Cut Destroyed Destruction God-fearing Innocent Perished Remember Righteous Upright
4:7 Remember, I pray thee, who [ever] perished, being {d} innocent? or where were the righteous cut off?
(d) He concludes that Job was reproved seeing that God handles him so extremely, which is the argument that the carnal men make against the children of God.
4:7 Innocent - Therefore thou art guilty of some great, though secret crimes, and thy sin hath now found thee out. Cut off - By the sickle of Divine vengeance before his time, which is like to be thy case. Eliphaz here advances another argument to prove Job an hypocrite; taken not only from his impatience under afflictions, but from his afflictions themselves.
4:7-11 Eliphaz argues, 1. That good men were never thus ruined. But there is one event both to the righteous and to the wicked, Ec 9:2, both in life and death; the great and certain difference is after death. Our worst mistakes are occasioned by drawing wrong views from undeniable truths. 2. That wicked men were often thus ruined: for the proof of this, Eliphaz vouches his own observation. We may see the same every day.
Consider Cut Destroyed Destruction God-Fearing Innocent Perished Remember Righteous Think Upright
Consider Cut Destroyed Destruction God-Fearing Innocent Perished Remember Righteous Think Upright