known groups of stars.

Job's Reply to Bildad

What You Say Is True

Job said:
(A) What you say is true.
No human is innocent
    in the sight of God.
Not once in a thousand times
could we win our case
    if we took him to court.
God is wise and powerful—
who could possibly
    oppose him and win?
When God becomes angry,
he can move mountains
    before they even know it.
God can shake the earth loose
    from its foundations
(B) or command the sun and stars
    to hold back their light.
God alone stretched out the sky,
    stepped on the sea,[a]
(C) and set the stars in place—
    the Big Dipper and Orion,
the Pleiades and the stars
    in the southern sky.
10 Of all the miracles God works,
    we cannot understand a one.
11 God walks right past me,
    without making a sound.
12 And if he grabs something,
who can stop him
    or raise a question?

13 When God showed his anger,
the servants of the sea monster[b]
    fell at his feet.
14 How, then, could I possibly
    argue my case with God?

Though I Am Innocent

15 Even though I am innocent,
    I can only beg for mercy.
16 And if God came into court
when I called him,
    he would not hear my case.
17 He would strike me with a storm[c]
and increase my injuries
    for no reason at all.
18 Before I could get my breath,
    my miseries would multiply.
19 God is much stronger than I am,
and who would call me into court
    to give me justice?

20 Even if I were innocent,
    God would prove me wrong.[d]
21 I am not guilty,
but I no longer care
    what happens to me.
22 What difference does it make?
God destroys the innocent
    along with the guilty.
23 When a good person dies
a sudden death,
    God sits back and laughs.
24 And who else but God
    blindfolds the judges,
then lets the wicked
    take over the earth?

My Life Is Speeding By

25 My life is speeding by,
    without a hope of happiness.
26 Each day passes swifter
than a sailing ship
    or an eagle swooping down.
27 Sometimes I try to be cheerful
    and to stop complaining,
28 but my sufferings frighten me,
because I know that God
    still considers me guilty.
29 So what's the use of trying
    to prove my innocence?
30 Even if I washed myself
    with the strongest soap,
31 God would throw me into a pit
of stinking slime, leaving me
    disgusting to my clothes.

32 God isn't a mere human like me.
    I can't put him on trial.
33 Who could possibly judge
    between the two of us?
34 Can someone snatch away
the stick God carries
    to frighten me?
35 Then I could speak up
without fear of him,
    but for now, I cannot speak.[e]

Footnotes

  1. 9.8 sea: Or “sea monster” (see verse 13 and the note there).
  2. 9.13 the sea monster: The Hebrew text has “Rahab,” which was some kind of sea monster with supernatural powers (see the notes at 3.8 and 26.12).
  3. 9.17 strike … storm: One possible meaning for the difficult Hebrew text.
  4. 9.20 God … wrong: Or “my own words would prove me wrong.”
  5. 9.35 but … speak: One possible meaning for the difficult Hebrew text.