Job's reply to Eliphaz
Job answers Eliphaz by insisting that his harsh words arise from unbearable suffering, not from rebellion. He rebukes his friends for failing to show loyal compassion, laments the brevity and misery of human life under God's searching gaze, and brings his complaint directly to God while still appeal
Commentary
6:1 Then Job responded:
6:2 “Oh, if only my grief could be weighed, and my misfortune laid on the scales too!
6:3 But because it is heavier than the sand of the sea, that is why my words have been wild.
6:4 For the arrows of the Almighty are within me; my spirit drinks their poison; God’s sudden terrors are arrayed against me.
6:5 “Does the wild donkey bray when it is near grass? Or does the ox low near its fodder?
6:6 Can food that is tasteless be eaten without salt? Or is there any taste in the white of an egg?
6:7 I have refused to touch such things; they are like loathsome food to me.
6:8 “Oh that my request would be realized, and that God would grant me what I long for!
6:9 And that God would be willing to crush me, that he would let loose his hand and kill me.
6:10 Then I would yet have my comfort, then I would rejoice, in spite of pitiless pain, for I have not concealed the words of the Holy One.
6:11 What is my strength, that I should wait? and what is my end, that I should prolong my life?
6:12 Is my strength like that of stones? or is my flesh made of bronze?
6:13 Is not my power to help myself nothing, and has not every resource been driven from me?
6:14 “To the one in despair, kindness should come from his friend even if he forsakes the fear of the Almighty.
6:15 My brothers have been as treacherous as a seasonal stream, and as the riverbeds of the intermittent streams that flow away.
6:16 They are dark because of ice; snow is piled up over them.
6:17 When they are scorched, they dry up, when it is hot, they vanish from their place.
6:18 Caravans turn aside from their routes; they go into the wasteland and perish.
6:19 The caravans of Tema looked intently for these streams; the traveling merchants of Sheba hoped for them.
6:20 They were distressed, because each one had been so confident; they arrived there, but were disappointed.
6:21 For now you have become like these streams that are no help; you see a terror, and are afraid. Friends’ Fears
6:22 “Have I ever said, ‘Give me something, and from your fortune make gifts in my favor’?
6:23 Or ‘Deliver me from the enemy’s power, and from the hand of tyrants ransom me’?
6:24 “Teach me and I, for my part, will be silent; explain to me how I have been mistaken.
6:25 How painful are honest words! But what does your reproof prove?
6:26 Do you intend to criticize mere words, and treat the words of a despairing man as wind?
6:27 Yes, you would gamble for the fatherless, and auction off your friend.
6:28 “Now then, be good enough to look at me; and I will not lie to your face!
6:29 Relent, let there be no falsehood; reconsider, for my righteousness is intact!
6:30 Is there any falsehood on my lips? Can my mouth not discern evil things?
7:1 “Does not humanity have hard service on earth? Are not their days also like the days of a hired man?
7:2 Like a servant longing for the evening shadow, and like a hired man looking for his wages,
7:3 thus I have been made to inherit months of futility, and nights of sorrow have been appointed to me.
7:4 If I lie down, I say, ‘When will I arise?’, and the night stretches on and I toss and turn restlessly until the day dawns.
7:5 My body is clothed with worms and dirty scabs; my skin is broken and festering.
7:6 My days are swifter than a weaver’s shuttle and they come to an end without hope.
7:7 Remember that my life is but a breath, that my eyes will never again see happiness.
7:8 The eye of him who sees me now will see me no more; your eyes will look for me, but I will be gone.
7:9 As a cloud is dispersed and then disappears, so the one who goes down to the grave does not come up again.
7:10 He returns no more to his house, nor does his place of residence know him any more.
7:11 “Therefore, I will not refrain my mouth; I will speak in the anguish of my spirit; I will complain in the bitterness of my soul.
7:12 Am I the sea, or the creature of the deep, that you must put me under guard?
7:13 If I say, “My bed will comfort me, my couch will ease my complaint,”
7:14 then you scare me with dreams and terrify me with visions,
7:15 so that I would prefer strangling, and death more than life.
7:16 I loathe it; I do not want to live forever; leave me alone, for my days are a vapor!
7:17 “What is mankind that you make so much of them, and that you pay attention to them?
7:18 And that you visit them every morning, and try them every moment?
7:19 Will you never look away from me, will you not let me alone long enough to swallow my spittle?
