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												Verse 1Job 6:1. Job answered and said — 
												Eliphaz concluded his discourse 
												with an air of assurance, being 
												very confident that what he had 
												advanced was so plain and so 
												pertinent that nothing could be 
												objected to it. Job, however, is 
												not at all convinced by it, but 
												still justifies himself in his 
												complaints, and condemns his 
												friend for the weakness of his 
												arguing. Though Eliphaz, in the 
												beginning and some other parts 
												of his speech, was very severe 
												upon Job, he gave him no 
												interruption, but heard him 
												patiently till he had delivered 
												his whole mind. But when he had 
												done this, and had finished all 
												he had to say, Job modestly, but 
												feelingly, makes his reply. He 
												begins with an apology for 
												venting his grief in a manner 
												somewhat unbecoming, and begs it 
												may be ascribed to the great 
												multitude and sharpness of his 
												afflictions; but as to the 
												advice given him by Eliphaz, to 
												hope for an amendment of his 
												condition: and to address God 
												for that purpose, he tells them, 
												that his petition to God should 
												be of a quite different nature, 
												namely, that he would be pleased 
												to cut him off speedily; for 
												that the desperateness of his 
												condition would by no means 
												permit him to hope for any 
												amendment. That, however, he 
												could not help resenting their 
												unkind suspicions of him, that 
												they should think him capable of 
												such great wickedness; but, 
												above all, should imagine him to 
												be so abandoned as to be able to 
												entertain a thought tending to a 
												revolt from the Almighty. He 
												begs them not to condemn him 
												barely on suspicion, and on the 
												strength of general maxims, but 
												to consider it was possible he 
												might be innocent.
 
 Verse 2
 Job 6:2. O that my grief — The 
												cause of my grief; were 
												thoroughly weighed — Were fully 
												understood and duly considered! 
												O that I had an impartial judge! 
												that would understand my case, 
												and see whether I have not just 
												cause for such bitter 
												complaints. And my calamity laid 
												in the balances — Would to God 
												some more equal person than you 
												would lay my complaint and my 
												sufferings one against the 
												other, and judge sincerely which 
												is heaviest!
 
 
 Verse 3
 Job 6:3. For now it — That is, 
												my grief or calamity; would be 
												heavier than the sand of the sea 
												— Which is much heavier than dry 
												sand. Therefore my words are 
												swallowed up — My voice and 
												spirit fail me. I cannot find or 
												utter words sufficient to 
												express my sorrow or misery.
 
