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Much like Eliphaz, Bildad believes people suffer as a result of their own sins. But his justification of that suffering is different. Bildad reasons that God is just; as God, He is justice personified. Because He is so perfectly just, God will not punish someone who is also just. Bildad’s logical but flawed conclusion is that Job must have sinned to deserve his current pain. Surprisingly, he manages to be even less effective than Eliphaz had been, alienating Job by reasoning that Job’s children must have sinned to deserve their deaths and implying that Job’s regular sacrifices on their behalf were not enough to save them.

Then Job spoke to them.

Job: Sure, I know all of this is correct,
        but tell me this: how can a person set things straight with God?
    If one wanted to argue with Him,
        even in a thousand questions he would not be able to answer Him once.
    His wise heart is vast; His strength immeasurable.
        Who has ever challenged Him and remained safe and at peace?
    He uproots mountains,
        and they are unaware when He overturns them in His rage.
    He shakes the earth out of its place
        so that its foundation pillars shudder.
    He commands the sun to go down and not rise,
        and He sequesters the stars so they do not shine.
    He single-handedly stretched out the heavens overhead
        and walks on the back of the raging sea.
    He fashioned the stars into constellations we know by name—
        Bear, Orion, the Pleiades—
        and the lights of the southern sky.
10     He does wonderful things, even confounding things,
        and performs an infinite number of miracles.
11     Still, if He passes right by me, I don’t see Him;
        if He brushes past, I don’t notice Him.
12     Ah, but if He were to steal like a thief in the market,
        who could stop Him? No one has authority over Him.
        Who could dare say to Him, “What are You doing?”

13     God does not restrain Himself in His anger.
        Even the minions of Rahab—that monster of the sea and purveyor of chaos—
        cower at His feet in subservience.

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