Job 22
Eliphaz: Job sinned bigtime
We don’t make God richer or smarter
1Eliphaz from Teman said:2Do humans help God?
Do even the smartest help him in any way?
3Is your righteousness an asset to God?
Does it help him or improve him at all?
4Is he punishing you for being good
Because he loses if you’re bad? [1]
You sin, you pay
5Aren't you suffering these incredible tragediesBecause you committed incredible sin?
I'm talking about sin that goes on and on.
6You must have taken clothing as collateral,
Forcing your own family to strip for a loan.
7You likely failed to give water to thirsty people
Or food to the hungry.
8Maybe you acted like only the rich belong here,
And that you are among the elite.
9You probably refused to help widows.
And I'll bet you ignored the orphans, too.
10That's why you’ve been caught in these traps,
And hit with sudden disaster.
11You’re in over your head now
And swallowed up in darkness.
God sees us from heaven
12God lives high above us in the sky,Beyond the farthest star.
Yet he sees us here below.
13But you say, “That’s too far.
How can he see us from there,
Through the dark clouds?
14He lives in the heavens.
He can’t see through the clouds.”
15That’s a sinful way of thinking,
And it’s as old as the ancients.
16Sinners like that died early.
They were swept away
Like a flash flood [2] hit them.
17They told Almighty God, “Leave us alone.
We don’t need anything from you.”
18Well, he’s the one who gave them what they had.
They lived far from God.
19Good people like to see God punish bad people.
Good folks like getting the last laugh.
20Righteous people will say, ”Look at that.
Everything they had is gone,
Burned in a fire.” [3]
Make peace with God
21Get back on good terms with God.Make peace with him,
And he'll make you prosperous again.
22Listen to what he says.
Then take it to heart, embrace it.
23Go back to God.
The Almighty will take you back.
Kick sin out of your tent.
Don't let it live there.
24Start thinking of gold
As no better than dust.
Think of Ophir’s [4] refined gold
As stones washed up in a flood.
25Think of God
As all the gold you’ll ever need
And all the silver you’ll ever want.
26Take pleasure in serving God.
Then hold your head high when you do.
27Pray to God.
And keep the promises you make to him.
28Then when you decide to do something,
It’ll get done.
A light is going to bless the path you take.
29God humbles proud people
And he saves the humble.
30But if you live a righteous life,
God will save sinners [5]
Because of your prayers.
Footnotes
This is implied, given the context of the previous verses. The jump to verse 5 is a long jump that might not seem to make much sense. But Eliphaz’s point seems to be that Job is wasting his time waiting for God to explain the reason for his tragedies. That’s because the reason doesn’t spring from God, since God doesn’t win or lose anything based on Job’s behavior. So, there’s only one obvious reason for Job’s tragedies: God is punishing him for sin. Still, that’s a long jump.
The word picture here seems to refer to a wadi, a typically dry riverbed in the often dry Middle East. When rain comes, a wadi can fill very quickly and wash away anyone using the wadi as a natural walking trail. Added to the danger is that the rainstorm can be far away at a higher altitude. And a person walking on the pathway far from the storm on a sunny day won’t feel its effects until the water hits them like the deluge from a busted dam.
“Burned in a fire” reads like an obvious dig at Job, who lost all his sheep and their shepherds in a lightning fire (Job 1:16).
Location of Ophir is unknown. But it was famous for producing the finest gold. A broken piece of pottery found near Tel Aviv and dated to the 700s BC, a couple centuries after kings David and Solomon, confirms that Ophir was a location from which gold was exported. The fragment reads “30 shekels…gold of Ophir for Beth-Horon.” Scholars have speculated that the gold was somewhere in Arabia or Africa or India. That narrows the search from seven continents to three.
Some scholars say the word translated as “sinners” or as “guilty” in some translations is an unknown word. They say it’s unlikely that hard-nosed Eliphaz would say God saves the guilty. In Eliphaz’s way of thinking, God wallops the guilty. If a prayer would save the guilty, then Eliphaz should say a prayer for Job. Yet the idea that Job could do something as big as this seems to track nicely with Job 22:28.
Discussion Questions
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