Job - 34:7



7 What man is like Job, who drinks scorn like water,

Verse In-Depth

Explanation and meaning of Job 34:7.

Differing Translations

Compare verses for better understanding.
What man is like Job, who drinketh up scorning like water?
What man is like Job, Who drinketh up scoffing like water,
Who is a man like Job? He drinketh scoffing like water,
What man is like Job, who drinks up scorning like water?
What man is like Job, a man who freely makes sport of God,
What man is there that is like Job, who drinks up derision as if it were water,

*Minor differences ignored. Grouped by changes, with first version listed as example.


Historical Commentaries

Scholarly Analysis and Interpretation.

What man is like Job, who drinketh up scorning like water? - A similar image occurs in Job 15:16. The idea is, that he was full of reproachful speeches respecting God; of the language of irreverence and rebellion. He indulged in it as freely as a man drinks water; gathers up and imbibes all the language of reproach that he can find, and indulges in it as if it were perfectly harmless.

Drinketh up scorning like water? - This is a repetition of the charge made against Job by Eliphaz, Job 15:16. It is a proverbial expression, and seems to be formed, as a metaphor, from a camel drinking, who takes in a large draught of water, even the most turbid, on its setting out on a journey in a caravan, that it may serve it for a long time. Job deals largely in scorning; he fills his heart with it.

What man [is] like Job, [who] drinketh up (f) scorning like water?
(f) Which is compelled to receive your reproach and scorns of many for his foolish words.

What man is like Job,.... This is said as wondering at the part he acted, that a man so wise and good as Job was esteemed to be should behave in such a manner as he did;
who drinketh up scorning like water? For a foolish and wicked man to do so is not strange nor uncommon; but for a man of such sense and grace as Job was to do this was astonishing; to have no more regard to his character than to expose himself to the scorn and ridicule of men: for a man to become a laughing stock to profane and wicked men for his religion and piety, it is no disgrace, but an honour to him; but by unbecoming words and gestures to make himself justly jeered and scoffed at is great indiscretion. Or it may be understood actively of his dealing very freely and frequently in scoffs and jeers, which he poured out very liberally and plentifully, and seemingly with as much delight as a man drinks water when thirsty; see Job 11:3.

(Job 15:16). Image from the camel.
scorning--against God (Job 15:4).

Like water - Abundantly and greedily: who doth so break forth into scornful expressions, not only against his friends, but in some sort against God himself.

*More commentary available at chapter level.


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