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Read the Bible

New Century Version

Job 6:8

"How I wish that I might have what I ask for and that God would give me what I hope for.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Death;  

Dictionaries:

- Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Prayer;   Charles Buck Theological Dictionary - Contrite;   Greatness of God;   Sanctification;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Petition;  

Parallel Translations

Christian Standard Bible®
If only my request would be grantedand God would provide what I hope for:
Hebrew Names Version
"Oh that I might have my request; That God would grant the thing that I long for!
King James Version
Oh that I might have my request; and that God would grant me the thing that I long for!
English Standard Version
"Oh that I might have my request, and that God would fulfill my hope,
New English Translation
"Oh that my request would be realized, and that God would grant me what I long for!
Amplified Bible
"Oh that my request would come to pass, And that God would grant me the thing that I long for!
New American Standard Bible
"Oh, that my request might come to pass, And that God would grant my hope!
World English Bible
"Oh that I might have my request; That God would grant the thing that I long for!
Geneva Bible (1587)
Oh that I might haue my desire, and that God would grant me the thing that I long for!
Legacy Standard Bible
"Oh that my request might come to pass,And that God would grant my hope!
Berean Standard Bible
If only my request were granted and God would fulfill my hope:
Contemporary English Version
How I wish that God would answer my prayer
Complete Jewish Bible
"If only I could have my wish granted, and God would give me what I'm hoping for —
Darby Translation
Oh that I might have my request, and that +God would grant my desire!
Easy-to-Read Version
"I wish I could have what I ask for. I wish God would give me what I want.
George Lamsa Translation
Oh that I might have my request; and that God would grant me the thing that I long for!
Good News Translation
Why won't God give me what I ask? Why won't he answer my prayer?
Lexham English Bible
"O that my request may come, and that God may grant my hope,
Literal Translation
Who will give it that my desire might come, and God would grant my longing;
Miles Coverdale Bible (1535)
O that I might haue my desyre: O yt God wolde graunte me the thynge, that I longe for:
American Standard Version
Oh that I might have my request; And that God would grant me the thing that I long for!
Bible in Basic English
If only I might have an answer to my prayer, and God would give me my desire!
Bishop's Bible (1568)
O that I might haue my desire, and that God woulde graunt me the thing that I long for:
JPS Old Testament (1917)
Oh that I might have my request, and that God would grant me the thing that I long for!
King James Version (1611)
O that I might haue my request! and that God would graunt mee the thing that I long for!
Brenton's Septuagint (LXX)
For oh that he would grant my desire, and my petition might come, and the Lord would grant my hope!
English Revised Version
Oh that I might have my request; and that God would grant me the thing that I long for.
Wycliffe Bible (1395)
Who yyueth, that myn axyng come; and that God yyue to me that, that Y abide?
Update Bible Version
Oh that I might have my request; And that God would grant [me] the thing that I long for!
Webster's Bible Translation
Oh that I might have my request; and that God would grant [me] the thing that I long for!
New King James Version
"Oh, that I might have my request, That God would grant me the thing that I long for!
New Living Translation
"Oh, that I might have my request, that God would grant my desire.
New Life Bible
"If only I might get what I ask for, and that God would give me what I desire!
New Revised Standard
"O that I might have my request, and that God would grant my desire;
J.B. Rotherham Emphasized Bible
Oh that my request would come! and, my hope, oh that GOD would grant!
Douay-Rheims Bible
Who will grant that my request may come: and that God may give me what I look for?
Revised Standard Version
"O that I might have my request, and that God would grant my desire;
Young's Literal Translation
O that my request may come, That God may grant my hope!
THE MESSAGE
"All I want is an answer to one prayer, a last request to be honored: Let God step on me—squash me like a bug, and be done with me for good. I'd at least have the satisfaction of not having blasphemed the Holy God, before being pressed past the limits. Where's the strength to keep my hopes up? What future do I have to keep me going? Do you think I have nerves of steel? Do you think I'm made of iron? Do you think I can pull myself up by my bootstraps? Why, I don't even have any boots!
New American Standard Bible (1995)
"Oh that my request might come to pass, And that God would grant my longing!

