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Elihu now speaks to Job[a]

32 Job would not agree that he had done anything that was wrong. So his three friends refused to argue with him any more. Another man was also there. His name was Elihu, Barakel's son. Barakel was a descendant of Buz. He belonged to Ram's clan.

Elihu became very angry with Job. He was angry because Job continued to say that he was not guilty. Job said that God was wrong to punish him. Elihu was also angry with Job's three friends. They had not been able to find an answer to Job's problem. But they still said that Job was guilty. Elihu had waited for Job's three friends to speak before he spoke to Job himself. He waited because he was younger than them. But he became angry when Job's three friends had nothing more to say. So he finally decided to speak.

Barakel's son, Elihu, said this:

‘I am young and you are old.
    So I was afraid to tell you what I was thinking.
I thought, “Older men should speak.
    They have lived for many years and they should share their wisdom.”
But it is a person's spirit that helps them to understand things.
Almighty God has to put his breath into them.
Not all old people are wise.
    Old people do not always understand what is right.
10 So I say, “Listen to me.
    I too will explain what I know.”
11 Yes, I waited for you all to speak.
I listened to your wise thoughts,
    as you tried to find the right words to say.
12 I listened carefully to you,
    as you argued with Job.
But none of you could show Job that he was wrong.
    None of you was able to answer his problems.
13 So do not say, “We are wise.”
    Do not say, “God must show Job that he is wrong.
    People cannot do that.”
14 Job was not speaking to me about his problems.
    So I will not answer him in the way that you did.

15 Now they are upset!
    They have no more answers to give.
    There is nothing more that they can say.
16 I have waited for them,
    and now they say nothing.
They stand there and they have no more answers.
17 So now I will say what I think.
    I, too, will tell you what I know.
18 There are many things that I want to say.
    The spirit inside me causes me to speak.
19 I cannot keep quiet any longer!
    I am like a bag that is full of new wine.
    I am ready to break so that everything pours out!
20 So I have to speak or I will become ill.
    I must open my mouth and reply to you.
21 I will be fair in what I say.
    I will not give honour to anyone to get their help.
22     I am too honest to do that.
If I am not fair,
    God, my Maker, would quickly remove me.’

Footnotes

  1. 32:1 In the next six chapters, we read the words of a man called Elihu. In chapters 32 and 33, he tries to help Job to understand several things. First, Job had said that God had not answered his questions. Elihu tells Job that God does speak to people. He speaks if people will listen (chapter 33, verses 14 to 17). Second, Job thinks that God has not been fair. This is how Elihu answers that: Sometimes God sends an illness to teach people the right way to live (chapter 33, verses 19 to 28).

Elihu

32 So these three men stopped answering Job,(A) because he was righteous in his own eyes.(B) But Elihu son of Barakel the Buzite,(C) of the family of Ram, became very angry with Job for justifying himself(D) rather than God.(E) He was also angry with the three friends,(F) because they had found no way to refute Job,(G) and yet had condemned him.[a](H) Now Elihu had waited before speaking to Job because they were older than he.(I) But when he saw that the three men had nothing more to say, his anger was aroused.

So Elihu son of Barakel the Buzite said:

“I am young in years,
    and you are old;(J)
that is why I was fearful,
    not daring to tell you what I know.
I thought, ‘Age should speak;
    advanced years should teach wisdom.’(K)
But it is the spirit[b](L) in a person,
    the breath of the Almighty,(M) that gives them understanding.(N)
It is not only the old[c] who are wise,(O)
    not only the aged(P) who understand what is right.(Q)

10 “Therefore I say: Listen to me;(R)
    I too will tell you what I know.(S)
11 I waited while you spoke,
    I listened to your reasoning;
while you were searching for words,
12     I gave you my full attention.
But not one of you has proved Job wrong;
    none of you has answered his arguments.(T)
13 Do not say, ‘We have found wisdom;(U)
    let God, not a man, refute(V) him.’
14 But Job has not marshaled his words against me,(W)
    and I will not answer him with your arguments.

15 “They are dismayed and have no more to say;
    words have failed them.(X)
16 Must I wait, now that they are silent,
    now that they stand there with no reply?
17 I too will have my say;
    I too will tell what I know.(Y)
18 For I am full of words,
    and the spirit(Z) within me compels me;(AA)
19 inside I am like bottled-up wine,
    like new wineskins ready to burst.(AB)
20 I must speak and find relief;
    I must open my lips and reply.(AC)
21 I will show no partiality,(AD)
    nor will I flatter anyone;(AE)
22 for if I were skilled in flattery,
    my Maker(AF) would soon take me away.(AG)

Footnotes

  1. Job 32:3 Masoretic Text; an ancient Hebrew scribal tradition Job, and so had condemned God
  2. Job 32:8 Or Spirit; also in verse 18
  3. Job 32:9 Or many; or great