Eliphaz's second speech
Eliphaz rebukes Job for arrogant, irreverent speech and appeals to inherited wisdom about human impurity and the ruin of the wicked. His doctrine of sin and judgment is broadly true, but he misapplies it by assuming Job's suffering proves hidden wickedness.
Commentary
15:1 Then Eliphaz the Temanite answered:
15:2 “Does a wise man answer with blustery knowledge, or fill his belly with the east wind?
15:3 Does he argue with useless talk, with words that have no value in them?
15:4 But you even break off piety, and hinder meditation before God.
15:5 Your sin inspires your mouth; you choose the language of the crafty.
15:6 Your own mouth condemns you, not I; your own lips testify against you.
15:7 “Were you the first man ever born? Were you brought forth before the hills?
15:8 Do you listen in on God’s secret council? Do you limit wisdom to yourself?
15:9 What do you know that we don’t know? What do you understand that we don’t understand?
15:10 The gray-haired and the aged are on our side, men far older than your father.
15:11 Are God’s consolations too trivial for you; or a word spoken in gentleness to you?
15:12 Why has your heart carried you away, and why do your eyes flash,
15:13 when you turn your rage against God and allow such words to escape from your mouth?
15:14 What is man that he should be pure, or one born of woman, that he should be righteous?
15:15 If God places no trust in his holy ones, if even the heavens are not pure in his eyes,
15:16 how much less man, who is abominable and corrupt, who drinks in evil like water!
15:17 “I will explain to you; listen to me, and what I have seen, I will declare,
15:18 what wise men declare, hiding nothing, from the tradition of their ancestors,
15:19 to whom alone the land was given when no foreigner passed among them.
15:20 All his days the wicked man suffers torment, throughout the number of the years that are stored up for the tyrant.
15:21 Terrifying sounds fill his ears; in a time of peace marauders attack him.
15:22 He does not expect to escape from darkness; he is marked for the sword;
15:23 he wanders about – food for vultures; he knows that the day of darkness is at hand.
15:24 Distress and anguish terrify him; they prevail against him like a king ready to launch an attack,
15:25 for he stretches out his hand against God, and vaunts himself against the Almighty,
15:26 defiantly charging against him with a thick, strong shield!
15:27 Because he covered his face with fat, and made his hips bulge with fat,
15:28 he lived in ruined towns and in houses where no one lives, where they are ready to crumble into heaps.
15:29 He will not grow rich, and his wealth will not endure, nor will his possessions spread over the land.
15:30 He will not escape the darkness; a flame will wither his shoots and he will depart by the breath of God’s mouth.
15:31 Let him not trust in what is worthless, deceiving himself; for worthlessness will be his reward.
15:32 Before his time he will be paid in full, and his branches will not flourish.
15:33 Like a vine he will let his sour grapes fall, and like an olive tree he will shed his blossoms.
15:34 For the company of the godless is barren, and fire consumes the tents of those who accept bribes.
15:35 They conceive trouble and bring forth evil; their belly prepares deception.” Job’s Reply to Eliphaz
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Context notes
Second cycle of the dialogue after Job's lament in chapters 12–14; Eliphaz answers Job's defense by appealing to inherited wisdom and the supposed fate of the wicked.
Historical setting and dynamics
Job 15 belongs to the ancient wisdom disputation setting, with Eliphaz the Temanite speaking as an experienced counselor rather than as a prophet with fresh revelation. His appeal to age, ancestry, and collective wisdom is rhetorical authority within an honor-shame world, where Job's lament is treated as impious self-defense. The speech reflects a pre-codified wisdom debate in which a moral order is assumed to be generally retributive, but the book will test that assumption against Job's case.
Central idea
Eliphaz rebukes Job for arrogant, irreverent speech and appeals to inherited wisdom about human impurity and the ruin of the wicked. His doctrine of sin and judgment is broadly true, but he misapplies it by assuming Job's suffering proves hidden wickedness.
Context and flow
This second speech follows Job's defense in chapters 12-14 and marks a sharper second cycle in which Eliphaz moves from cautious counsel to open accusation. The speech has three movements: accusation of Job's words (1-16), appeal to ancestral wisdom (17-19), and a proverbial portrait of the wicked man's collapse (20-35). It sets up Job's reply and shows the friends' theology hardening rather than helping.
Exegetical analysis
Eliphaz opens by mocking Job's speech as 'east wind'—hot air that leaves nothing behind. Verse 4 likely means that Job is undermining reverence and the reflective posture fitting for one speaking before God. Eliphaz then argues that Job's own words condemn him (vv. 5-6), a standard wisdom move in which the accused's speech becomes evidence against him.
In vv. 7-10 Eliphaz uses a string of rhetorical questions to deny Job any special standing. Job was not firstborn, does not have access to God's secret council, and is not wiser than the aged tradition represented by Eliphaz and his companions. The appeal to older men is not a claim to revelation but to inherited wisdom; Eliphaz wants Job to submit to the consensus of the wise rather than to his own interpretation of events.