7:20 If I have sinned – what have I done to you, O watcher of men? Why have you set me as your target? Have I become a burden to you?
7:21 And why do you not pardon my transgression, and take away my iniquity? For now I will lie down in the dust, and you will seek me diligently, but I will be gone.” Bildad’s First Speech to Job
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Context notes
This unit is Job’s full reply to Eliphaz in the first dialogue cycle; the supplied text includes the transition heading for Bildad’s next speech at the end, but Job’s speech itself ends at 7:21.
Historical setting and dynamics
The speech belongs to the ancient wisdom world, where sufferers are expected to receive loyal comfort from friends and where disputation over a righteous person’s affliction is carried out in elevated poetic discourse. The desert and trade imagery assumes an arid environment in which seasonal streams (wadis) can appear promising but fail when needed, making the comparison of unreliable friends especially forceful. The references to Tema and Sheba fit the wider Arabian trade world and underscore the common expectation that hospitality and support should be dependable. Job speaks as a socially isolated man whose bodily suffering, loss of stability, and broken friendships have all converged.
Central idea
Job answers Eliphaz by insisting that his harsh words arise from unbearable suffering, not from rebellion. He rebukes his friends for failing to show loyal compassion, laments the brevity and misery of human life under God's searching gaze, and brings his complaint directly to God while still appealing for pardon before death.
Context and flow
This is Job’s first long reply after Eliphaz’s initial speech, and it sets the tone for the first cycle of debate. The unit moves from Job’s defense of his speech, to a direct rebuke of the friends, to a broader lament over mortality and divine scrutiny, and then to a final appeal to God for pardon. Bildad’s first speech follows immediately, so Job’s words here are a hinge between accusation and further disputation.
Exegetical analysis
Job begins by asking that his grief and misfortune be weighed; the image is hyperbolic, but the point is not exaggeration for its own sake. He wants his friends to understand that his speech is the pressured speech of a man crushed by suffering. In 6:4 he interprets his affliction as coming from the arrows of the Almighty and God's terrors, language that reflects Job's lived perception of divine opposition without settling the larger question of causation.
The animal and food analogies in 6:5-7 show that complaint is natural when something is distasteful and unpalatable; Job is saying that his words fit his condition as instinctive reactions fit the condition that produces them. In 6:8-13 he moves from explanation to a desperate wish for death. This is not detached speculation but the cry of one who sees no remaining strength, no self-help, and no plausible future. Even so, he appeals to his integrity before God: he has not concealed the words of the Holy One. That is not a claim to sinlessness, but a claim that he has not abandoned God's word in secret unbelief.
Job then turns sharply to his friends. In 6:14 he states a principle of true friendship: a despairing person should receive loyal kindness rather than suspicion. The Hebrew wording is difficult, but the thrust is clear. His friends should have shown mercy, not treated him as if he were morally disposable. Instead, they have proved treacherous like seasonal streams. The wadi image is carefully chosen: channels that seem promising can fail exactly when they are needed. Caravans depend on them, and disappointment there means danger. Job says his friends have done the same to him: they appeared reliable, but they have failed in his crisis.
In 6:22-30 Job denies that he ever asked them for money, rescue, or ransom. He wanted instruction if they had actual correction to give, but instead they treated his words as wind and piled on blame. The fatherless image in 6:27 is a moral indictment: to exploit the vulnerable in speech is as cruel as wagering away an orphan. Job closes this section by asking them to look at him honestly and admit that his righteousness remains intact. That does not mean he claims moral perfection; it means he rejects their assumption that his suffering proves secret hypocrisy.
Chapter 7 broadens from the friends to human life under God. Human existence is compared to hard service and hired labor: a worker longs for evening and wages, and Job longs for relief that never comes. His nights are restless, his body diseased, and his days are swift and hopeless. The language of worms, scabs, and festering skin is graphic and concrete; it communicates the disgrace and anguish of bodily decay. His claim that he will never again see happiness comes from the perspective of his present affliction, not from a fully developed doctrine of the afterlife.
Job then describes the finality of death in experiential terms: the dead do not return to their house, and earthly relationships are severed. He is not giving a full theological account of the intermediate state; he is lamenting the apparent irreversibility of his condition from within his suffering. In 7:11-16 he resolves not to restrain his mouth. His anguish is so severe that he would rather die than continue as he is. The references to dreams and visions show that even sleep offers no relief; God's terrors intrude there as well.