 Verse 4
 Job 6:4. The arrows of the 
												Almighty are within me, &c. — 
												The sublimity of style, and 
												beautiful vein of poetry, which 
												run through this verse, are well 
												deserving of the reader’s 
												particular attention. He fitly 
												terms his afflictions arrows, 
												because, like arrows, they came 
												upon him swiftly and suddenly, 
												one after another, and that from 
												on high, and wounded him deeply. 
												And he calls them arrows of the 
												Almighty, not only, generally 
												speaking, because all 
												afflictions come from him, but 
												particularly, because God’s hand 
												was in a singular manner visible 
												and eminent in his sufferings, 
												and especially because they were 
												immediately shot by God into his 
												spirit, so that they were within 
												him, as it follows, not like the 
												external evils mentioned chap. 
												1., which were passed, but fixed 
												and constant in his very nature, 
												producing sharp pains in his 
												body, and dismal horrors in his 
												mind. The poison whereof 
												drinketh up my spirit — Or, as 
												the Hebrew may be rendered, The 
												poison whereof my spirit 
												drinketh up: which is the 
												construction of Pagninus and the 
												Targum. But our translation is 
												more poetical, and quite 
												agreeable to Moses’s sublime 
												expression, Deuteronomy 32:42, 
												where he represents God as 
												taking vengeance on his enemies, 
												and saying, I will make mine 
												arrows drunk with blood. The 
												words imply, that these arrows 
												were more keen and pernicious 
												than ordinary, being dipped in 
												God’s wrath, as the barbarous 
												nations used to dip their arrows 
												in poison, that they might not 
												only pierce, but burn up and 
												consume the vital parts. Thus 
												did the poison of God’s arrows 
												drink up his spirit, that is, 
												exhaust and consume his life and 
												soul. The terrors of God do set 
												themselves in array — They are 
												like a numerous army invading me 
												on every side. Houbigant renders 
												it, The terrors of the Lord 
												confound me. This was the sorest 
												part of his calamity, wherein he 
												was an eminent type of Christ, 
												who complained most of the 
												sufferings of his soul. Indeed, 
												trouble of mind is the sorest 
												trouble. A wounded spirit, who 
												can bear? “He had patience 
												enough,” says Lord Clarendon, 
												“for the oppression and rapine 
												of his enemies, for the 
												unkindness and reproach of his 
												friends, and for the cunning and 
												malice of the devil; but he was 
												so transported with the sense of 
												God’s anger against him, he 
												could not bear that with temper: 
												the apprehension that all those 
												miseries, of so piercing and 
												destroying a nature in 
												themselves, fell upon him, not 
												only by God’s permission, to try 
												and humble him, but proceeded 
												directly from his indignation 
												and resolution to destroy him, 
												almost confounded him. When they 
												appeared no more the arrows of 
												his enemies levelled and shot at 
												his greatness and prosperity, 
												the enterprises and designs of 
												evil men, suborned by the devil 
												against him; but the artillery 
												which God himself discharged 
												upon him in his greatest 
												displeasure and fury, he was 
												able to stand the shock no 
												longer, and thought he had some 
												reason to pour out his 
												complaints and lamentations with 
												a little more earnestness; and 
												that the grief and trouble of 
												his mind might excuse the want 
												of that order, and method, and 
												deliberation, which the ease, 
												and calm condition, and 
												disputing humour of his friends, 
												who were only healthy spectators 
												of what he suffered, 
												reproachfully required from 
												him.”
 
 Verse 5
 Job 6:5. Doth the wild ass bray 
												when he hath grass? &c. — “Grass 
												and fodder here are a figure of 
												abundance and tranquillity, such 
												as the friends of Job enjoyed. 
												To bray and low refer to 
												expressions of grief and 
												uneasiness. Job therefore 
												compares his friends, with some 
												smartness, to a wild ass 
												exulting in its food, and to an 
												ox perfectly satisfied with 
												grateful pasture.” His words may 
												be paraphrased thus: Even the 
												brute beasts, when they have 
												convenient food, are quiet and 
												contented. So, it is no wonder 
												that you complain not, who live 
												in ease and prosperity, any more 
												than I did when I wanted 
												nothing; “happy yourselves, you 
												do not condole with me in my 
												wretchedness, nor mourn with me, 
												but rather blame my mourning as 
												importunate clamour, and as if I 
												had behaved myself toward God 
												with insolence and impatience.” 
												— Schultens.
 
 Verse 6
 Job 6:6. Can that which is 
												unsavoury — Or rather, that 
												which is insipid, be eaten 
												without salt? — Is it not 
												requisite that every thing 
												insipid should be seasoned, to 
												give it a relish, and make it 
												agreeable? Therefore life 
												itself, when it has lost those 
												comforts, which are the 
												seasoning to it, and give it its 
												relish, then becomes insipid, so 
												that it is nothing more than a 
												burden. Now, if men commonly 
												complain of their meat when it 
												is only unsavoury, how much more 
												when it is so bitter as mine is? 
												Some commentators, however, 
												consider Job here as referring 
												to Eliphaz’s discourse, which 
												had been insipid and 
												disagreeable to him, as having 
												no substance, and carrying no 
												weight with it: like unsavoury 
												food, not seasoned nor cured, 
												instead of satisfying and 
												instructing him, it had been 
												nauseous and offensive, like 
												corrupted meat to a weak and 
												sick stomach. Or is there any 
												taste in the white of an egg? — 
												“Our version of this clause,” 
												says Dr. Dodd, “seems to be void 
												of all sense and connection with 
												what goes before. Mr. Mudge 
												supposes Job to allude, in the 
												original words, to those 
												medicinal potions, which were 
												administered by way of 
												alterative; and, agreeably to 
												his criticism, the clause should 
												be rendered, Is there any relish 
												in the nauseous medicinal 
												draught?”
 
