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If indeed you will magnify yourselves against me, And plead against me my reproach;
Verse Takeaways
1
The Arrogance of Judging
Commentators explain that Job's friends were "magnifying themselves" by adopting a superior, judgmental tone. They used Job's suffering—his "reproach"—as the primary evidence to prove he was a wicked man. This highlights the danger of judging others based on their circumstances rather than offering the compassion due to a friend in affliction.
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Job
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5
18th Century
Presbyterian
If, indeed, you will magnify yourselves against me - This is connected with the next verse. The sense is, “all these calamities cam…
19th Century
Baptist
Job seems to say, "I did not bring this trouble upon myself; it is God who has laid it upon me. Be careful that, in reproaching me for my trouble, …
17th Century
Reformed Baptist
If indeed you will magnify [yourselves] against me Look and talk big, set up themselves for great folk, and resolve …
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Job's friends blamed him as a wicked man because he was so afflicted; here he describes their unkindness, showing that what they condemned was capa…
13th Century
Catholic
In the previous discourse, it seems Bildad intended two things. First, he intended to refute Job for his stupidity, pride, and anger ([Reference Jo…