The final movement, 7:17-21, is a direct protest before God. Job uses language that recalls humanity's smallness before divine attention, but here the emphasis is not awe so much as bewilderment at relentless scrutiny. He feels watched every moment, targeted as if he were an enemy, and he asks why God does not pardon his sin before death overtakes him. This should be read as lament and plea, not as a final confession that his calamity proves some specific hidden offense. Job remains morally serious and Godward even in his distress.
Covenantal and redemptive location
Job stands in the wisdom tradition outside the explicit institutions of Israel’s land, kingship, temple, and sacrificial system, yet fully within the post-fall world where righteous suffering and apparent divine hiddenness are real problems. The speech does not advance covenant history in a narrow national sense, but it does expose the need for more than human wisdom, more than friends, and more than self-defense. Canonically, it contributes to the Bible’s growing testimony that the fear of God does not eliminate suffering and that only God can finally vindicate the righteous, pardon sin, and answer the complaint of the afflicted.
Theological significance
The passage teaches that genuine faith may lament honestly before God without ceasing to be faith. It shows the severity of suffering, the fragility of human life, the inadequacy of shallow counsel, and the moral duty of compassionate friendship. It also presses the question of divine justice: if God searches and tests humanity, he must also provide the only true solution to guilt, affliction, and mortality.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No major prophecy, typology, or symbol requires special comment in this unit. The arrows, the seasonal streams, the hired man, and the vapor are forceful poetic images, but they function as lament metaphors rather than as direct prophetic symbols.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The speech depends on ordinary ancient Near Eastern realities: desert travel, seasonal wadis, caravan dependence on water, and the expectation that friends will act with loyal solidarity toward one in distress. The comparison with a hired laborer reflects the concrete, time-bound nature of work and relief in the ancient world. Job's appeal for his friends to look him in the face and his reference to the fatherless also fit honor-shame and vulnerability patterns in which public integrity and social protection mattered greatly.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
Job’s lament is not a direct messianic prophecy, but it does fit a broader canonical pattern: the righteous sufferer is misunderstood by friends, feels abandoned under divine pressure, and longs for pardon and vindication. Later Scripture will answer this pattern more fully in the faithful Servant and in Christ, who bears suffering without sin and provides the true mediator and friend Job lacks. The passage therefore contributes to the Bible’s expectation that ultimate vindication must come from God himself, not from human observers.
Practical and doctrinal implications
Believers are permitted to bring raw grief to God, but they must do so as Job does here: honestly, not flippantly, and with moral seriousness. Friends should answer suffering with loyal compassion and truthful help rather than suspicion and weaponized theology. The passage warns against interpreting affliction simplistically as direct proof of hidden sin, while also reminding readers that human life is brief and cannot secure its own relief. It encourages patience, humility, and careful speech in the presence of another person's pain.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The hardest line is 6:14, where the Hebrew is difficult and English versions differ. The safest reading is that a man in desperate suffering should receive loyal kindness from a friend, not abandonment or suspicion. Another major tension is 7:20-21: Job speaks as a sinner in the general human sense and asks for pardon, but he is not conceding the friends' retributive verdict that his suffering proves a hidden crime. Both passages should be read as lamented protest, not as settled doctrinal conclusions.
Application boundary note
Do not treat Job's wish for death as a model of piety or his every utterance as a settled theological claim. The passage authorizes lament and protest before God, but it does not authorize bitterness, reckless speech, or the assumption that every sufferer is hiding sin. Its friendship ethic is concrete and situational, not a license for simplistic moralizing.
Key Hebrew terms
Shaddai
Gloss: Almighty
Job attributes his suffering to the direct assault of the Almighty, showing that he interprets his affliction as coming under God's sovereign power, even while he protests the experience.
hesed
Gloss: kindness, steadfast love
In 6:14 Job says a despairing man should receive hesed from his friend. The term raises the moral expectation of faithful, loyal support rather than harsh suspicion.
hevel
Gloss: breath, vapor, fleetingness
Job uses this image for the brevity and fragility of life, emphasizing how quickly his days are disappearing and how little time he has left.
enosh
Gloss: mortal man
The word stresses human frailty in 7:17-18 and sharpens Job's question about why God should pay such intense attention to a weak, transient creature.
Interpretive cautions
Poetic compression remains, but the principal interpretive difficulties have been handled with restraint.