Thursday, September 23, 2010

The ‘scrapheap’ Job -- #196

[July 2006 journal entry]

Does Eliphaz see Job as tossed aside on the ‘scrapheap’? Would Job use such imagery about himself? Does Job use ‘perished’, ‘cut off’, ‘reap’, ‘consumed’, . . . (4:7-11) to describe his condition? He uses ‘perished’ in cursing the day he was born (3:3), but does not apply the word more directly to himself. His three close friends use ‘perish’ in reference to the fate of those who are evil. The verb ‘consumed’ (7:6, 7:9, 11:20, 17:5, 19:27, 33:21 in the active and 9:22, 21:13, 31:16, 36:11 in the intensive) is never specifically applied by the ‘scrapheap’ Job to himself. Eliphaz places the ‘scrapheap’ Job with the wicked, perhaps among the unknowingly wicked. The ‘scrapheap’ Job understands Eliphaz to be placing him among the wicked. On the other hand, the ‘scrapheap’ Job sees himself among the innocent and thus as undeserving of such punishment. He sees himself among the consumed, but not among the wicked. He is heading to his wife’s earlier conclusion -- “If ‘God’ is going to throw me on the scrapheap for no reason, I may as well die.”