 Verse 7
 Job 6:7. The things that my soul 
												refused, &c. — “Job, persisting 
												in his allegory,” says 
												Schultens, “goes on to show how 
												disagreeable to his stomach the 
												speech of Eliphaz had been.” 
												This learned critic accordingly 
												translates the verse thus: My 
												soul refuseth to touch such 
												things; they are to me as 
												corrupted food. But Dr. Dodd, 
												after quoting these words of 
												Schultens, observes, he “cannot 
												help thinking that this and the 
												two preceding verses will bear 
												another interpretation, and that 
												Job means, in them, to offer a 
												justification for himself; to 
												declare that he had sufficient 
												ground for complaint, without 
												which it was no more usual for 
												man to lament than for the ox or 
												ass to low or bray, when they 
												had sufficient food, &c.” The 
												sense of the verse seems to be, 
												Those grievous afflictions, 
												which I dreaded the very thought 
												of, are now my daily, though 
												sorrowful, bread.
 
 Verse 8-9
 Job 6:8-9. O that I might have 
												my request! — The thing which I 
												so passionately desired, and 
												which, notwithstanding all your 
												vain words, and weak arguments, 
												I still continue to desire, and 
												beseech God to grant me. The 
												thing that I long for! — Hebrew, 
												תקותי, tickvati, my hope or 
												expectation. That it would 
												please God to destroy me — To 
												end my days and calamities 
												together: that he would let 
												loose his hand — Which is now, 
												as it were, bound up or 
												restrained from giving me that 
												deadly blow which I desire. O 
												that he would not restrain it 
												any longer, and suffer me to 
												languish in this miserable 
												condition, but give me one 
												stroke more and quite cut me 
												off. Mr. Peters has justly 
												observed, that “these two 
												verses, as well as Job 6:11, 
												with many more that might be 
												quoted to the same purpose, are 
												utterly inconsistent with Job’s 
												believing that God would restore 
												him to his former happy state;” 
												as Bishop Warburton contended, 
												that he might lay a foundation 
												for an interpretation of the 
												noted passage in Job 19:25-27, 
												different from that commonly 
												received, and might explain it, 
												not of Job’s hope of 
												immortality, but of his 
												expectation of a restoration to 
												temporal prosperity.
 
 Verse 10
 Job 6:10. Then should I yet have 
												comfort — The thoughts of my 
												approaching death would comfort 
												me in all my sorrows, and yield 
												me abundantly more solace than 
												life, with all that worldly 
												safety, and glory, and 
												happiness, for which thou hast 
												advised me to seek unto God. 
												Yea, I would harden myself in 
												sorrow — I would bear up with 
												more courage and patience, under 
												all my torments, with the hopes 
												of death and blessedness after 
												death. Let him not spare — Let 
												him use all severity against me, 
												so far as to cut me off, and not 
												suffer me to live any longer. 
												For I have not concealed the 
												words of the Holy One — That is, 
												of God, who is frequently called 
												the Holy One in Scripture, and 
												is so in a most eminent and 
												peculiar sense. The meaning is, 
												As I have myself steadfastly 
												believed the words, or truths of 
												God, and not wilfully and 
												wickedly departed from them; so 
												I have endeavoured to teach and 
												recommend them to others, and 
												have not been ashamed nor afraid 
												boldly to confess and preach the 
												true religion in the midst of 
												the heathen round about me. And, 
												therefore, I know, if God do cut 
												me off, it will be in mercy, and 
												I shall be a gainer by it.
 
