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The Four Speeches of Elihu[a]

Chapter 32

Elihu’s Indignation Is Aroused.[b] The three men then ceased to argue with Job because in his own eyes he was righteous. Then Elihu, the son of Barachel the Buzite,[c] of the family of Ram, became very angry. He was furious because Job believed that he was righteous and that God was in error. And he was also angry at Job’s three friends because they had never devised an answer to refute Job and thus had allowed God to appear to be wrong.

While Job and his friends had been conversing, Elihu had refrained from addressing Job, since the three companions were older than he. But when Elihu perceived that the three had no answer to offer, he could no longer contain his anger.

Elihu’s First Speech

I Have Many Things To Say.[d] Therefore Elihu, the son of Barachel the Buzite, began to speak.

“I am young in years,
    and you are old.
Therefore, I held my tongue
    and hesitated to express my opinion to you.
I thought, ‘Age ought to speak;
    many years will result in conveying wisdom.’
“But it is the spirit in a man,
    the breath of the Almighty,
    that gives him understanding.
It is not only the old who are wise;
    it is not only the aged who understand what is right.
10 Therefore, I beg you to listen to me
    and allow me to declare my opinion.
11 “I have been waiting to hear what you had to say,
    and I listened attentively to your arguments
    as each one of you chose your words with care.
12 I gave you my close attention,
    but there is not one of you who has convicted Job
    or refuted his statements.
13 Therefore, do not say, ‘We have found wisdom;
    let God confute him, not men!’
14 Job has not addressed his words to me;
    therefore, I will not answer him in the way you have done.
15 “These three men are confounded and unable to respond;
    words have failed them.
16 Am I then to wait because they do not speak,
    but simply stand there, stuck for an answer?
17 I also will now have my say;
    it is my turn to express my opinion.
18 For I have many things to say,
    and the spirit within me forces me to speak.
19 “I am ready to burst,
    like a new wineskin with wine searching for a vent.
20 I must speak so that I may find relief;
    I must open my lips and reply.
21 I will show no partiality to anyone,
    nor will I use flattering words.
22 For I do not know how to flatter;
    if I did, my Maker would soon do away with me.

Chapter 33

God Is Greater Than Any Human Being[e]

“Therefore, O Job, listen to my words
    and pay careful attention to everything I have to say.
Behold, I have opened my mouth;
    the words are on the tip of my tongue.
My words issue forth from an upright heart,
    and my lips will be sincere in what I say.
The Spirit of God has made me,
    and the breath of the Almighty gives me life.
“Refute me if you are able to do so;
    prepare your arguments and confront me.
In the sight of God I am just like you;
    like you, I was formed from a piece of clay.
Therefore, no fear of me should frighten you,
    nor should you feel any pressure on my account.
“You have offered your defense in my presence,
    and I have listened carefully to the words you spoke.
You said, ‘I am pure and without sin;
    I am clean, and there is no fault in me.
10 Yet God continues to invent excuses against me
    and regards me as his enemy.
11 He fastens my feet in shackles
    and watches everything I do.’
12 “In regard to this, I tell you, you are completely wrong.
    God is greater than any human being.
13 Why then do you utter endless complaints
    that he will not explain his decisions to you?

God Speaks in Many Ways[f]

14 “For God does speak, first in one way and then in another,
    although we do not always perceive it.
15 “In dreams and in visions of the night,
    when deep sleep falls upon men
    as they slumber on their beds,
16 God then opens their ears
    and issues warnings that strike them with terror,
17 so that he may turn man away from evil
    and check his pride.
18 In this way he spares his soul from the pit[g]
    and his life from a violent death.
19 “Or again, he chastens him with pain upon his bed
    and with unceasing agony in his bones,
20 so that he regards food with loathing
    and rejects the choicest dishes.
21 His flesh is so wasted away that it cannot be seen,
    and his bones that once were invisible now begin to show.
22 His soul draws nearer to the pit
    and his life to the abode of the dead.
23 “But then, if there should be an angel on his side,
    one out of a thousand, a mediator,
to show him what is right for him
    and expound God’s righteousness to him,
24 he will take pity on him and say,
    ‘Spare him from going down into the pit;
    I have the ransom for his life.’
25 Then his flesh will regain its boyish freshness,
    and he will return to the days of his youthful vigor.
26 “Then, if he entreats God to show him favor
    and allow him to enter his presence with joy,
27 he will affirm before everyone,
    ‘I sinned and departed from the path of righteousness,
    but God has not punished me as I deserved.
28 He spared my soul from descending into the pit,
    and I will behold the light of life.’
29 “God indeed does all these things
    again and again[h] for a man,
30 bringing back his soul from the pit
    so that he may see the light of life.
31 “Be attentive, Job, and listen to me;
    be silent and I will speak.
32 If you have anything to say, then answer me;
    speak, for I desire to justify you.
33 But if you have nothing to say, then listen to me;
    be silent and I will teach you wisdom.”

