Lectionary Calendar
Tuesday, August 19th, 2025
the Week of Proper 15 / Ordinary 20
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Read the Bible

New Century Version

Job 20:3

You correct me and I am insulted, but I understand how to answer you.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- The Topic Concordance - Happiness/joy;   Hypocrisy;   Oppression;   Perishing;   Victory/overcoming;   Wickedness;  

Dictionaries:

- Charles Buck Theological Dictionary - Greatness of God;   Hypocrisy;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Job, the Book of;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Check;   Zophar;  

Parallel Translations

Christian Standard Bible®
I have heard a rebuke that insults me,and my understanding makes me reply.
Hebrew Names Version
I have heard the reproof which puts me to shame; The spirit of my understanding answers me.
King James Version
I have heard the check of my reproach, and the spirit of my understanding causeth me to answer.
English Standard Version
I hear censure that insults me, and out of my understanding a spirit answers me.
New English Translation
When I hear a reproof that dishonors me, then my understanding prompts me to answer.
Amplified Bible
"I have heard the reproof which insults me, But the spirit of my understanding makes me answer.
New American Standard Bible
"I listened to the reprimand which insults me, And the spirit of my understanding makes me answer.
World English Bible
I have heard the reproof which puts me to shame; The spirit of my understanding answers me.
Geneva Bible (1587)
I haue heard the correction of my reproch: therefore the spirite of mine vnderstanding causeth me to answere.
Legacy Standard Bible
I listened to the discipline which dishonors me,And the spirit of my understanding makes me answer.
Berean Standard Bible
I have heard a rebuke that insults me, and my understanding demands a reply.
Contemporary English Version
You have accused and insulted me, and reason requires a reply.
Complete Jewish Bible
I have heard reproof that outrages me, but a spirit past my understanding gives me a reply.
Darby Translation
I hear a reproof putting me to shame; and [my] spirit answereth me by mine understanding.
Easy-to-Read Version
You insulted me with your answers! But I am wise and know how to answer you.
George Lamsa Translation
I will make you hear the instruction of my discipline, and the spirit of my understanding will cause me to answer.
Good News Translation
What you have said is an insult, but I know how to reply to you.
Lexham English Bible
I hear discipline that insults me, and a spirit beyond my understanding answers me.
Literal Translation
I have heard the instruction of my chastisement; and the spirit from my understanding makes me reply.
Miles Coverdale Bible (1535)
I haue sufficiently herde the checkynge & reprofe, therfore am I purposed to make answere after my vnderstodinge.
American Standard Version
I have heard the reproof which putteth me to shame; And the spirit of my understanding answereth me.
Bible in Basic English
I have to give ear to arguments which put me to shame, and your answers to me are wind without wisdom.
JPS Old Testament (1917)
I have heard the reproof which putteth me to shame, but out of my understanding my spirit answereth me.
King James Version (1611)
I haue heard the checke of my reproach, and the spirit of my vnderstanding causeth me to answere.
Bishop's Bible (1568)
I haue sufficiently heard the checking of my reproofe, therefore the spirite of myne vnderstanding causeth me to aunswere.
Brenton's Septuagint (LXX)
I will hear my shameful reproach; and the spirit of my understanding answers me.
English Revised Version
I have heard the reproof which putteth me to shame, and the spirit of my understanding answereth me.
Wycliffe Bible (1395)
Y schal here the techyng, bi which thou repreuest me; and the spirit of myn vndurstondyng schal answere me.
Update Bible Version
I have heard the reproof which puts me to shame; And the spirit of my understanding answers me.
Webster's Bible Translation
I have heard the check of my reproach, and the spirit of my understanding causeth me to answer.
New King James Version
I have heard the rebuke that reproaches me, And the spirit of my understanding causes me to answer.
New Living Translation
I've had to endure your insults, but now my spirit prompts me to reply.
New Life Bible
I heard the strong words that take away my honor. The spirit of my understanding makes me answer.
New Revised Standard
I hear censure that insults me, and a spirit beyond my understanding answers me.
J.B. Rotherham Emphasized Bible
The correction meant to confound me, I must hear, but, the spirit - out of my understanding, will give me a reply.
Douay-Rheims Bible
The doctrine with which thou reprovest me, I will hear, and the spirit of my understanding shall answer for me.
Revised Standard Version
I hear censure which insults me, and out of my understanding a spirit answers me.
Young's Literal Translation
The chastisement of my shame I hear, And the spirit of mine understanding Doth cause me to answer:
New American Standard Bible (1995)
"I listened to the reproof which insults me, And the spirit of my understanding makes me answer.