 Verse 11
 Job 6:11. What is my strength 
												that I should hope? — My 
												strength is so small and spent, 
												that although I may linger a 
												while in my torments, yet I 
												cannot live long, and therefore 
												it is vain for me to hope for 
												such a restitution as thou hast 
												promised me, Job 5:22. And what 
												is my end? — What is the end of 
												my life? Or, what is death to 
												me? It is not terrible, but 
												comfortable. That I should 
												prolong my life? — That I should 
												desire or endeavour to prolong 
												it, by seeking unto God for that 
												purpose. But, as desirous of 
												death as Job was, yet he never 
												offered to put an end to his own 
												life. Such a thought will never 
												be entertained by any that have 
												the least regard to the law of 
												God and nature. How uneasy 
												soever the soul’s confinement in 
												the body may be, it must by no 
												means break the prison, but wait 
												for a fair discharge.
 
 Verse 12
 Job 6:12. Is my strength the 
												strength of stones? — I am not 
												made of stone or brass, but of 
												flesh and blood, as others are; 
												therefore I am not able to 
												endure these miseries longer, 
												and can neither desire nor hope 
												for the continuance of my life. 
												Bishop Patrick’s paraphrase on 
												this verse is, “God hath not 
												made me insensible; and 
												therefore do not wonder that I 
												desire to be released from these 
												very sharp pains.”
 
 Verse 13
 Job 6:13. Is not my help in me? 
												— Though I have no strength in 
												my body, or outward man, yet I 
												have some help and support 
												within me, or in my inward man, 
												even a consciousness of my 
												sincerity toward God, 
												notwithstanding all your bitter 
												accusations and censures, as if 
												I were a hypocrite and had no 
												integrity in me, chap. Job 4:6. 
												And is wisdom driven quite from 
												me? — If I have no strength in 
												my body, have I therefore no 
												wisdom or judgment left in my 
												soul? Am I therefore unable to 
												judge of the vanity of thy 
												discourse, and of the truth of 
												my own case? Have I not common 
												sense and discretion? Do not I 
												know my own condition, and the 
												nature and degree of my 
												sufferings, better than thou 
												dost? And am I not a better 
												judge whether I have integrity 
												or not than thou art? It may not 
												be improper to observe here, 
												that there is considerable 
												difficulty in determining the 
												precise sense of the Hebrew of 
												this verse; and that, 
												accordingly, different learned 
												men have proposed different 
												translations of it. Houbigant 
												renders it, Because my help is 
												not at hand, is wisdom, 
												therefore departed far from me? 
												Dr. Waterland reads it, Is my 
												help in me vain, and the 
												substance quite gone from me? 
												And Heath, Do not I find that I 
												cannot in the least help myself, 
												and that strength is quite 
												driven out of me? In 
												justification of our 
												translation, and of the 
												interpretation given above, it 
												may be sufficient to observe, 
												that the same form of expression 
												in the Hebrew is used Isaiah 
												50:2, האם אין בי כח, haim en bi 
												choach, and is translated, and 
												according to the context must 
												necessarily be translated, in a 
												similar manner. An vero, nulla 
												(est) in me potestas? Is there 
												no power in me? (saith the 
												Lord.) or, Have I no power to 
												deliver? If, however, a 
												different translation of the 
												words be contended for, perhaps 
												that mentioned by Poole, which 
												is perfectly agreeable to the 
												Hebrew, and admits of an easy 
												explication, is preferable to 
												any other that has been 
												proposed; which is, What, if I 
												have not help in me, is wisdom 
												driven quite from me? That is, 
												if I cannot help myself, if my 
												outward condition be helpless 
												and hopeless, as I confess it 
												is, have I therefore lost my 
												understanding? Cannot I judge 
												whether it is more desirable for 
												me to live or to die; whether I 
												am sincere in my religion or 
												not; whether your words have 
												truth and weight in them; and 
												whether you take the right 
												method of dealing with me?
 