Contextual Overview

8 "How I wish that I might have what I ask for and that God would give me what I hope for. 9 How I wish God would crush me and reach out his hand to destroy me. 10 Then I would have this comfort and be glad even in this unending pain, because I would know I did not reject the words of the Holy One. 11 "I do not have the strength to wait. There is nothing to hope for, so why should I be patient? 12 I do not have the strength of stone; my flesh is not bronze. 13 I have no power to help myself, because success has been taken away from me.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

the thing that I long for: Heb. my expectation, Job 6:11-13, Job 17:14-16, Psalms 119:81

Reciprocal: Numbers 11:15 - kill me Job 10:1 - My soul Jonah 4:3 - take

Cross-References

Genesis 6:12
When God saw that everyone on the earth did only evil,
Genesis 6:17
I will bring a flood of water on the earth to destroy all living things that live under the sky, including everything that has the breath of life. Everything on the earth will die.
Genesis 19:19
You have been merciful and kind to me and have saved my life. But I can't run to the mountains. The disaster will catch me, and I will die.
Psalms 84:11
The Lord God is like a sun and shield; the Lord gives us kindness and honor. He does not hold back anything good from those whose lives are innocent.
Psalms 145:20
The Lord protects everyone who loves him, but he will destroy the wicked.
Proverbs 3:4
Then you will be respected and will please both God and people.
Proverbs 8:35
Those who find me find life, and the Lord will be pleased with them.
Proverbs 12:2
The Lord is pleased with a good person, but he will punish anyone who plans evil.
Jeremiah 31:2
This is what the Lord says: "The people who were not killed by the enemy's sword found help in the desert. I came to give rest to Israel."
Luke 1:30
The angel said to her, "Don't be afraid, Mary; God has shown you his grace.

Gill's Notes on the Bible

And that I might have my request,.... Or that it "might come" m; that it might go up to heaven, enter there, and come into the ears of the Lord, be attended to, admitted, and received by him, see

Psalms 18:6; or come to Job, be returned into his bosom, be answered and fulfilled; the same with the desire that "cometh", which is, when the thing desired is enjoyed, Proverbs 13:12; or that what he had requested would come, namely, death, which is sometimes represented as a person that looks in at the windows, and comes into the houses of men, and seizes on them, Jeremiah 9:21; and this is what Job wishes for; this was his sole request; this was the thing, the one thing, that lay uppermost in his mind, and he was most importunately solicitous for:

and that God would grant [me] the thing that I long for! death, as the following words explain it; this is not desirable by nature, but contrary to it; it is itself a penal evil, the sanction and curse of the law; it is an enemy, and a very formidable one, the king of terrors; and, though a very formidable, one, is desired by good men from a principle of grace, and with right views, to be rid of sin, and to be with Christ; yet it often is done by persons in melancholy, sullen, and humorous fits, when they cannot have what they would, as in Rachel, Elijah, and Jonah, Genesis 30:1; and because of sore troubles and afflictions, which was the present case of Job; though it must be said that it was not, as is frequently the case with wicked men, through the horrors of a guilty conscience, which he was free of; and he had faith, and hope of comfort in another world, and in some degree he submitted to the will and pleasure of God; though pressed with too much eagerness, importunity, and passion: and it may be observed, that Job did not make request to men, to his servants, or friends about him, to dispatch him, as Abimelech and Saul did; nor did he lay hands on himself, or attempt to do it, as Saul, Ahithophel, and Judas: the wretched philosophy of the stoics was not known in Job's time, which not only makes suicide lawful, but commends it as an heroic action; no, Job makes his, request to the God of his life, who had given it to him, and had maintained it hitherto, and who only had a right to dispose of it; he asks it as a favour, he desires it as a gift, he had nothing else to ask, nothing was more or so desirable to him as death.

m תבוא "ut veniat", V. L. Pagninus, Montanus, Schmidt, Michaelis; "utinam veniret", Schultens.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

Oh that I might have my request - To wit, death. This he desired as the end of his sorrows, either that he might be freed from them, or that he might be admitted to a happy world - or both.

Would grant me the thing that I long for - Margin, “My expectation.” That is, death. He expected it; he looked out for it; he was impatient that the hour should come. This state of feeling is not uncommon - where sorrows become so accumulated and intense that a man desires to die. It is no evidence, however, of a preparation for death. The wicked are more frequently in this state than the righteous. They are overwhelmed with pain; they see no hope of deliverance from it and they impatiently wish that the end had come. They are stupid about the future world, and either suppose that the grave is the end of their being, or that in some undefinable way they will be made happy hereafter. The righteous, on the other hand, are willing to wait until God shall be pleased to release them, feeling that He has some good purpose in all that they endure, and that they do not suffer one pang too much. Such sometimes were Job’s feelings; but here, as in some other instances, no one can doubt that he was betrayed into unjustifiable impatience under his sorrows, and that he expressed an improper wish to die.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Job 6:8. O that I might have — As Job had no hope that he should ever be redeemed from his present helpless state, he earnestly begs God to shorten it by taking away his life.


 
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