Elihu's third and fourth speeches
Elihu argues that God is righteous, powerful, and wise, using affliction as correction and creation as a display of his governance. Therefore Job must abandon any attempt to indict or instruct God and respond with humble fear.
Commentary
36:1 Elihu said further:
36:2 “Be patient with me a little longer and I will instruct you, for I still have words to speak on God’s behalf.
36:3 With my knowledge I will speak comprehensively, and to my Creator I will ascribe righteousness.
36:4 For in truth, my words are not false; it is one complete in knowledge who is with you.
36:5 Indeed, God is mighty; and he does not despise people, he is mighty, and firm in his intent.
36:6 He does not allow the wicked to live, but he gives justice to the poor.
36:7 He does not take his eyes off the righteous; but with kings on the throne he seats the righteous and exalts them forever.
36:8 But if they are bound in chains, and held captive by the cords of affliction,
36:9 then he reveals to them what they have done, and their transgressions, that they were behaving proudly.
36:10 And he reveals this for correction, and says that they must turn from evil.
36:11 If they obey and serve him, they live out their days in prosperity and their years in pleasantness.
36:12 But if they refuse to listen, they pass over the river of death, and expire without knowledge.
36:13 The godless at heart nourish anger, they do not cry out even when he binds them.
36:14 They die in their youth, and their life ends among the male cultic prostitutes.
36:15 He delivers the afflicted by their afflictions, he reveals himself to them by their suffering.
36:16 And surely, he drew you from the mouth of distress, to a wide place, unrestricted, and to the comfort of your table filled with rich food.
36:17 But now you are preoccupied with the judgment due the wicked, judgment and justice take hold of you.
36:18 Be careful that no one entices you with riches; do not let a large bribe turn you aside.
36:19 Would your wealth sustain you, so that you would not be in distress, even all your mighty efforts?
36:20 Do not long for the cover of night to drag people away from their homes.
36:21 Take heed, do not turn to evil, for because of this you have been tested by affliction.
36:22 Indeed, God is exalted in his power; who is a teacher like him?
36:23 Who has prescribed his ways for him? Or said to him, ‘You have done what is wicked’?
36:24 Remember to extol his work, which people have praised in song.
36:25 All humanity has seen it; people gaze on it from afar.
36:26 “Yes, God is great – beyond our knowledge! The number of his years is unsearchable.
36:27 He draws up drops of water; they distill the rain into its mist,
36:28 which the clouds pour down and shower on humankind abundantly.
36:29 Who can understand the spreading of the clouds, the thunderings of his pavilion?
36:30 See how he scattered his lightning about him; he has covered the depths of the sea.
36:31 It is by these that he judges the nations and supplies food in abundance.
36:32 With his hands he covers the lightning, and directs it against its target.
36:33 His thunder announces the coming storm, the cattle also, concerning the storm’s approach.
37:1 At this also my heart pounds and leaps from its place.
37:2 Listen carefully to the thunder of his voice, to the rumbling that proceeds from his mouth.
37:3 Under the whole heaven he lets it go, even his lightning to the far corners of the earth.
37:4 After that a voice roars; he thunders with an exalted voice, and he does not hold back his lightning bolts when his voice is heard.
37:5 God thunders with his voice in marvelous ways; he does great things beyond our understanding.
37:6 For to the snow he says, ‘Fall to earth,’ and to the torrential rains, ‘Pour down.’
37:7 He causes everyone to stop working, so that all people may know his work.
37:8 The wild animals go to their lairs, and in their dens they remain.
37:9 A tempest blows out from its chamber, icy cold from the driving winds.
37:10 The breath of God produces ice, and the breadth of the waters freeze solid.
37:11 He loads the clouds with moisture; he scatters his lightning through the clouds.
37:12 The clouds go round in circles, wheeling about according to his plans, to carry out all that he commands them over the face of the whole inhabited world.
37:13 Whether it is for punishment for his land, or whether it is for mercy, he causes it to find its mark.
37:14 “Pay attention to this, Job! Stand still and consider the wonders God works.
37:15 Do you know how God commands them, how he makes lightning flash in his storm cloud?
37:16 Do you know about the balancing of the clouds, that wondrous activity of him who is perfect in knowledge?
37:17 You, whose garments are hot when the earth is still because of the south wind,
37:18 will you, with him, spread out the clouds, solid as a mirror of molten metal?
37:19 Tell us what we should say to him. We cannot prepare a case because of the darkness.
37:20 Should he be informed that I want to speak? If a man speaks, surely he would be swallowed up!
37:21 But now, the sun cannot be looked at – it is bright in the skies – after a wind passed and swept the clouds away.
37:22 From the north he comes in golden splendor; around God is awesome majesty.
37:23 As for the Almighty, we cannot attain to him! He is great in power, but justice and abundant righteousness he does not oppress.
37:24 Therefore people fear him, for he does not regard all the wise in heart.” VI. The Divine Speeches (38:1-42:6) The Lord’s First Speech
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
Elihu continues his final address to Job and the friends immediately before the LORD speaks from the whirlwind in 38:1.
Historical setting and dynamics
The book’s setting reflects an ancient patriarchal world of household wealth, livestock, and honor-centered dispute rather than Israel’s later monarchy or temple system. Elihu speaks in a wisdom disputation where theological correctness, public reputation, and the interpretation of suffering are all at stake. The storm imagery draws on a familiar ancient Near Eastern association between thunder and divine power, but here it is harnessed to confess the uniqueness, moral perfection, and incomparability of Israel’s God.