 Verse 14
 Job 6:14. To him that is 
												afflicted — Hebrew, To him that 
												is melted, or dissolved with 
												afflictions: or, as Dr. 
												Waterland renders it, To one 
												that is wasting away; pity 
												should be showed from his friend 
												— His friend, such as thou, O 
												Eliphaz, pretendest to be to me, 
												should show kindness and 
												compassion in his judgment of 
												him, and behaviour toward him, 
												and not pass such unmerciful 
												censures upon him as thou hast 
												passed upon me, nor load him 
												with reproaches; but he 
												forsaketh the fear of the 
												Almighty — Thou hast no love or 
												pity for thy friend; a plain 
												evidence that thou art guilty of 
												what thou didst charge me with, 
												even of the want of the fear of 
												God. The least which those that 
												are at ease can do for them that 
												are pained, is to pity them, to 
												feel a tender concern for them, 
												and to sympathize with them.
 
 
 Verse 15
 Job 6:15. My brethren — That is, 
												my kinsmen, or three friends; 
												for though Eliphaz only had 
												spoken, the other two had shown 
												their approbation of his 
												discourse; have dealt 
												deceitfully — Under a pretence 
												of friendship dealing 
												unmercifully with me, and adding 
												to the afflictions which they 
												said they came to remove. As the 
												stream of brooks, &c. — Which 
												quickly vanish and deceive the 
												hopes of the thirsty traveller. 
												It is no new thing for even 
												brethren to deal deceitfully. It 
												is therefore our wisdom to cease 
												from man. We cannot expect too 
												little from the creature, or too 
												much from the Creator.
 
 Verse 16
 Job 6:16. Which are blackish, 
												&c. — Which in winter, when the 
												traveller neither needs nor 
												desires it, are full of water 
												congealed by the frost. Wherein 
												the snow is hid — Under which 
												the water from snow, which 
												formerly fell, and afterward was 
												dissolved, lies hid. So he 
												speaks not of those brooks which 
												are fed by a constant spring, 
												but of them which are filled by 
												accidental falls of water or 
												snow.
 
 Verse 17-18
 Job 6:17-18. What time they wax 
												warm — When the weather grows 
												milder, and the frost and snow 
												are dissolved; they vanish — 
												נצמתו, nitsmathu, ex cisi sunt, 
												they are cut off, having no 
												fountain from whence to draw a 
												supply. When it is hot — In the 
												hot season, when waters are most 
												refreshing and necessary; they 
												are consumed out of their place 
												— The place where the traveller 
												expected to find them to his 
												comfort; but they are gone he 
												knows not whither. The paths of 
												their way are turned aside — 
												That is, the courses of those 
												waters are changed; they are 
												gone out of their channel, 
												flowing hither and thither, till 
												they be quite consumed, as it 
												here follows. There “is a noble 
												climax,” as Heath observes, in 
												these last three verses; “a most 
												poetical description of the 
												torrents in the hot climates. By 
												extraordinary cold they are 
												frozen over, but the sun no 
												sooner exerts its power than 
												they melt; they are exhaled by 
												the heat, till the stream for 
												smallness is diverted into many 
												channels; it yet lasts a little 
												way, but is soon quite 
												evaporated and lost.”
 
