Zophar is next to take a whack at Job's problem. And whack he does. He rips Job for hiding his sin and proclaiming his innocence, when clearly God is punishing him for something. Just who does Job think he is fooling? It is arrogance that guides Zophar's assessment of Job's predicament.
He offers a description of God that mostly was already covered by Job himself in the previous chapter. I picture Job nodding and rolling his eyes, as I often do when be lectured about something about which I already know full well. Nobody is as wise as God. Right, we get it. True wisdom is realizing nobody is as wise as God, uh huh.
If only Job would confess this sin that is burdening him, Zophar thinks. Does he really want to help Job, or is it more of an issue of coming out on top? Zophar feels he is wiser than Job, and that his rather generic advice is customized enough to Job's "problem." Which is likely the most unique problem in human history, considering all that brought him to this point. Zophar needs to consider Job's specific problem, and even then would likely never be able to pinpoint God as the fulcrum.
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