Verses 11-16 intensify the charge. Eliphaz claims that God's consolations have been offered, but Job has rejected them because his heart has been carried away by anger. The key doctrinal point comes in vv. 14-16: no human being is pure or righteous before God, and even the heavens are not pure in his sight; therefore man, who is corrupt and inclined to evil, cannot stand on the basis of self-justification. That claim is broadly true in the Bible's doctrine of sin, but Eliphaz mishandles it by turning a general truth into a direct indictment of Job.
In vv. 17-35 Eliphaz delivers the tradition of the wise concerning the fate of the wicked. The section is not a proof from revelation but a vivid moral pattern: terror, darkness, attack, violence, and collapse characterize the wicked man's days. The imagery is compressed and forceful. The east wind, darkness, sword, vultures, vine, and olive tree all reinforce the same conclusion: the wicked may appear established, but their end is fruitlessness and ruin. Verse 19's appeal to ancient landowners underscores the antiquity of the tradition, while vv. 25-26 portray the wicked as one who defiantly confronts God. Eliphaz's portrait may describe wickedness in general, but in context it functions as an accusation against Job. The narrator reports the speech without endorsing its conclusion, and the book as a whole will show that Eliphaz has taken a true doctrine and applied it with unjust certainty.
Covenantal and redemptive location
Job belongs to wisdom reflection rather than to the explicit covenant storyline of Israel, yet it still stands within the creation-order framework by which God governs all people. Eliphaz's speech assumes a retributive moral order in which wickedness brings judgment and righteousness brings stability, but the book of Job will expose the limits of that formula. In the broader canon, the passage helps prepare readers to expect that divine justice is real but not mechanically reducible to immediate outward circumstances, thereby making room for righteous suffering, patient faith, and eventual vindication.
Theological significance
The passage underscores God's transcendence, human impurity, and the seriousness of speech before God. It also shows that correct-sounding theology can become false when stripped of humility, compassion, and true discernment. Eliphaz affirms that God judges evil, but he wrongly assumes that this principle can be used as a ready-made verdict against a suffering man. The text therefore warns against the misuse of orthodox doctrine.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No direct prophecy or typology is in view. The east wind, darkness, fruitless vine and olive tree, and barren tents are conventional wisdom images for emptiness, instability, and judgment; they function rhetorically, not as predictive symbols requiring allegorical decoding.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The speech leans heavily on elder authority, inherited tradition, and honor/shame dynamics. Eliphaz treats Job's lament as a public disgrace and uses the consensus of older men as a warrant for his case. The appeal to the 'secret council' reflects an ancient wisdom assumption that true insight belongs to those granted access to deep, communal, and divine knowledge rather than to the self-assertive individual.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
Within the canon, this speech contributes indirectly by exposing the inadequacy of simplistic retribution theology. Later Scripture repeatedly confirms that suffering does not always indicate personal guilt, and Job's righteous suffering points beyond the friends' categories to the need for a truly innocent sufferer and a just mediator. The ultimate answer to the problem is found not in Eliphaz's maxims but in the fuller biblical witness that culminates in Christ, while preserving Job's original place as wisdom literature wrestling with divine justice.
Practical and doctrinal implications
Believers should not confuse traditional wisdom with infallible application. The passage warns against using true doctrines about sin and divine justice as weapons against the afflicted. It also reminds us that reverent speech matters: anger, presumption, and certainty about another person's hidden guilt can turn counsel into condemnation. At the same time, it keeps before readers the reality of human sinfulness and the need to approach God with humility.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
Verse 4 is the main translation crux, with renderings varying between Job's breaking off reverence, restraint, or meditation before God. A second crux is the force of vv. 20-35: the 'wicked man' is a wisdom type rather than a precise predictive oracle, and Eliphaz wrongly turns the type into a diagnosis of Job.
Application boundary note
Do not treat Eliphaz's words as automatically approved by God or as a formula for diagnosing suffering. The passage can inform doctrine about human sin and divine justice, but it must not be used to claim that every sufferer is secretly wicked or that prosperity always proves innocence.
Key Hebrew terms
rûaḥ qādîm
Gloss: east wind
A vivid image of something hot, empty, and destructive; Eliphaz uses it to dismiss Job's speech as worthless bluster.
sôd
Gloss: council; confidential counsel
Eliphaz denies Job any unique access to divine wisdom and contrasts Job's claims with the supposed wisdom of the elders.
ḥānēp̄
Gloss: godless, irreverent, profane
The term frames the wicked as fundamentally defiled and under judgment, a category Eliphaz implicitly tries to apply to Job.
Interpretive cautions
Read Eliphaz as voicing a true doctrine in a false application; the speech is wisdom discourse, not divine endorsement of his verdict.