3.0 KiB
Eliphaz Speaks
Chapter 15
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Then Eliphaz the Temanite replied:
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Does a wise man answer with empty counsel or fill himself with the hot east wind?
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Should he argue with useless talk or with words that serve no good purpose?
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But you even undermine the fear of God and hinder meditation before him.
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Your iniquity teaches you what to say, and you choose the language of the crafty.
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Your own mouth condemns you, not I; your own lips testify against you.
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Were you the first human ever born, or were you brought forth before the hills?
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Do you listen in on the council of God, or have a monopoly on wisdom?
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What do you know that we don't? What do you understand that is not clear to us?
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Both the gray-haired and the elderly are with us-- older than your father.
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Are God's consolations not enough for you, even the words that deal gently with you?
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Why has your heart misled you, and why do your eyes flash
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as you turn your anger against God and allow such words to leave your mouth?
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What is a mere human, that he should be pure, or one born of a woman, that he should be righteous?
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If God puts no trust in his holy ones and the heavens are not pure in his sight,
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how much less one who is revolting and corrupt, who drinks injustice like water?
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Listen to me and I will inform you. I will describe what I have seen,
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what the wise have declared and not concealed, that came from their ancestors,
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to whom alone the land was given when no foreigner passed among them.
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A wicked person writhes in pain all his days, throughout the number of years reserved for the ruthless.
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Dreadful sounds fill his ears; when he is at peace, a robber attacks him.
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He doesn't believe he will return from darkness; he is destined for the sword.
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He wanders about for food, asking, "Where is it?" He knows the day of darkness is at hand.
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Trouble and distress terrify him, overwhelming him like a king prepared for battle.
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For he has stretched out his hand against God and has arrogantly opposed the Almighty.
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He rushes headlong at him with his thick, studded shields.
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Though his face is covered with fat and his waistline bulges with it,
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he will dwell in ruined cities, in abandoned houses destined to become piles of rubble.
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He will no longer be rich; his wealth will not endure. His possessions will not increase in the land.
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He will not escape from the darkness; flames will wither his shoots, and by the breath of God's mouth, he will depart.
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Let him not put trust in worthless things, being led astray, for what he gets in exchange will prove worthless.
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It will be accomplished before his time, and his branch will not flourish.
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He will be like a vine that drops its unripe grapes and like an olive tree that sheds its blossoms.
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For the company of the godless will have no children, and fire will consume the tents of those who offer bribes.
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They conceive trouble and give birth to evil; their womb prepares deception.