the Week of Proper 16 / Ordinary 21
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THE MESSAGE
Job 33:10
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- HolmanEncyclopedias:
- InternationalParallel Translations
But he finds reasons to oppose me;he regards me as his enemy.
Behold, he finds occasions against me, He counts me for his enemy:
Behold, he findeth occasions against me, he counteth me for his enemy,
Behold, he finds occasions against me, he counts me as his enemy,
But God has found fault with me; he considers me his enemy.
Yet God finds occasions with me; he regards me as his enemy!
'Behold, God finds pretexts against me; He counts me as His enemy.
'Behold, He invents criticisms against me; He counts me as His enemy.
Behold, he finds occasions against me, He counts me for his enemy:
Lo, he hath found occasions against me, and counted me for his enemie.
Behold, He finds reasons for opposition against me;He counts me as His enemy.
Yet He finds occasions against me; He counts me as His enemy.
You claim that God has made you his enemy,
Yet [God] finds pretexts for accusing me; he regards me as his enemy.
Lo, he findeth occasions of hostility against me, he counteth me for his enemy;
But God found an excuse to attack me. He treats me like an enemy.
Behold, he finds occasions against me, he counts me as his enemy.
But God finds excuses for attacking me and treats me like an enemy.
Look, he finds fault against me; he reckons me as his enemy;
behold, He finds alienation on me; He considers me His enemy;
But lo, he hath pyked a quarell agaynst me, & taketh me for his enemy:
Behold, he findeth occasions against me, He counteth me for his enemy;
See, he is looking for something against me; in his eyes I am as one of his haters;
Behold, He findeth occasions against me, He counteth me for His enemy;
Behold, hee findeth occasions against mee, hee counteth mee for his enemie.
But lo, he hath piked a quarell against me, and taketh me for his enemie.
Yet he has discovered a charge against me, and he has reckoned me as an adversary.
Behold, he findeth occasions against me, he counteth me for his enemy;
`For God foond querels in me, therfor he demyde me enemy to hym silf.
Look, he finds occasions against me, He counts me for his enemy:
Behold, he findeth occasions against me, he counteth me for his enemy,
Yet He finds occasions against me, He counts me as His enemy;
God is picking a quarrel with me, and he considers me his enemy.
But see, God finds things against me. He thinks of me as someone who hates Him.
Look, he finds occasions against me, he counts me as his enemy;
Lo! occasions of hostility, would he find against me, He counteth me an enemy to him;
Because he hath found complaints against me, therefore he hath counted me for his enemy.
Behold, he finds occasions against me, he counts me as his enemy;
Lo, occasions against me He doth find, He doth reckon me for an enemy to Him,
'Behold, He invents pretexts against me; He counts me as His enemy.
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
he findeth: Job 9:30, Job 9:31, Job 10:15-17, Job 13:25, Job 14:16, Job 34:5
he counteth: Job 13:24, Job 16:9, Job 19:11, Job 30:21, Job 31:35
Cross-References
Jacob named the place Peniel (God's Face) because, he said, "I saw God face-to-face and lived to tell the story!"
Then Esau said, "Let's start out on our way; I'll take the lead."
But Jacob said, "My master can see that the children are frail. And the flocks and herds are nursing, making for slow going. If I push them too hard, even for a day, I'd lose them all. So, master, you go on ahead of your servant, while I take it easy at the pace of my flocks and children. I'll catch up with you in Seir."
But Judah said, "The man warned us most emphatically, ‘You won't so much as see my face if you don't have your brother with you.' If you're ready to release our brother to go with us, we'll go down and get you food. But if you're not ready, we aren't going. What would be the use? The man told us, ‘You won't so much as see my face if you don't have your brother with you.'"
When the time came for Israel to die, he called his son Joseph and said, "Do me this favor. Put your hand under my thigh, a sign that you're loyal and true to me to the end. Don't bury me in Egypt. When I lie down with my fathers, carry me out of Egypt and bury me alongside them." "I will," he said. "I'll do what you've asked."
When the period of mourning was completed, Joseph petitioned Pharaoh's court: "If you have reason to think kindly of me, present Pharaoh with my request: My father made me swear, saying, ‘I am ready to die. Bury me in the grave plot that I prepared for myself in the land of Canaan.' Please give me leave to go up and bury my father. Then I'll come back."
She dropped to her knees, then bowed her face to the ground. "How does this happen that you should pick me out and treat me so kindly—me, a foreigner?"
But David said, "Your father knows that we are the best of friends. So he says to himself, ‘Jonathan must know nothing of this. If he does, he'll side with David.' But it's true—as sure as God lives, and as sure as you're alive before me right now—he's determined to kill me."
"Great," said David. "It's a deal. But only on one condition: You're not welcome here unless you bring Michal, Saul's daughter, with you when you come to meet me."
Absalom lived in Jerusalem for two years, and not once did he see the king face-to-face. He sent for Joab to get him in to see the king, but Joab still wouldn't budge. He tried a second time and Joab still wouldn't. So he told his servants, "Listen. Joab's field adjoins mine, and he has a crop of barley in it. Go set fire to it." So Absalom's servants set fire to the field. That got him moving—Joab came to Absalom at home and said, "Why did your servants set my field on fire?"
Gill's Notes on the Bible
Behold, he findeth occasions against me,.... That is, sought in order to find them; so Job in some places suggests, that God inquired after his sins, and sought diligently after them, that he might have something to bring against him; and because he could not find great sins, gross enormities, he sought after lesser sins; so some render the word, "staggerings", "totterings" h; frailties, failings, and infirmities; and because he could find none of late of a very heinous nature, he went back as far as the sins of his youth; see
Job 10:6; and this in order to pick a quarrel with him; and so Mr. Broughton renders the words, "lo, he picketh quarrels against me"; or that he might have just reason to depart from him, or to break from him, or to break off friendship with him, or to break him to pieces in his estate, family, and health; all which senses some observe the words will bear: but it would be needless for God to seek in order to find occasions against men; there is enough ready at hand, the sins that are about them; and to represent the Lord as dealing thus with good men is to represent him as acting contrary to the declarations and methods of his grace; yea, as doing what wicked men do to good men, as the enemies of David, Daniel, and Jeremiah, did to them; nay, even as Satan himself does, who goes about and seeks for, and picks up accusations against the saints; this must be owned to be a very irreverent and unbecoming expression of Job's, and for which he deserved to be sharply rebuked, as well as for some following ones, and for which he afterwards was thoroughly humbled:
he counteth me for his enemy; this he had often said, but very wrongly; Job 10:6- :, and
Job 10:6- :, and
Job 10:6- :.
h תנואות "vacillationes", Cocceius; "aut mutationes", Michaelis.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
Behold, he findeth occasions against me - That is, God. This is not exactly the language of Job, though much that he had said had seemed to imply this. The idea is, that God sought opportunity to oppose him; that he was desirous to find in him some ground or reason for punishing him; that he wished to be hostile to him, and was narrowly on the watch to find an opportunity which would justify his bringing calamity upon him. The word rendered “occasions” - תנואה tenû'âh, is from נוא nû', in the Hiphil, הניא hāniy' - to refuse, decline; to hinder, restrain, Numbers 30:6, Numbers 30:9,Numbers 30:12; and hence, the noun means, a holding back, a withdrawal, an alienation; and hence, the idea is, that God sought to be alienated from Job. The Vulgate renders it, “He seeks complaints (querales) against me.” The Septuagint, μέμψιν mempsin - accusation. Umbreit, Feindshaft, enmity. So Gesenius and Noyes. “He counteth me for his enemy.” This is language which Job had used; see Job 19:11.