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← (Job 23) | (Job 25) →

English Standard Version

New Living Translation

  • “Why are not times of judgment kept by the Almighty,
    and why do those who know him never see his days?
  • Job Asks Why the Wicked Are Not Punished

    “Why doesn’t the Almighty bring the wicked to judgment?
    Why must the godly wait for him in vain?
  • Some move landmarks;
    they seize flocks and pasture them.
  • Evil people steal land by moving the boundary markers.
    They steal livestock and put them in their own pastures.
  • They drive away the donkey of the fatherless;
    they take the widow’s ox for a pledge.
  • They take the orphan’s donkey
    and demand the widow’s ox as security for a loan.
  • They thrust the poor off the road;
    the poor of the earth all hide themselves.
  • The poor are pushed off the path;
    the needy must hide together for safety.
  • Behold, like wild donkeys in the desert
    the poora go out to their toil, seeking game;
    the wasteland yields food for their children.
  • Like wild donkeys in the wilderness,
    the poor must spend all their time looking for food,
    searching even in the desert for food for their children.
  • They gather theirb fodder in the field,
    and they glean the vineyard of the wicked man.
  • They harvest a field they do not own,
    and they glean in the vineyards of the wicked.
  • They lie all night naked, without clothing,
    and have no covering in the cold.
  • All night they lie naked in the cold,
    without clothing or covering.
  • They are wet with the rain of the mountains
    and cling to the rock for lack of shelter.
  • They are soaked by mountain showers,
    and they huddle against the rocks for want of a home.
  • (There are those who snatch the fatherless child from the breast,
    and they take a pledge against the poor.)
  • “The wicked snatch a widow’s child from her breast,
    taking the baby as security for a loan.
  • They go about naked, without clothing;
    hungry, they carry the sheaves;
  • The poor must go about naked, without any clothing.
    They harvest food for others while they themselves are starving.
  • among the olive rows of the wickedc they make oil;
    they tread the winepresses, but suffer thirst.
  • They press out olive oil without being allowed to taste it,
    and they tread in the winepress as they suffer from thirst.
  • From out of the city the dyingd groan,
    and the soul of the wounded cries for help;
    yet God charges no one with wrong.
  • The groans of the dying rise from the city,
    and the wounded cry for help,
    yet God ignores their moaning.
  • “There are those who rebel against the light,
    who are not acquainted with its ways,
    and do not stay in its paths.
  • “Wicked people rebel against the light.
    They refuse to acknowledge its ways
    or stay in its paths.
  • The murderer rises before it is light,
    that he may kill the poor and needy,
    and in the night he is like a thief.
  • The murderer rises in the early dawn
    to kill the poor and needy;
    at night he is a thief.
  • The eye of the adulterer also waits for the twilight,
    saying, ‘No eye will see me’;
    and he veils his face.
  • The adulterer waits for the twilight,
    saying, ‘No one will see me then.’
    He hides his face so no one will know him.
  • In the dark they dig through houses;
    by day they shut themselves up;
    they do not know the light.
  • Thieves break into houses at night
    and sleep in the daytime.
    They are not acquainted with the light.
  • For deep darkness is morning to all of them;
    for they are friends with the terrors of deep darkness.
  • The black night is their morning.
    They ally themselves with the terrors of the darkness.
  • “You say, ‘Swift are they on the face of the waters;
    their portion is cursed in the land;
    no treader turns toward their vineyards.
  • “But they disappear like foam down a river.
    Everything they own is cursed,
    and they are afraid to enter their own vineyards.
  • Drought and heat snatch away the snow waters;
    so does Sheol those who have sinned.
  • The gravea consumes sinners
    just as drought and heat consume snow.
  • The womb forgets them;
    the worm finds them sweet;
    they are no longer remembered,
    so wickedness is broken like a tree.’
  • Their own mothers will forget them.
    Maggots will find them sweet to eat.
    No one will remember them.
    Wicked people are broken like a tree in the storm.
  • “They wrong the barren, childless woman,
    and do no good to the widow.
  • They cheat the woman who has no son to help her.
    They refuse to help the needy widow.
  • Yet Gode prolongs the life of the mighty by his power;
    they rise up when they despair of life.
  • “God, in his power, drags away the rich.
    They may rise high, but they have no assurance of life.
  • He gives them security, and they are supported,
    and his eyes are upon their ways.
  • They may be allowed to live in security,
    but God is always watching them.
  • They are exalted a little while, and then are gone;
    they are brought low and gathered up like all others;
    they are cut off like the heads of grain.
  • And though they are great now,
    in a moment they will be gone like all others,
    cut off like heads of grain.
  • If it is not so, who will prove me a liar
    and show that there is nothing in what I say?”
  • Can anyone claim otherwise?
    Who can prove me wrong?”

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