 Verse 19
 Job 6:19. The troops of Tema 
												looked — This place and Sheba 
												were both parts of the hot and 
												dry country of Arabia; in which 
												waters were very scarce, and 
												therefore precious and 
												desirable, especially to 
												travellers. The word ארחות, 
												orchoth, signifies companies of 
												travellers or merchants, such as 
												that mentioned Genesis 37:25, A 
												company of the Ishmaelites came 
												from Gilead, with their camels, 
												&c., or those spoken of Isaiah 
												21:13-14, In the forest of 
												Arabia shall ye lodge, O ye 
												travelling companies. The 
												inhabitants of Tema brought 
												water, &c. The Hebrew word, 
												however, properly means ways, or 
												roads; but is here put for 
												travellers in the ways, by a 
												common metonymy. The companies 
												of Sheba waited for them — The 
												Scenitæ, who lived in tents, may 
												here be included, as well as the 
												troops before mentioned, for 
												they removed with their cattle 
												from one place to another for 
												the convenience of pasture and 
												water. It must be observed, men 
												did not there travel singly as 
												we do, but in companies, for 
												their security against wild 
												beasts and robbers. “By a very 
												slight alteration in the 
												pointing, Mr. Heath so 
												translates this verse as to 
												introduce the speaker using a 
												prosopopœia, or addressing 
												himself to the travellers: Look 
												for them, ye troops of Tema, ye 
												travellers of Sheba, expect them 
												earnestly. This gives great life 
												to the poetry, and sets a very 
												beautiful image before the eye: 
												the travellers wasting their 
												time, depending on those 
												torrents for water; but, when 
												they come hither, how great the 
												disappointment!” — Dodd.
 
 Verse 20
 Job 6:20. They were confounded — 
												That is, the troops and 
												companies were miserably 
												disappointed; because they hoped 
												— Comforted themselves with the 
												expectation of water there to 
												quench their thirst; they came, 
												and were ashamed — To think that 
												they should expect relief from 
												such uncertain streams, and had 
												deceived themselves and others. 
												Thus we prepare confusion for 
												ourselves by our vain hopes: the 
												reeds break under us because we 
												lean upon them.
 
 Verse 21
 Job 6:21. For now ye are 
												nothing, &c. — Just such are 
												you, who, seeing my calamity, 
												afford me no comfort, and seem 
												afraid lest I should want 
												something of you. Thus Job very 
												properly applies the preceding 
												most beautiful description of 
												the torrents in the hot 
												climates, to his three friends 
												who thus disappointed his 
												expectations. Indeed, it is a 
												very fine image of pretended 
												friends in adversity. When their 
												help is most wanted and coveted, 
												they are too apt to fail the 
												expectations of those that 
												trusted in them. They may 
												properly enough be said to be 
												either frozen or melted away by 
												adversity. All their warm 
												professions are congealed, as it 
												were, when adverse circumstances 
												have laid hold on their friends, 
												and their friendship is quite 
												dissolved and melted away. Ye 
												see my casting down, and are 
												afraid — You are shy of me, and 
												afraid for yourselves, lest some 
												further plague should come upon 
												me, wherein you, for my sake, 
												should be involved; or, lest I 
												should be burdensome to you. 
												Therefore you are to me as if 
												you had never come; you are 
												nothing to me, for I have no 
												help or comfort from you.
 
 
 Verse 22-23
 Job 6:22-23. Did I say — Or, is 
												it because I said; Bring unto 
												me? — Give me something for my 
												support or relief? Is this, or 
												what else is the reason why you 
												are afraid of me, or alienated 
												from me? Did either my former 
												covetousness, or my present 
												necessity, make me troublesome 
												or chargeable to you? or, Give a 
												reward for me of your substance 
												— Or, Give a gift for my use or 
												need? Did I send for you to come 
												and visit me for this end? Nay, 
												did you not come of your own 
												accord? Why then are you so 
												unmerciful to me? You might at 
												least have given me comfortable 
												words, when I expected nothing 
												else from you. Or, Deliver me 
												from the enemy’s hand? — By 
												power and the force of your 
												arms, as Abraham delivered Lot; 
												or, Redeem me from the hand of 
												the mighty? — Namely, by price 
												or ransom.
 
