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So how can you comfort me with nonsense, Seeing that in your answers there remains only falsehood?"
Verse Takeaways
1
True Comfort Requires Truth
Job dismisses his friends' attempts at comfort because their arguments are based on a false premise: that suffering is always a direct and immediate punishment for sin. Commentators like Barnes and Gill stress that genuine, lasting comfort can only be built on a foundation of truth. Any consolation rooted in error or a misunderstanding of God's character is ultimately 'in vain' and cannot sustain a soul through affliction.
See 3 Verse Takeaways
Book Overview
Job
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5
18th Century
Presbyterian
How then comfort ye me in vain ... - That is, how can you be qualified to give me consolation in my trials, who have such erroneous…
19th Century
Anglican
There remains falsehood—Or, all that is left of them is transgression, that is to say, it is not only worthless, but furthermore, it is ev…
17th Century
Reformed Baptist
How then comfort ye me in vain This is the conclusion Job draws from the above observations: his friends came to com…
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Job opposes the opinion of his friends that the wicked are sure to fall into visible and remarkable ruin, and none but the wicked; upon which princ…
13th Century
Catholic
Since Job had previously established that evil men sometimes experience prosperity and at other times adversity in this life, which causes doubt, h…