the Week of Proper 11 / Ordinary 16
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Geneva Bible
Job 34:1
Bible Study Resources
Dictionaries:
- HolmanParallel Translations
Then Elihu continued, saying:
Moreover Elihu answered,
Furthermore Elihu answered and said,
Then Elihu answered and said:
Then Elihu said:
Elihu answered:
Elihu continued his discourse and said,
Then Elihu continued and said,
Moreover Elihu answered,
Then Elihu answered and said,
Then Elihu continued:
Elihu Continues Elihu said:
Elihu continued speaking:
Moreover Elihu answered and said,
Then Elihu continued his speech:
MOREOVER Elihu continued and said.
You men are so wise, so clever; listen now to what I am saying. <
Thus Elihu spoke up and said,
And Elihu answered and said:
Eliu proceaded forth in his comunicacion, & sayde:
Moreover Elihu answered and said,
And Elihu made answer and said,
Moreover Elihu answered and said:
Furthermore Elihu answered, and said,
Elihu proceeding in his aunswere, sayde:
And Elius continued, and said,
Moreover Elihu answered and said,
And Helyu pronounside, and spak also these thingis,
Moreover Elihu answered and said,
Furthermore Elihu answered and said,
Elihu further answered and said:
Then Elihu said:
Then Elihu said,
Then Elihu continued and said:
Furthermore Elihu responded, and said: -
And Eliu continued his discourse, and said:
Then Eli'hu said:
And Elihu answereth and saith:
Then Elihu continued and said,
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
Cross-References
Nowe when Esau was fourtie yeere olde, he tooke to wife Iudith, the daughter of Beeri an Hittite, and Bashemath the daughter of Elon an Hittite also.
Also Rebekah said to Izhak, I am weary of my life, for the daughters of Heth. If Iaakob take a wife of the daughters of Heth like these of the daughters of the lande, what auaileth it me to liue?
When Esau sawe that Izhak had blessed Iaakob, and sent him to Padan Aram, to set him a wife thence, and giuen him a charge when he blessed him, saying, Thou shalt not take a wife of the daughters of Canaan,
Then sayde Leah, Ah, blessed am I, for the daughters will blesse me. and she called his name, Asher.
After that, shee bare a daughter, and shee called her name Dinah.
These bee the sonnes of Leah, which shee bare vnto Iaakob in Padan Aram, wt his daughter Dinah. All the soules of his sonnes & his daughters were thirtie and three.
Why runnest thou about so much to change thy waies? for thou shalt be confounded of Egypt, as thou art confounded of Asshur.
And likewise also being idle they learne to goe about from house to house: yea, they are not onely ydle, but also pratlers and busibodies, speaking things which are not comely.
That they be temperate, chaste, keeping at home, good & subiect vnto their husbands, that the word of God be not euill spoken of.
Gill's Notes on the Bible
Furthermore Elihu answered and said. It is reasonable to suppose that Elihu made a considerable pause, to see whether Job would make any reply to what he had delivered, or object to what he had said; which he gave him free liberty to do, if he had anything upon his mind: but perceiving he was not inclined to return any answer to him, he went on with his discourse; and which is called a further answer to him: for though Joh had made no reply to which this could be called an answer, yet as there were several things remaining for Elihu to answer to, and which he proposed to answer and did, it may with great propriety here be said that he answered him.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
Furthermore, Elihu answered and said - That is, evidently, after a pause to see if Job had anything to reply. The word answered in the Scriptures often means “to begin a discourse,” though nothing had been said by others; see Job 3:2; Isaiah 14:10; Zechariah 1:10; Zechariah 3:4; Zechariah 4:11-12. Sometimes it is used with reference to a subject, meaning that one replied to what could be suggested on the opposite side. Here it maybe understood either in the general sense of beginning a discourse, or more probably as replying to the sentiments which Job had advanced in the debate with his friends.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
CHAPTER XXXIV
Elihu begins with an exhortation to Job's friends, 1-4;
charges Job with accusing God of acting unrighteously, which
he shows is impossible, 5-12;
points out the power and judgments of the Almighty, 13-30;
shows how men should address God, and how irreverently Job has
acted, 31-37.
NOTES ON CHAP. XXXIV