 Verse 24-25
 Job 6:24-25. Teach me — Instead 
												of censuring and reproaching, 
												instruct and convince me by 
												solid arguments; and I will hold 
												my tongue — I will patiently 
												hear and gladly receive your 
												counsels; and cause me to 
												understand wherein I have erred 
												— Show me my mistakes and 
												miscarriages; for I am ready to 
												receive your reproofs, and 
												humbly to submit to them. How 
												forcible are right words! — The 
												words of truth and solid 
												argument have a marvellous power 
												to convince and persuade a man; 
												and, if yours were such, I 
												should readily yield to them. 
												But what doth your arguing 
												reprove? — There is no truth in 
												your assertions, nor weight in 
												your arguments, and therefore 
												they are of no account, and have 
												no power with me.
 
 Verse 26
 Job 6:26. Do you imagine to 
												reprove words? — What! is all 
												your wisdom employed for this, 
												to catch hold of and reprove 
												some of my words, without making 
												allowance for human infirmity or 
												extreme misery? and the speeches 
												of one that is desperate? — Of a 
												poor, miserable, helpless, and 
												hopeless man; which are as wind 
												— Which you esteem to be like 
												wind, vain and light, without 
												solidity, giving a sound, but 
												with little sense, and to little 
												purpose. Heath renders it, Are 
												they as the wind? vain and 
												empty.
 
 Verse 27
 Job 6:27. Ye overwhelm the 
												fatherless — Your words are not 
												only vain, useless, and 
												uncomfortable to me, but also 
												grievous and pernicious. Hebrew, 
												תפילו, tappilu, you rush, or 
												throw yourselves upon him. You 
												fall upon him with all your 
												might, and say all that you can 
												devise to charge and grieve him. 
												You load him with censures and 
												calumnies. The word יתום, 
												jathom, here rendered 
												fatherless, means a solitary 
												person in distress, as well as 
												an orphan; or one desolate. Job 
												intends himself by the 
												expression, being deprived of 
												all his children, and of all his 
												estate, and forsaken by his 
												friends. And you dig a pit for 
												your friend — You insult and 
												triumph over me, whom once you 
												owned for your friend. I spoke 
												all I thought, as to my friends, 
												and you from thence take 
												occasion to cast me down. There 
												is nothing in the Hebrew for the 
												word pit: it is literally, You 
												dig for your friend; or as Heath 
												and Houbigant render it, make a 
												mock of your friend.
 
 Verse 28
 Job 6:28. Now therefore be 
												content, look upon me — Hebrew, 
												Be willing; look upon me, or, to 
												look upon me, the second 
												imperative being put for the 
												infinitive. Be pleased to 
												consider me and my cause further 
												and better than you have done, 
												that you may give a more true 
												and righteous judgment 
												concerning it; for it is — Or 
												rather, will be; evident — You 
												will plainly discover it; if I 
												lie — A little farther 
												consideration and discourse will 
												make it manifest if I have 
												uttered any thing untrue or 
												without foundation, and I shall 
												readily acknowledge it.
 
 Verse 29
 Job 6:29. Return, I pray, let it 
												not be iniquity — Or, Recollect 
												yourselves, I beseech you; call 
												it not wickedness: yea, return 
												again; my righteousness is in it 
												— Or, Consider it yet again, 
												righteousness may be in me. — 
												Chappelow. Notwithstanding your 
												suspicion, if you will examine 
												more candidly and strictly, you 
												may, perhaps, be convinced that 
												I am not the sinner you think; 
												but that righteousness is still 
												in me, though I have fallen 
												under these sore afflictions.
 
 Verse 30
 Job 6:30. Is there iniquity in 
												my tongue? — Consider, if there 
												be any iniquity, or untruth, in 
												what I have already said, or 
												shall further speak? Have I 
												hitherto uttered any thing that 
												is faulty? Cannot my taste 
												discern perverse things — That 
												is, my understanding, which 
												judges of words and actions, as 
												the palate doth of meats. I hope 
												it is not so corrupted but that 
												I can discern what is bad, 
												though spoken by myself.
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