Elihu’s Second Speech[i]

Chapter 34

Let Us Explore What Is Right.[j] Then Elihu continued and said:

“Listen to my words, you wise men;
    you men of learning, hear what I have to say.
For the ear tests the value of words
    as the palate does with food.
“Let us consider together what is right;
    let us determine among ourselves what is good.
For Job has said, ‘I am innocent,
    but God has denied me justice;
I am in desperate straits
    despite the fact that I have done no wrong.’
“Was there ever a man like Job
    with his thirst for blasphemous charges,
who keeps company with evildoers
    and travels with wicked men?
Did he not state that no one derives any benefit
    by being pleasing to God?

God Does Not Pervert Justice

10 “Therefore, listen to me like intelligent men.
    Far be it from God to do evil;[k]
    far be it from the Almighty to be unjust.
11 He requites everyone according to his deeds,
    ensuring that he will receive what his conduct deserves.
12 There can be no doubt that God will never do wrong;
    the Almighty will not pervert justice.
13 “Did someone else entrust the world to his keeping?
    Who but he established the whole world?
14 If he were to take back his Spirit to himself
    and withdraw back into himself his breath,
15 all flesh would perish instantaneously
    and mankind would turn again to dust.
16 “If you have any semblance of intelligence, O Job,
    pay attention to what I am saying.
17 How could an enemy of justice ever govern?
    Would you dare to condemn the Righteous One, the Almighty,
18 who says to a king, ‘You are a scoundrel,’
    and to nobles, ‘You are wicked men’?
19 “He shows no special respect to princes,
    nor does he make any distinction between rich and poor,
    for they are all the work of his hands.
20 They die suddenly, without warning,
    in the middle of the night;
at his touch the rich are no more,
    and he removes the mighty without lifting a finger.

God’s Eyes Observe the Ways of Humans

21 “For his eyes observe the ways of humans,
    and he watches every step they take.
22 Nowhere is there darkness or gloom so dense
    where evildoers may conceal themselves.
23 He forewarns no one when his time will come
    to appear before God for judgment.
24 Without holding a trial he shatters the mighty
    and establishes others in their place.
25 Knowing the sinful deeds they do,
    he overthrows them at night and they are crushed.
26 “He strikes them down for their crimes
    while others look on,
27 because they have turned away from following him
    and paid no heed to any of his ways.
28 But they caused the cries of the poor to reach him,
    so that he heard the anguished appeal of the afflicted.
29 “But if he remains silent and no one can condemn him,
    and if he hides his face so that no one can behold him,
it is because he rules over nations and individuals
30     to prevent a godless man from ruling
    and to set some wrongdoer free from affliction.

Job Is a Rebel to God[l]

31 “Suppose someone were to say to God,
    ‘I was wrong, but I will not offend anymore;
32 instruct me how to avoid sin
    so that I will not do it again.’
33 In your opinion, should God then punish such a person
    because he rejected his laws?
For it is up to you to decide, not me;
    therefore, please enlighten us.
34 “Men of intelligence will say to me,
    and any wise listener will assert:
35 ‘Job speaks without knowledge;[m]
    what he says lacks any intelligence.’
36 Would that Job be tried to the limit,
    since his answers are those of the wicked.
37 For he is adding rebellion to his sin
    by making an end of justice among us
    and insulting God with abusive words.”

Elihu’s Third Speech[n]

Chapter 35

How Does Human Conduct Affect God? Then Elihu continued his speech, saying:

“Do you think that you can defend your uprightness
    by claiming that you are just before God?
For you said: ‘What does it mean to you?
    Or what would you gain if I sinned?’
I will provide an answer for you
    and your three friends as well.
“Look up to the skies and see;
    observe the clouds towering above you.
If you sin, how can that affect God?
    And if your offenses are multiplied, how do you hurt him?
If you are righteous, what do you give him?
    What does he receive from your hand?
Your wickedness affects only someone like you,
    and your righteousness affects only your fellow men.

No One Asks, “Where Is God?”

