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NOTES for Job 27:8-10

For what is the hope of the hypocrite, though he hath gained, when God taketh away his soul?
Will God hear his cry when trouble cometh upon him?
10 Will he delight himself in the Almighty? will he always call upon God?
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Job does not want to lie. He will not bear false witness about himself, calling himself a sinner while being sure of his righteousness. He is more ready to admit that God, for now, is depriving him of His judgment. He does not reject God, does not reject His righteousness, and does not doubt that God's judgment will still put everything in its place. But right now that judgment is absent, and Job speaks directly about what he sees and how he sees it. He does not want to lie to himself and to others for "pious" reasons. More than that, he regards such a lie as a very serious sin. A sin of which, among others, he accuses his friends. And of course the point here is not the words they said. One cannot pick fault with their words; they are so correct and self-evident that, in essence, they need not have been said at all.

The issue is why and for what purpose all these correct general words are being spoken. That is where the lie begins. Insincerity, when words that are perfectly correct in themselves are spoken not in defense of what they say, but in defense of one's own, at the least ambiguous, position. And sometimes a plainly deceitful one: the longer the conversation continues, the more the situation begins to lean precisely in that direction.

When general correct words hide from those who say them both the person and the real situation in which that person has found himself, this is, at minimum, a serious spiritual mistake. But when those saying them begin to suspect what is going on and understand the true motives for their insistence on correct words, it is no longer a mistake but a more or less conscious lie. And if the liars do not want to admit their lie even to themselves, so much the worse for them: unwillingness to see one's lie does not make a conscious sin into a mistake.

And here a question arises: what is such a person to do on the day of God's judgment? Then one will have to meet God face to face. What then? Will God really forgive deceit and falsehood merely because they were covered with pious words? The questions asked required a direct and honest answer. And a no less honest look at themselves.

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