Job 21
Job questions why the wicked often live long, prosperous lives, while the righteous suffer, and notes that the wicked seem to be able to live without fear of God's judgment. He argues that the wicked may die peacefully, while the righteous die in bitterness, and yet they will both end up in the same place, the grave. Job also criticizes his friends for their empty words of comfort and their mistaken assumption that the wicked are always punished in this life.
1Then Job responded by saying2I beseech you to hear my words and to do penance3Permit me, and I will speak, and afterwards, if you see fit, you can laugh at my words4Is my dispute against man, so that I would have no reason to be discouraged5Listen to me and be astonished, and place a finger over your mouth6As for me, when I think it over, I am afraid, and trembling convulses my body7Why then do the impious live, having been lifted up and strengthened with riches8They see their offspring continue before them: a commotion of close relatives and of children’s children in their sight9Their houses have been secure and peaceable, and there is no staff of God over them10Their cattle have conceived and have not miscarried; their cow has given birth and is not deprived of her newborn11Their little ones go out like a flock, and their children jump around playfully12They take up the timbrel and the lyre, and they rejoice at the sound of the organ13Their days are prolonged in wealth, yet, in an instant, they descend into hell14Who has said to God, "Depart from us, for we do not want the knowledge of your ways15Who is the Almighty that we should serve him? And how is it helpful to us if we pray to him?16It is true that their good things are not in their power. May the counsel of the impious be far from me17How often will the lamp of the wicked be extinguished, and a deluge overtake them, and how often will he distribute the afflictions of his wrath18They will be like chaff before the face of the wind, and like ashes that the whirlwind scatters19God will preserve the grief of the father for his sons, and, when he repays, then he will understand20His eyes will see his own destruction, and he will drink from the wrath of the Almighty21For what does he care what happens to his house after him, or if the number of its months are reduced by half22Can anyone teach holy knowledge to God, who judges the exalted23This one dies strong and healthy, rich and happy24His gut is full of fat and his bones are moistened with marrow25In truth, another dies in bitterness of soul, without any resources26And yet they will sleep together in the dust, and worms will cover them27Surely, I know your thoughts and your sinful judgments against me28For you say, "Where is the house of the ruler, and where are the tabernacles of the impious?29Ask any passerby whom you wish, and you will realize that he understands these same things30that the evil-doer is reserved for the day of destruction, and he will be led to the day of wrath31Who will reprove his way to his face, and who will repay him for what he has done32He will be led to the tomb, and he will remain awake in the chaos of the dead33He has been found acceptable to the banks of the River of Lamentation, and he will draw any man towards him, and there are countless before him34Therefore, how long will you console me in vain, when your answer is shown to be repugnant to truth
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