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Job 6:6

Context

6:6 Can food that is tasteless 1  be eaten without salt?

Or is there any taste in the white 2  of an egg?

Job 7:10

Context

7:10 He returns no more to his house,

nor does his place of residence 3  know him 4  any more.

Job 8:12

Context

8:12 While they are still beginning to flower 5 

and not ripe for cutting, 6 

they can wither away 7 

faster 8  than any grass! 9 

Job 31:17

Context

31:17 If I ate my morsel of bread myself,

and did not share any of it with orphans 10 

Job 34:31

Context
Job Is Foolish to Rebel

34:31 “Has anyone said to God,

‘I have endured chastisement, 11 

but I will not act wrongly any more.

1 tn Heb “a tasteless thing”; the word “food” is supplied from the context.

2 tn Some commentators are not satisfied with the translation “white of an egg”; they prefer something connected to “slime of purslane” (H. H. Rowley, Job [NCBC], 59; cf. NRSV “juice of mallows”). This meaning is based on the Syriac and Arabic version of Sa`adia. The meaning “white of the egg” comes from the rabbinic interpretation of “slime of the yolk.” Others carry the idea further and interpret it to mean “saliva of dreams” or after the LXX “in dream words.” H. H. Rowley does not think that the exact edible object can be identified. The idea of the slimy glaring white around the yolk of an egg seems to fit best. This is another illustration of something that is tasteless or insipid.

3 tn M. Dahood suggests the meaning is the same as “his abode” (“Hebrew-Ugaritic Lexicography V,” Bib 48 [1967]: 421-38).

4 tn The verb means “to recognize” by seeing. “His place,” the place where he was living, is the subject of the verb. This personification is intended simply to say that the place where he lived will not have him any more. The line is very similar to Ps 103:16b – when the wind blows the flower away, its place knows it no more.

5 tn The word has been traditionally translated “greenness” (so KJV, ASV), but some modern commentators argue for “in flower.” The word is found only in Song 6:11 (where it may be translated “blossoms”). From the same root is אָבִיב (’aviv, “fresh young ears of barley”). Here the word refers to the plant that is still in its early stages of flowering. It should not be translated to suggest the plant is flowering (cf. NRSV), but translating as if the plant is green (so NASB) is also problematic.

6 sn The idea is that as the plant begins to flower, but before it is to be cut down, there is no sign of withering or decay in it. But if the water is withdrawn, it will wither sooner than any other herb. The point Bildad will make of this is that when people rebel against God and his grace is withheld, they perish more swiftly than the water reed.

7 tn The imperfect verb here is the modal use of potential, “can wither away” if the water is not there.

8 tn Heb “before.”

9 tn The LXX interprets the line: “does not any herb wither before it has received moisture?”

10 tn Heb “and an orphan did not eat from it.”

11 tn The Hebrew text has only “I lift up” or “I bear” (= I endure). The reading “I have been led astray” is obtained by changing the vowels to read a passive. If the MT is retained, an object has to be supplied, such as “chastisement” (so RSV, NASB) or “punishment” (NRSV). If not, then a different reading would be followed (e.g., “I was misguided” [NAB]; “I am guilty” [NIV]).



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