“People cry out under the weight of oppression;
    they cry for help against the power of the mighty.
10 But not one of them asks, ‘Where is God, my Maker,
    who protects me during the night,
11 who gave us greater intelligence than the animals of the earth
    and made us wiser than the birds of the air?’
12 Although they cry out, God does not answer
    because of the pride of the wicked.
13 “But it is foolish to say that God does not hear
    or that the Almighty does not pay attention.
14 Even though you do not see him,
    he is aware of your plight,
    and you must wait for his decision.
15 But now, because God does not grow angry and punish
    and because he allows transgressions to go unheeded,
16 Job gives vent to his anger with empty talk
    and babbles a stream of utter nonsense.”

Elihu’s Fourth Speech[o]

Chapter 36

God Renders Justice to the Afflicted.[p] Elihu then proceeded further and said:

“Be patient a little longer while I instruct you,
    for I have more to say on God’s behalf.
I will take my knowledge from afar
    to support my assertion that my Master is just.
I promise that there will be no flaws in my arguments;
    I come before you as a man of sound learning.
“God is mighty and does not recant;
    he is great because of firmness of heart.
He does not let the wicked live on in all vigor
    and renders justice to the afflicted.
He does not withdraw his eyes from the righteous,
    but he seats them forever with kings on the throne,
    and they are exalted forever.
“He will also have sinners fettered with chains
    and held fast by the bonds of affliction
after having denounced their conduct
    and the sins of pride that they have committed.
10 He opens their ears to correction,
    commanding them to turn back from their evil ways.
11 “If they obey and once again serve him,
    they will live out their days in prosperity,
    and their years will pass pleasantly.
12 But if they do not obey him,
    they will cross the river of death
    and die as a result of their stubbornness.
13 Those whose hearts turn away from God rage against him,
    and they do not cry for help when he chains them.
14 They die in the bloom of their youth
    after a dissolute life.
15 But God rescues the suffering from their affliction,
    employing their distress to instruct them.
16 “He also seeks to snatch you from torment.
    When you were enjoying a life of comfort
    with abundant riches and plenteous food,
17 you refused to bring the wicked to trial
    or to uphold the rights of the orphan.
18 Beware lest abundance cloud your judgment
    and that you not be corrupted by lavish gifts.
19 Bring the powerful to justice, not merely the poor,
    those who are powerful, not only the weak.
20 “Do not long for the night
    when you can drag people away from their homes.
21 Take care not to turn to evil;
    that is why you are now being tested by affliction.

God Is Truly Great[q]

22 “Behold, God is exalted in his power.
    What teacher can equal him?
23 Who has prescribed the course he should follow?
    Who can dare to say to him, ‘You have done wrong’?
24 “Therefore, remember to extol his work
    which men have always praised in song.
25 All men can behold it,
    admiring it from afar.
26 God is so great that he is beyond our understanding;
    the number of his years is past counting.
27 “It is God who draws up drops of water
    that he distills as rain to the streams.
28 His rain clouds pour down
    and provide abundant water for mankind.
29 “Can anyone fathom how he spreads the clouds
    as the carpeting of his tent?
30 Behold how he scatters his lightning
    and covers the depths of the sea.
31 This is how he nourishes the nations,
    providing food for them in abundance.
32 He holds the lightning in his hands
    and commands it to strike the designated mark.
33 His thunder warns us of his coming
    as he prepares for combat against iniquity.

Chapter 37

“This also causes my heart to tremble
    and to leap out of its place.
Listen to the thunder of God’s voice
    and the rumbling that comes forth from his mouth.
He sends it forth across the heavens,
    along with his lightning to the ends of the earth.
Following this, there comes a roaring sound,
    as God thunders with his majestic voice,
and he does not restrain his flashes of lightning
    when his voice is heard.
“At God’s command marvels come to pass;
    he performs wonders beyond our ability to comprehend.
For he says to the snow, ‘Fall upon the earth,’
    and to the rain shower, ‘Turn into a heavy downpour.’
All human activity comes to a standstill
    so that everyone may acknowledge his power.
Wild beasts return to their lairs
    and take shelter in their dens.
“The tempest comes out of its chamber,
    and the north winds bring bitter cold.
10 By the breath of God[r] ice is formed
    and the surface of the waters becomes frozen.
11 He weighs down the thick clouds with moisture,
    and they scatter his lightning.
12 Following his command they blow about
    over the face of the entire earth
    to do whatever he directs.
13 Whether for correction of his people or for love,
    he causes all this to happen.

