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If I have sinned, what do I do to you, you watcher of men? Why have you set me as a mark for you, So that I am a burden to myself?
Verse Takeaways
1
A Complex 'Confession'
Most commentators note that Job's statement, "I have sinned," is not a simple, penitent confession. Instead, it's likely a hypothetical or frustrated concession, as if to say, "Even if I have sinned, what is that to an all-powerful God that He should punish me so severely?" This highlights the raw honesty of lament, where one can question the scale of God's response while in deep pain.
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Job
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8
18th Century
Presbyterian
I have sinned – חטאתי châṭâ’tı̂y. This is a literal translation, and as it stands in the common version, it is the languag…
19th Century
Anglican
I have sinned — i.e., “Putting the case that I have sinned, yet what then can I do to You, O You keeper of men?”…
Baptist
I have sinned; what shall I do unto thee, O thou preserver of men?
We did not expect him to call God by that name; yet sorrow has a…
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17th Century
Reformed Baptist
I have sinned Some render it, "if I have sinned" F23 ; be it so that I have, as my friends say, yet since ther…
Job reasons with God concerning his dealings with man. But in the midst of this discourse, Job seems to have lifted up his thoughts to God with som…
13th Century
Catholic
After Job has shown that the consolation of Eliphaz, which was based on the promise of earthly happiness, was leading him to despair and the desire…
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