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Job 9 :: New Living Translation (NLT)

Job’s Third Speech: A Response to Bildad
Job 9:1Then Job spoke again:
Job 9:2“Yes, I know all this is true in principle.
But how can a person be declared innocent in God’s sight?
Job 9:3If someone wanted to take God to court,[fn]
would it be possible to answer him even once in a thousand times?
Job 9:4For God is so wise and so mighty.
Who has ever challenged him successfully?
Job 9:5“Without warning, he moves the mountains,
overturning them in his anger.
Job 9:6He shakes the earth from its place,
and its foundations tremble.
Job 9:7If he commands it, the sun won’t rise
and the stars won’t shine.
Job 9:8He alone has spread out the heavens
and marches on the waves of the sea.
Job 9:9He made all the stars—the Bear and Orion,
the Pleiades and the constellations of the southern sky.
Job 9:10He does great things too marvelous to understand.
He performs countless miracles.
Job 9:11“Yet when he comes near, I cannot see him.
When he moves by, I do not see him go.
Job 9:12If he snatches someone in death, who can stop him?
Who dares to ask, ‘What are you doing?’
Job 9:13And God does not restrain his anger.
Even the monsters of the sea[fn] are crushed beneath his feet.
Job 9:14“So who am I, that I should try to answer God
or even reason with him?
Job 9:15Even if I were right, I would have no defense.
I could only plead for mercy.
Job 9:16And even if I summoned him and he responded,
I’m not sure he would listen to me.
Job 9:17For he attacks me with a storm
and repeatedly wounds me without cause.
Job 9:18He will not let me catch my breath,
but fills me instead with bitter sorrows.
Job 9:19If it’s a question of strength, he’s the strong one.
If it’s a matter of justice, who dares to summon him to court?
Job 9:20Though I am innocent, my own mouth would pronounce me guilty.
Though I am blameless, it[fn] would prove me wicked.
Job 9:21“I am innocent,
but it makes no difference to me—
I despise my life.
Job 9:22Innocent or wicked, it is all the same to God.
That’s why I say, ‘He destroys both the blameless and the wicked.’
Job 9:23When a plague[fn] sweeps through,
he laughs at the death of the innocent.
Job 9:24The whole earth is in the hands of the wicked,
and God blinds the eyes of the judges.
If he’s not the one who does it, who is?
Job 9:25“My life passes more swiftly than a runner.
It flees away without a glimpse of happiness.
Job 9:26It disappears like a swift papyrus boat,
like an eagle swooping down on its prey.
Job 9:27If I decided to forget my complaints,
to put away my sad face and be cheerful,
Job 9:28I would still dread all the pain,
for I know you will not find me innocent, O God.
Job 9:29Whatever happens, I will be found guilty.
So what’s the use of trying?
Job 9:30Even if I were to wash myself with soap
and clean my hands with lye,
Job 9:31you would plunge me into a muddy ditch,
and my own filthy clothing would hate me.
Job 9:32“God is not a mortal like me,
so I cannot argue with him or take him to trial.
Job 9:33If only there were a mediator between us,
someone who could bring us together.
Job 9:34The mediator could make God stop beating me,
and I would no longer live in terror of his punishment.
Job 9:35Then I could speak to him without fear,
but I cannot do that in my own strength.
NLT Footnotes
Or If God wanted to take someone to court.
Hebrew the helpers of Rahab, the name of a mythical sea monster that represents chaos in ancient literature.
Or he.
Or disaster.
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