Reflect Upon the Marvelous Works of God

14 “Listen to my words, O Job;
    stop and reflect upon the marvelous works of God.
15 Do you know how God controls the clouds,
    or how he makes his lightning flash?
16 Do you know how the clouds are balanced,
    the wondrous work of the one who is perfect in knowledge?
17 You who swelter in your stifling garments
    when the earth lies still under the south wind,
18 can you, like him, spread out the skies,
    hard as a mirror of cast metal?[s]
19 “Teach us, then, what we should say to him;
    because of ignorance, we cannot present our case.
20 Do my words have any effect on him?
    Is he informed of any man’s commands?
21 Sometimes the light vanishes,
    and the sky is overcast with clouds;
    then the wind comes and sweeps them away.
22 [t]“Out of the north golden splendor comes forth,
    and God is surrounded by awesome majesty.
23 But the Almighty we cannot find;
    he is unequaled in power and judgment,
    and in his righteousness he will not violate justice.
24 Therefore, men revere him,
    and all thoughtful men fear him.”

Footnotes

  1. Job 32:1 The speeches of Elihu (chs. 32–37), like the composition on wisdom (ch. 28), were probably added to the Book of Job in a second phase of the Book’s history. The final editor was perhaps trying to soften the overly harsh positions put on the lips of Job. He tries to justify the intervention of this unexpected personage by saying that it was necessary to let the older men speak first. This champion of the rights of God adds little new except that he does a better job of situating suffering in the divine plan. When he has concluded his bit of eloquence, he is no longer mentioned.
  2. Job 32:1 Elihu’s four poetic speeches are introduced by five prose verses written by the author.
  3. Job 32:2 Buzite: i.e., an inhabitant of the desert region of Buz in north Arabia (see Jer 25:23).
  4. Job 32:6 Right from the beginning of this lengthy monologue, Elihu opposes his wisdom to that of the ancients. Intelligence does not result from the short views of experience or tradition but from receiving inspiration from God (Wis 1:6; Sir 1:1-10; Isa 28:26; Dan 1:17). He does not hurl false accusations at Job as his friends did but uses Job’s own words to criticize him (see Job 33:9-11; 34:5-6, 9; 35:2-3).
  5. Job 33:1 As far as Elihu is concerned, Job is too sure of himself. One cannot discuss things with God as an equal. In addition, Elihu correctly brings out that Job’s perception of God as his enemy (v. 10; 13:24; 19:11) is wrong.
  6. Job 33:14 When God manifests himself, human beings tremble with a salutary fear (Gen 20:3; 28:17). God also speaks through sickness, which could be transformed into the moment for inner renewal that leads to hope for the joy of a cure. An angel translates this language for humans and successfully intervenes for them before God.
  7. Job 33:18 Pit: i.e., the grave (see also vv. 22, 24, 28, 30).
  8. Job 33:29 Again and again: literally, “twice . . . three times” (see note on Job 5:19).
  9. Job 34:1 Elihu’s thoughts become more spirited. He reaches the heart of the dispute: human suffering in the face of God’s justice.
  10. Job 34:1 The entire problem lies herein. Elihu mounts a fiery defense of God.
  11. Job 34:10 Far be it from God to do evil: Elihu is answering a charge that God does evil, which Job in his frustration has intimated; for he has insisted that God is punishing him wrongfully and allowing evildoers to flourish (Job 24:1-12).
  12. Job 34:31 Exacerbated by his torment, Job has forgotten mercy and, in the view of Elihu, he speaks like a sinner who is entrenched in his rebellion.
  13. Job 34:35 Job speaks without knowledge: this theme is found also in God’s first response (Job 38:2) and Job’s final response (Job 42:3).
  14. Job 35:1 The silence of God is what upsets human beings. Is the Eternal One perhaps indifferent to human tragedies? Elihu looks for a different explanation: God is silent because unhappy human beings lack faith in their prayers, and they sin through pride. But the entire passage is obscure in its development.
  15. Job 36:1 With his usual excessive emphasis, Elihu repeats in his last discourse the main current beliefs on the justice and greatness of God: God does indeed reward the righteous and punish sinners (in direct contrast to Job’s assertions). The text, which is often corrupt, does not allow us always to determine just what is proper to Elihu.
  16. Job 36:1 God’s greatness consists in being just. He refutes the pretensions of the wicked and powerful and saves the poor. If Job could understand this, hope would arise in him. At times, the text speaks of poverty with the tone of the Gospel.
  17. Job 36:22 The sovereign wisdom of God radiates throughout the universe. In his hands, rain, tempest, and snow become calamities or benefits to accompany his justice in regard to human beings. This text is a lyrical chant of the power of God.
  18. Job 37:10 Breath of God: i.e., the wind.
  19. Job 37:18 Hard as a mirror of cast metal: see Deut 28:23 where this type of sky symbolizes unrelieved heat.
  20. Job 37:22 Elihu describes the advent of God, emphasizing both his power and his justice (see also Ps 48:3). He thus prepares Job for the appearance of God in the storm (chs. 38–41).