Open Bible Data Home  About  News  OET Key

OETOET-RVOET-LVULTUSTBSBBLBAICNTOEBWEBBEWMBBNETLSVFBVTCNTT4TLEBBBEMoffJPSWymthASVDRAYLTDrbyRVWbstrKJB-1769KJB-1611BshpsGnvaCvdlTNTWycSR-GNTUHBRelatedTopicsParallelInterlinearReferenceDictionarySearch

FBVBy Document By Chapter Details

JOBC1C2C3C4C5C6C7C8C9C10C11C12C13C14C15C16C17C18C19C20C21C22C23C24C25C26C27C28C29C30C31C32C33C34C35C36C37C38C39C40C41C42

FBV JOB Chapter 22

JOB 22 ©

22Then Eliphaz the Temanite responded and said, 2“How can anyone be of help to God? Even wise people are only helpful to themselves. 3Is it any benefit to the Almighty if you're a good person?[fn] What does he gain if you do what's right? 4Does he correct you and bring charges against you because of your reverence?[fn] 5No: it's because you're so wicked! Your sins are never-ending!

6For no reason at all you took your brother's clothing as a security for a debt, and left them stripped naked. 7You refused water to the thirsty; you denied food to the hungry. 8Is it because the land belongs to the powerful, and only the privileged have a right to live there?[fn] 9You have sent widows away empty-handed; you have crushed the outstretched arms of orphans, begging for help.[fn] 10That's why you're surrounded by traps to catch you, and why you suddenly panic in terror. 11That's why it's so dark you cannot see, and why you feel like you're drowning.[fn]

12Doesn't God live in highest heaven and looks down on even the highest stars? 13But you ask, ‘What does God know? How can he see and judge what happens in down here in darkness? 14Thick clouds cover him so he can't see anything as he walks around in heaven.’[fn]

15Why do you insist on following the traditional thinking of the wicked?[fn] 16They were taken before their time; all they had built was washed away. 17They had told God, ‘Get lost! What can the Almighty do to us?’ 18And yet he was the one who had filled their homes with good things—but I don't accept their way of thinking.[fn]

19Those who do right rejoice when they see the destruction of the wicked,[fn] and the innocent mock them, 20saying, ‘Our enemies are destroyed, and fire has burned up all that's left of them.’

21Come back to God and be reconciled to him, and you'll be prosperous again. 22Listen to what he tells you and keep his words in mind. 23If you return to God you will be restored. If you renounce your sinful life[fn] 24and give up your love of money and desire for possessions,[fn] 25then the Almighty will be your gold and your precious silver.

26Then you will find delight in the Almighty, and be able to face him without feeling ashamed. 27You will pray to him, and he will hear you, and you will keep your promises to him. 28Whatever you decide to do will be successful, and wherever you go, light will shine on you. 29When others are humbled, and you say, ‘please help them,’ God will save them. 30God saves those who are innocent, and you will be saved if you do what is right.”[fn]


22:3 “Good person”: or “righteous.”

22:4 Eliphaz is saying that if Job was truly innocent he wouldn't be suffering God's punishment.

22:8 Suggesting that this is Job's attitude.

22:9 “Begging for help” implied.

22:11 Literally, “the abundance of water covers you.”

22:14 Eliphaz accuses Job of believing in a distant, uninterested God who is immune to what happens on earth.

22:15 Literally, “the old paths on which evil people walked.”

22:18 Eliphaz uses exactly the same words as Job does in 21:16.

22:19 Literally, “it,” referring back to verse 16.

22:23 Literally, “remove wickedness from your tent.”

22:24 Literally, “throw your gold in the dust, the gold of Ophir in the riverbed.” Since Job has lost everything already, this needs to be seen figuratively.

22:30 Literally, “if your hands are clean.”

JOB 22 ©

JOBC1C2C3C4C5C6C7C8C9C10C11C12C13C14C15C16C17C18C19C20C21C22C23C24C25C26C27C28C29C30C31C32C33C34C35C36C37C38C39C40C41C42