-
Verse Job 22:5. IS _NOT THY WICKEDNESS GREAT?_] Thy sins are not only
_many_, but they are _great_; and of thy continuance in them _there_
_is no end_, אין קץ ein kets....
-
IS NOT THY WICKEDNESS GREAT? - That is, “Is it not utter presumption
and folly for a man, whose wickedness is undoubtedly so great, to
presume to enter into a litigation with God?” Eliphaz here
“assum...
-
THE THIRD SERIES OF CONTROVERSIES
CHAPTER 22 The Third Address of Eliphaz
_ 1. Is not thy wickedness great? (Job 22:1)_
2. In what Job had sinned (Job 22:6)
3. The omniscience of God and the ways...
-
JOB 22. THIRD SPEECH OF ELIPHAZ. The only new thing that Eliphaz has
to say, is definitely to describe the sin of Job! Yet his mildness
makes him end with bright promises.
JOB 22:1. Is it not to Job'...
-
Job's afflictions are because of his sins sins which Eliphaz now
suggests and enumerates. They are such sins as a powerful Oriental
ruler naturally falls into, inhumanity, avarice, and abuse of power....
-
God's treatment of men cannot be due to any respect which He has to
Himself, for He is too lofty to be affected by anything human. He
deals with men according to their ways, and Job's afflictions can...
-
The Third Circle of Speeches
In the first round of speeches the three friends exhausted the
argument from the general conception of God. In the second they
exhausted the argument from the operation o...
-
III. FALLACIES, FOLLIES, AND LOGOTHERAPYTHIRD TIME'S A CHARM (Job
22:1, Job 26:14)
A.
ELIPHAZ ON THE FUNCTIONAL VALUE OF MAN (Job 22:1-30)
1.
God, needing nothing, is not self-seeking in punishing...
-
_IS NOT THY WICKEDNESS GREAT? AND THINE INIQUITIES INFINITE?_
Heretofore Eliphaz had only insinuated, now he plainly asserts Job's
guilt, merely on the ground of his sufferings....
-
THE LAST SPEECH OF ELIPHAZ
1-11. Eliphaz ignoring Job's last speech, perhaps because he could not
answer it, argues that God's treatment of man must be impartial, since
He has nothing to gain or lose...
-
JOB, A SERVANT OF GOD
Job
_KEITH SIMONS_
Words in boxes (except for words in brackets) are from the Bible.
This commentary has been through Advanced Checking.
CHAPTER 22
ELIPHAZ’S LAST SPEECH
G...
-
At last, Eliphaz accused Job clearly. He said that God was punishing
Job for his evil deeds. But Eliphaz was wrong. Job was a good, honest
man (Job 1:1)....
-
IS NOT THY WICKEDNESS GREAT? — This was mere conjecture and surmise,
arising simply from a false assumption: namely, that a just God can
only punish the wicked, and that therefore those must be wicked...
-
הֲ לֹ֣א רָעָֽתְךָ֣ רַבָּ֑ה וְ אֵֽין
־קֵ֝֗ץ
-
XIX.
DOGMATIC AND MORAL ERROR
Job 22:1
ELIPHAZ SPEAKS
THE second colloquy has practically exhausted the subject of debate
between Job and his friends. The three have really nothing more to say
in t...
-
“ACQUAINT THYSELF WITH GOD”
Job 22:1
Eliphaz opens the third cycle of the discussion with a speech
altogether too hard and cruel. He begins with an _enumeration of Job's
fancied misdeeds,_ Job 22:1....
-
Here begins the third cycle in the controversy, and again EIiphaz is
the first speaker. His address consisted of two movements. First, he
made a definite charge against Job (1-20); and, second, he mad...
-
_Iniquities. He adduces no fresh arguments, but boldly taxes Job with
many crimes, which a person in his station might have committed. He
rashly concludes that he must have fallen into some of them at...
-
(5) В¶ Is not thy wickedness great? and thine iniquities infinite?
