the Week of Proper 19 / Ordinary 24
Click here to join the effort!
Read the Bible
THE MESSAGE
Job 27:12
Bible Study Resources
Dictionaries:
- HolmanParallel Translations
All of you have seen this for yourselves,why do you keep up this empty talk?
Behold, all of you have seen it yourselves; Why then have you become altogether vain?
Behold, all ye yourselves have seen it; why then are ye thus altogether vain?
Behold, all of you have seen it yourselves; why then have you become altogether vain?
You have all seen this yourselves. So why are we having all this talk that means nothing?
If you yourselves have all seen this, Why in the world do you continue this meaningless talk?
"Behold, all of you have seen it; Why then do you act vainly and foolishly [cherishing worthless concepts]?
"Behold, all of you have seen it; Why then do you talk of nothing?
Behold, all of you have seen it yourselves; Why then have you become altogether vain?
Beholde, all ye your selues haue seene it: why then doe you thus vanish in vanitie?
Behold, all of you have seen it;Why then do you speak with utter vanity?
Surely all of you have seen it for yourselves. Why then do you keep up this empty talk?
All of you have seen these things for yourselves. So you have no excuse.
Look, you all can see for yourselves; so why are you talking such empty nonsense?
Behold, ye yourselves have all seen [it]; and why are ye thus altogether vain?
But you have seen it all with your own eyes. So why do you say such useless things?
Behold, all of you have seen it; why then do you boast in vain?
But no, after all, you have seen for yourselves; so why do you talk such nonsense?
Look, you all have seen, and why in the world have you become altogether vain?
Behold, all of you have seen it yourselves; when then do you become vain with this vanity?
Beholde, ye stonde in yor owne conceate, as though ye knew all thinges. Wherfore then do ye go aboute wt soch vayne wordes,
Behold, all ye yourselves have seen it; Why then are ye become altogether vain?
Truly, you have all seen it yourselves; why then have you become completely foolish?
Behold, all ye yourselves have seen it; why then are ye become altogether vain?
Behold, all ye your selues haue seene it, why then are yee thus altogether vaine?
Behold, all ye your selues haue seene it, why then do ye thus vanishe in vanitie?
Behold, ye all know that ye are adding vanity to vanity.
Behold, all ye yourselves have seen it; why then are ye become altogether vain?
Lo! alle ye knowen, and what speken ye veyn thingis with out cause?
Look, all you yourselves have seen it; Why then have you become altogether vain?
Behold, all ye yourselves have seen [it]; why then are ye thus altogether vain?
Surely all of you have seen it; Why then do you behave with complete nonsense?
But you have seen all this, yet you say all these useless things to me.
All of you have seen it yourselves. Why then do you speak in a foolish way?
All of you have seen it yourselves; why then have you become altogether vain?
Lo! ye, have, all of you, seen, Wherefore, then, is it, that ye are utterly without purpose?
Behold you all know it, and why do you speak vain things without cause?
Behold, all of you have seen it yourselves; why then have you become altogether vain?
Lo, ye -- all of you -- have seen, And why [is] this -- ye are altogether vain?
"Behold, all of you have seen it; Why then do you act foolishly?
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
ye yourselves: Job 21:28-30, Ecclesiastes 8:14, Ecclesiastes 9:1-3
altogether: Job 6:25-29, Job 13:4-9, Job 16:3, Job 17:2, Job 19:2, Job 19:3, Job 21:3, Job 26:2-4
Cross-References
The boys grew up. Esau became an expert hunter, an outdoorsman. Jacob was a quiet man preferring life indoors among the tents. Isaac loved Esau because he loved his game, but Rebekah loved Jacob.
Isaac said, "Come close, son; let me touch you—are you really my son Esau?"
