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See now, I have set my cause in order. I know that I am righteous.
Verse Takeaways
1
Job's Legal Defense
Commentators explain that Job is using legal language, as if preparing for a trial. When he says, "I have set my cause in order," he means he has arranged his arguments. His confidence that he will be "justified" is a declaration that he expects God, the ultimate judge, to acquit him of his friends' accusations of hypocrisy and secret sin.
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Job
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4
18th Century
Presbyterian
I have ordered my cause – literally, "judgment?" – משׁפט (mı̂shpâṭ). The Septuagint renders it, "I am near (ἐγγύς εἰμί…
17th Century
Reformed Baptist
Behold now, I have ordered [my] cause Or "judgment" F20 ; that is, he had looked over his cause afresh, had reviewe…
Job resolved to cling to the testimony his own conscience gave of his uprightness. He depended on God for justification and salvation, the two grea…
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13th Century
Catholic
After correcting the reasoning of his friends, who tried to defend divine justice with lies, Job now proceeds to dismantle their false dogmas in th…