Add parallel Print Page Options

I had heard of you by the hearing of the ear,
but now my eye has seen you.[a]
Therefore I despise myself,[b]
and I repent in dust and ashes!”

VII. The Epilogue (42:7-17)

Job’s Restoration

After the Lord had spoken these things to Job, he[c] said to Eliphaz the Temanite, “My anger is stirred up[d] against you and your two friends, because you have not spoken about me what is right,[e] as my servant Job has.

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. Job 42:5 sn This statement does not imply there was a vision. He is simply saying that this experience of God was real and personal. In the past his knowledge of God was what he had heard—hearsay. This was real.
  2. Job 42:6 tn Or “despise what I said.” There is no object on the verb; Job could be despising himself or the things he said (see L. J. Kuyper, “Repentance of Job,” VT 9 [1959]: 91-94).
  3. Job 42:7 tn Heb “the Lord.” The title has been replaced by the pronoun (“he”) in the translation for stylistic reasons.
  4. Job 42:7 tn Heb “is kindled.”
  5. Job 42:7 tn The form נְכוֹנָה (nekhonah) is from כּוּן (kun, “to be firm; to be fixed; to be established”). Here it means “the right thing” or “truth.” The Akkadian cognate kīnu means “true, just, honest, firm” (CAD K: 389).