Central idea
Elihu argues that God is righteous, powerful, and wise, using affliction as correction and creation as a display of his governance. Therefore Job must abandon any attempt to indict or instruct God and respond with humble fear.
Context and flow
This unit closes Elihu’s speeches in the book’s wisdom debate. It follows his earlier insistence that God is just and that suffering can function as discipline, and it prepares directly for the LORD’s own speeches out of the whirlwind in 38:1. The movement runs from self-introduction, to moral exhortation, to a sustained doxology on divine sovereignty in creation, and finally to direct application to Job.
Exegetical analysis
Elihu opens with a plea for patience and a claim to speak truthfully on God’s behalf (36:2-4). He then sketches God’s moral governance: the Almighty does not despise humanity, vindicates the righteous, and judges the wicked (36:5-7). The suffering of the righteous or afflicted is interpreted as disciplinary; God exposes hidden pride and calls for repentance (36:8-10). The prosperity/ruin contrast in 36:11-12 states a real wisdom pattern, but Job itself shows that it is not a rigid formula that explains every case of suffering. Verses 13-15 contrast hardened rebels with those whom God delivers through affliction; 36:14 is lexically difficult, but the line most likely conveys a shameful end under divine judgment rather than a securely recoverable social scene. Elihu then warns Job against bribery, wealth, and retaliatory anger (36:16-21) and moves into a doxology of God’s sovereignty over rain, clouds, thunder, lightning, snow, and ice (36:22-37:13). In 37:14-24 he presses Job to recognize creaturely limits: humans cannot command the storm, explain all providence, or litigate against the Creator. The speech ends by affirming that God remains transcendent, powerful, and just, so fear and humble submission are the proper response.
Covenantal and redemptive location
Job stands outside the Israelite covenant administration and likely reflects a patriarchal setting in which the moral order of creation is front and center rather than Sinai legislation or temple worship. This unit therefore speaks from the level of general revelation and providence: God governs the world justly, disciplines the afflicted, and remains unanswerable to human challenge. Canonically, it contributes to the larger wisdom witness that prepares readers for the limits of human understanding and for the later revelation that the righteous may suffer under God’s wise purposes without implying divine injustice.
Theological significance
The passage affirms God’s sovereignty, moral purity, and incomparability. It teaches that suffering can function as discipline and that divine providence extends even to weather and the ordering of nations. It also exposes a recurring human sin: the impulse to treat God as though he must answer to human standards before he may be trusted. At the same time, the book as a whole warns readers not to absolutize Elihu’s retributive scheme, because Job’s suffering is more complex than a simple punishment-for-sin formula.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No major prophecy or direct messianic oracle appears here. The storm, thunder, lightning, cloud, snow, and ice function as poetic-theophanic symbols of divine majesty and providence, anticipating the LORD’s own appearance in the whirlwind in 38:1. These images should be read as revelation of God’s greatness, not as hidden allegory.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The speech uses courtroom language, as if Job were trying to prepare a case against God, which makes sense in an honor-and-justice oriented culture. Elihu’s rhetoric assumes that a creature cannot summon the Creator to judgment. The storm imagery also reflects a common ancient way of speaking about divine power, but the text redirects that imagery to the moral and sovereign governance of the one true God.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
The next chapter’s divine speeches confirm that Elihu has rightly stressed God’s majesty and human smallness, even if his explanation of suffering is too narrow. Later Scripture develops the theme that God’s ways are higher than ours and that righteous suffering can serve wise and even redemptive ends. In that broader canonical trajectory, Christ as the truly righteous sufferer shows that innocent affliction need not signal divine injustice; rather, God can work through suffering without compromising his justice. Elihu’s speech therefore contributes to the canon’s insistence on humility before providence, while also leaving room for fuller revelation beyond Job’s immediate debate.
Practical and doctrinal implications
Believers should resist the habit of treating every affliction as a direct, one-to-one punishment for specific sin. The passage rightly calls for humility, repentance where needed, and reverent trust in God’s providence. It also encourages worshipful attention to creation, since ordinary weather patterns testify that God governs far more than human courts or human anxieties. Finally, it warns against self-justifying speech that tries to put God on trial.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The principal crux is 36:14, where the final phrase is rendered variously and probably points to an ignominious end under judgment; the exact image is uncertain. A secondary issue is how to read Elihu’s retribution statements in 36:5-12: they articulate a true wisdom principle about God’s moral governance, but not a mechanically applicable formula that exhausts Job’s suffering. In 37:13, the line about judgment or mercy emphasizes that the same storm can serve different divine purposes under God’s providence.
Application boundary note
Do not turn Elihu’s statements into a universal rule that every suffering person must have committed a specific sin. Do not force the storm imagery into speculative symbolism or mystical weather-reading. The passage teaches humility before God and the possibility that suffering can discipline, but Job’s book as a whole forbids simplistic application of retribution formulas.
Key Hebrew terms
tsaddiq
Gloss: righteous, just
This term frames Elihu’s claim that God upholds the righteous and that the proper human response is to fear God rather than challenge him.
rashaʿ
Gloss: wicked, guilty
The wicked are contrasted with the righteous as those under divine judgment; Elihu’s argument is built on a moral order in which God does not treat evil as trivial.
yasar
Gloss: discipline, correct
In 36:10 Elihu says affliction can be used for correction, showing that suffering is not only punitive but also pedagogical in God’s hands.
ʿani
Gloss: afflicted, humbled, poor
Elihu repeatedly appeals to the afflicted as recipients of God’s attention and deliverance, which is central to his theology of suffering.
Interpretive cautions
36:14 remains the main translation crux; read Elihu’s speech as a human wisdom argument, not the final divine explanation of Job’s suffering.