So Jacob moved close to his father Isaac. Isaac felt him and said, "The voice is Jacob's voice but the hands are the hands of Esau." He didn't recognize him because his hands were hairy, like his brother Esau's. But as he was about to bless him he pressed him, "You're sure? You are my son Esau?" "Yes. I am." Isaac said, "Bring the food so I can eat of my son's game and give you my personal blessing." Jacob brought it to him and he ate. He also brought him wine and he drank. Then Isaac said, "Come close, son, and kiss me." He came close and kissed him and Isaac smelled the smell of his clothes. Finally, he blessed him, Ahhh. The smell of my son is like the smell of the open country blessed by God . May God give you of Heaven's dew and Earth's bounty of grain and wine. May peoples serve you and nations honor you. You will master your brothers, and your mother's sons will honor you. Those who curse you will be cursed, those who bless you will be blessed. And then right after Isaac had blessed Jacob and Jacob had left, Esau showed up from the hunt. He also had prepared a hearty meal. He came to his father and said, "Let my father get up and eat of his son's game, that he may give me his personal blessing." His father Isaac said, "And who are you?" "I am your son, your firstborn, Esau." Isaac started to tremble, shaking violently. He said, "Then who hunted game and brought it to me? I finished the meal just now, before you walked in. And I blessed him—he's blessed for good!" Esau, hearing his father's words, sobbed violently and most bitterly, and cried to his father, "My father! Can't you also bless me?" "Your brother," he said, "came here falsely and took your blessing." Esau said, "Not for nothing was he named Jacob, the Heel. Twice now he's tricked me: first he took my birthright and now he's taken my blessing." He begged, "Haven't you kept back any blessing for me?" Isaac answered Esau, "I've made him your master, and all his brothers his servants, and lavished grain and wine on him. I've given it all away. What's left for you, my son?" "But don't you have just one blessing for me, Father? Oh, bless me my father! Bless me!" Esau sobbed inconsolably. Isaac said to him, You'll live far from Earth's bounty, remote from Heaven's dew. You'll live by your sword, hand-to-mouth, and you'll serve your brother. But when you can't take it any more you'll break loose and run free. Esau seethed in anger against Jacob because of the blessing his father had given him; he brooded, "The time for mourning my father's death is close. And then I'll kill my brother Jacob." When these words of her older son Esau were reported to Rebekah, she called her younger son Jacob and said, "Your brother Esau is plotting vengeance against you. He's going to kill you. Son, listen to me. Get out of here. Run for your life to Haran, to my brother Laban. Live with him for a while until your brother cools down, until his anger subsides and he forgets what you did to him. I'll then send for you and bring you back. Why should I lose both of you the same day?" Rebekah spoke to Isaac, "I'm sick to death of these Hittite women. If Jacob also marries a native Hittite woman, why live?"
Esau said, "Not for nothing was he named Jacob, the Heel. Twice now he's tricked me: first he took my birthright and now he's taken my blessing." He begged, "Haven't you kept back any blessing for me?"
"A curse on the person who makes a big show of doing something great for me—an expensive sacrifice, say—and then at the last minute brings in something puny and worthless! I'm a great king, God -of-the-Angel-Armies, honored far and wide, and I'll not put up with it!"
Gill's Notes on the Bible
Behold, all ye yourselves have seen [it],.... As they were men of observation, at least made great pretensions to it, as well as of age and experience, they must have seen and observed somewhat at least of the above things; they must have seen the wicked, as David afterwards did, spreading himself like a green bay tree, and the hypocrites in easy and flourishing circumstances, and good men labouring under great afflictions and pressures, and Job himself was now an instance of that before their eyes:
why then are ye thus altogether vain? or "become vain in vanity" k; so exceeding vain, so excessively trifling, as to speak and act against the dictates of their own conscience, against their own sense, and what they saw with their own eyes, and advance notions so contrary thereunto; as to affirm that evil men are always punished of God in this life, and good men are succeeded and prospered by him; and so from Job's afflictions drew so vain and empty a conclusion, that he must be a wicked man and an hypocrite.
k הבל תהבלו "vanitate vanescitis", Pagninus, Junius Tremellius, Michaelis, Schultens "[vel] evanescitis", Montanus, Bolducius, Beza, Mercerus, Drusius, Piscator, Cocceius.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
Behold, all ye yourselves have seen it - You have had an opportunity of tracing the proofs of the wisdom of God in his works.
Why then are ye thus altogether vain - Why is it that you maintain such opinions - that you evince no more knowledge of his government and plans - that you argue so inconclusively about him and his administration! Why, since you have had an opportunity of observing the course of events, do you maintain that suffering is necessarily a proof of guilt, and that God deals with all people, in this life, according to their character? A close observation of the course of events would have taught you otherwise. Job proceeds to state what he supposes to be the exact truth on the subject, and particularly aims, in the following chapter, to show that the ways of God are inscrutable, and that we cannot be expected to comprehend them, and are not competent to pronounce upon them.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Job 27:12. Ye yourselves have seen it] Your own experience and observation have shown you that the righteous are frequently in affliction, and the wicked in affluence.
Why then are ye thus altogether vain? — The original is very emphatical: הבל תהבלו hebel tehbalu, and well expressed by Mr. Good: "Why then should ye thus babble babblings!" It our language would allow it, we might say vanitize vanity.