Contextual Overview

1 Then Zophar the Naamathite answered: 2 "My troubled thoughts cause me to answer, because I am very upset. 3 You correct me and I am insulted, but I understand how to answer you. 4 "You know how it has been for a long time, ever since people were first put on the earth. 5 The happiness of evil people is brief, and the joy of the wicked lasts only a moment. 6 Their pride may be as high as the heavens, and their heads may touch the clouds, 7 but they will be gone forever, like their own dung. People who knew them will say, ‘Where are they?' 8 They will fly away like a dream and not be found again; they will be chased away like a vision in the night. 9 Those who saw them will not see them again; the places where they lived will see them no more.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

the check: Job 19:29

the spirit: Job 20:2, Job 27:11, Job 33:3, Psalms 49:3, Psalms 78:2-5

Reciprocal: Job 12:2 - ye are the people Job 16:3 - what emboldeneth Job 26:4 - whose spirit

Cross-References

Genesis 20:1
Abraham left Hebron and traveled to southern Canaan where he stayed awhile between Kadesh and Shur. When he moved to Gerar,
Genesis 20:7
Give Abraham his wife back. He is a prophet. He will pray for you, and you will not die. But if you do not give Sarah back, you and all your family will surely die."
Genesis 20:12
And it is true that she is my sister. She is the daughter of my father, but she is not the daughter of my mother.
Genesis 20:13
When God told me to leave my father's house and wander in many different places, I told Sarah, ‘You must do a special favor for me. Everywhere we go tell people I am your brother.'"
Genesis 20:14
Then Abimelech gave Abraham some sheep, cattle, and male and female slaves. He also gave Sarah, Abraham's wife, back to him
Genesis 20:15
and said, "Look around you at my land. You may live anywhere you want."
Genesis 28:12
Jacob dreamed that there was a ladder resting on the earth and reaching up into heaven, and he saw angels of God going up and coming down the ladder.
Genesis 31:24
That night God came to Laban the Aramean in a dream and said, "Be careful! Do not say anything to Jacob, good or bad."
Genesis 37:5
One time Joseph had a dream, and when he told his brothers about it, they hated him even more.
Genesis 37:9
Then Joseph had another dream, and he told his brothers about it also. He said, "Listen, I had another dream. I saw the sun, moon, and eleven stars bowing down to me."

Gill's Notes on the Bible

I have heard the check of my reproach,.... He took it that Job had reproached him and his friends, by representing them as hardhearted men, and persecuting him wrongly in a violent manner; and he had observed the "check" or reproof given for it, by bidding them beware of the sword, and lest the punishment of it should be inflicted on them; and if that should not be the case, yet there was a righteous judgment they could not escape. Now Zophar heard this, but could not hear it with patience; be could not bear that he and his friends should be insulted, as he thought, in this manner; and therefore it was he was in such baste to return an answer; though some d think he here pretends to a divine oracle, like that which Eliphaz makes mention of in the beginning of this dispute, Job 4:12, c. which he had from God, and from which he had heard the "correction [of his] reproach" e, or a full confutation of the thing Job had reproached him with and being thus divinely furnished, he thought it his duty to deliver it:

and the spirit of my understanding causeth me to answer; or his rational spirit, his natural understanding, furnished him at once with an answer; he had such a clear insight into the controversy on foot, and such a full view of it, that he thought himself capable of speaking very particularly to the matter in hand, and to the conviction and confusion of Job; nay, his conscience, or the spirit of his conscience, as Mr. Broughton renders it, not only readily dictated to him what he should say, but obliged him to it; though some think he meant the Holy Spirit of God, by which he would be thought to be inspired; that he "out [of his] understanding" f, enlightened by him, caused him to answer, or would answer for him, or supply him with matter sufficient to qualify him for it; and this he might observe to Job, in order to raise his attention to what he was about to say.

d Schmidt. e מוסר כלמתי "correctionem ignominiae meae", Pagninus, Montanus; so Schmidt, Michaelis. f מבינתי "ex intelligentia mea", Junius & Tremellius, Piscator, Mercerus, Drusius, Schmidt, Michaelis.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

I have heard the check of my reproach - I have heard your violent and severe language reproaching us. Probably he refers to what Job had said in the close of his speech Job 19:29, that they had occasion to dread the wrath of God, and that they might anticipate heavy judgments as the result of their opinions. Or it may be, as Schultens supposes, that he refers to what Job said in Job 19:2, and the rebuke that he had administered there. Or possibly, and still more probably, I think, he may refer to what Job had said in reply to the former speech of Zophar Job 12:2, where he tauntingly says that “they were the people, and that wisdom would die with them.” The Hebrew literally is, “the correction of my shame” (כלמה מוּסר mûsâr kelı̂mmâh), “the correction of my shame.” that is, the castigation or rebuke which tends to cover me with ignominy. The sense is, “you have accused me of that which is ignominious and shameful, and under the impetuous feelings caused by such a charge I cannot refrain from replying.”

And the spirit of my understanding - Meaning, perhaps, “the emotion of his mind.” The word “mind” or “soul” would better express the idea than the word “understanding;” and the word “spirit” here seems to be used in the sense of violent or agitating emotions - perhaps in allusion to the primary signification of the word (רוּח rûach), “mind.”

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Job 20:3. I have heard the check of my reproach — Some suppose that Zophar quotes the words of Job, and that some words should be supplied to indicate this meaning; e.g., "I have heard (sayest thou) the check or charge of my reproach?" Or it may refer to what Job says of Zophar and his companions, Job 19:2; Job 19:3: How long will ye vex may soul-these ten times have ye reproached me. Zophar therefore assumes his old ground, and retracts nothing of what he had said. Like many of his own complexion in the present day, he was determined to believe that his judgment was infallible, and that he could not err.


 
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