(6) For thou hast taken a pledge from thy brother for nought, and
stripped the naked of their clothing. (7) Thou hast not given water...
-
THE FOLLOWING COMMENTARY COVERS CHAPTER S 4 THROUGH 31.
As to the friends of Job, they do not call for any extended remarks.
They urge the doctrine that God's earthly government is a full measure
and...
-
IS NOT THY WICKEDNESS GREAT?.... It must be owned it is, it cannot be
denied. Indeed, the wickedness of every man's heart is great, it being
desperately wicked, full of sin, abounding with it; out of...
-
Job 22:5 [Is] not thy wickedness great? and thine iniquities infinite?
Ver. 5. _Is not thy wickedness great?_] Why, no; God of his grace had
kept Job innocent of the great transgression, Psalms 19:13...
-
_Is not thy wickedness great?_ Thy great sins are the true and only
cause of thy misery. Or, the verse may be translated, _Is not thy
evil_ (thy affliction or punishment) _great, because_, אין קצ,
_ei...
-
Is not thy wickedness great and thine iniquities infinite? Eliphaz
here boldly draws the conclusion to which his first statements
entitled him, as he thought: Because God sends such afflictions only
a...
-
ELIPHAZ CHARGES JOB WITH WICKEDNESS...
-
JOB'S SIN EXPOSED BEFORE GOD
(vv.1-8)
Eliphaz considered that he was representing God in speaking, and
exposing what he imagined were the sins of Job. He first asks a
question that it is well worth...
-
Seeing that Job has been punished severely this is taken as proof that
Job is not simply. sinner, but. sinner with transgressions without
numbers. "If your suffering is limitless and God is just, then...
-
Thy great sins are the true and only causes of thy misery. The words
may very well be rendered thus, _Is not thy evil_ (i.e. thy punishment
or affliction, which is frequently expressed by this very wo...
-
Job 22:5 wickedness H7451 great H7227 iniquity H5771 end H7093
not thy - Job 4:7-11,...
-
CONTENTS: Eliphaz's third discourse, accusing Job again of hypocrisy.
CHARACTERS: God, Eliphaz, Job.
CONCLUSION: It is the duty of those especially who are in affliction
to keep up a perfect acquain...
-
Job 22:5. _Is not thy wickedness great?_ This speech of Eliphaz is
cruel, and very much embittered; for it was mere suspicion that Job
had robbed the widow, and stripped the naked. Job replies to it m...
-
_Is not thy wickedness great?_
THE CHARGE AGAINST JOB
I. Wrong in relation to man. In regard to the charge which he here
brings against Job, it is worthy of note that whilst most expositors
regard E...
-
JOB—NOTE ON JOB 22:1 Third Cycle. The consistent pattern of the
first two cycles unravels in this last dialogue. Eliphaz describes
Job’s life as a constant stream of wicked activity (ch. Job
-
JOB—NOTE ON JOB 22:5 Eliphaz assumes that Job’s circumstances
reveal significant EVIL in his life. He describes the likely ways that
Job has sinned.
⇐
-
_THIRD SPEECH OF ELIPHAZ THE TEMANITE_
Remonstrates with Job on his self-righteousness, and plainly charges
him with grievous transgressions as the cause of his present
sufferings; concludes with pro...
-
EXPOSITION
JOB 22:1
Eliphaz returns to the attack, but with observations that are at first
strangely pointless and irrelevant, _e.g._ on the unprofitableness of
man to God (verses l, 2), and on the s...
-
So Eliphaz takes up the argument now. And the same old story: he
accuses Job of being wicked and he actually makes many bad
accusations. He said,
Can a man be profitable unto God, as he that is wise m...
-
Job 11:14; Job 15:31; Job 15:5; Job 15:6; Job 21:27;...
-
Evil — Is not thy evil, thy affliction, are not thy calamities
procured by, and proportionable to thy sins....