Then Job answered and said,
Job still rebels, though he does his best to repress his complaints ( Job 23:2 ). Translate as mg. Job 23:6 f. shows the gain Job has got. Jo...
answered . replied [a third time]. See note on Job 4:1 .
Job wishes that he might be allowed to plead his cause before God; but, wherever he turns himself, he cannot find or behold him. He acknowledges, h...
Then Job answered and said, No JFB commentary on this verse.
Job's Seventh Speech (Job 23, 24) Job makes but slight reference to the remarks of Eliphaz, but continues to brood over the mysteries of God's dea...
XXIII. (1) Then Job answered. — Job replies to the insinuations of Eliphaz with the earnest longing after God and the assertion of his own innoc...
XX. WHERE IS ELOAH? Job 23:1-17 ; Job 24:1-25 Job SPEAKS THE obscure couplet with which Job begins appears to involve some reference to his...
“He Knoweth the Way That I Take” Job 23:1-17 This chapter is threaded by a sublime faith. Job admitted that his complaint seemed rebellious, bu...
In answer to Eliphaz, ob took no notice of the terrible charges made against him. That is postponed to a later speech. Rather, he discussed Eliphai c...
CONTENTS Job is again, in this chapter, described, as making still further his defense. From the decision of Man, he appeals to God; and opens his m...
(1) В¶ Then Job answered and said, (2) Even today is my complaint bitter: my stroke is heavier than my groaning. (3) Oh that I knew where I might fin...
Then Job answered and said. In reply to Eliphaz; for though he does not direct his discourse to him, nor take any notice of his friends; yet, as a...
Then Job answered and said, Ver. 1. Then Job answered and said ] viz. In defence of his own integrity, against Eliphaz's calumnies in the foregoin...
Then Job answered Job, being exceedingly grieved by the freedom which Eliphaz had taken with him in his last speech, charging him directly with the...
HE LONGS TO LAY HIS CASE BEFORE GOD (vv.1-9) What Eliphaz has said to Job was hardly worth an answer, so that Job practically ignores this and l...
The Reply of Job to Eliphaz; Job Appeals from Man to God. B. C. 1520....
JOB CHAPTER 23 Job's reply: his desire to plead with God, Job 23:1-5 ; who should not confound, but strengthen him, Job 23:6,7 . He cannot be...
JOB’S THIRD REPLY TO ELIPHAZ Ceases directly to address his friends. His present speech rather a soliloquy. Takes no notice of the charges laid...
Always remember, dear friends, that one of the great lessons of the Book of Job is this, that we may never judge a man's character by his condition....
We shall read, this evening, in the Book of Job. May the good Spirit instruct us during our reading! Here we shall see Job in a very melancholy plig...
Job is in great physical pain through the sore boils that cover him from head to foot; he is still smarting under all the bereavements and losses he...
Job 23:3 . Oh that I knew where I might find him. Job sighs for the favours conferred on certain patriarchs, whom God had met. The living oracle w...
Oh, that I knew where I might find Him. The cry for restored relations with God The language of the text is exclusively that of men on the eart...
EXPOSITION Verses 1-24:25 Job replies to Eliphaz in a speech of no great length, which, though it occupies two chapters, runs to only forty-t...
Job Desires a Judicial Decision of God
Job 23:1
Job Challenged by Satan Job 1:1 - Job 23:1-17 INTRODUCTORY WORDS We begin today a series of studies on one of the most interesting charac...
1 Then Job answered and said,