Job Chapter 27 verse 11 Holy Bible

ASV Job 27:11

I will teach you concerning the hand of God; That which is with the Almighty will I not conceal.
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BBE Job 27:11

I will give you teaching about the hand of God; I will not keep secret from you what is in the mind of the Ruler of all.
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DARBY Job 27:11

I will teach you concerning the hand of ùGod; what is with the Almighty will I not conceal.
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KJV Job 27:11

I will teach you by the hand of God: that which is with the Almighty will I not conceal.
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WBT Job 27:11

I will teach you by the hand of God: that which is with the Almighty will I not conceal.
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WEB Job 27:11

I will teach you about the hand of God. That which is with the Almighty will I not conceal.
read chapter 27 in WEB

YLT Job 27:11

I shew you by the hand of God, That which `is' with the Mighty I hide not.
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerses 11-23. - It is impossible to deny that this passage directly contradicts Job's former utterances, especially Job 24:2-24. But the hypotheses which would make Job irresponsible for the present utterance and fix on him, as his steadfast conviction, the opposite theory, are unsatisfactory and have no solid basis. To suppose that Zophar is the real speaker is to imagine the absolute loss and suppression of two entire verses - one between vers. 10 and 11, assigning the speech to him, and another at the beginning of ch. 28, reintroducing Job and making him once more the interlocutor. That this should have happened by accident is inconceivable. Τὰ κατὰ τύχην οὐ πάνυ συνδυάζεται To ascribe it to intentional corruption by a Hebrew redactor, bent on maintaining the old orthodox view, and on falsely and wickedly giving the authority of Job to it (Froude 'Short Studies on Great Subjects,' vol. 1. p. 316), is to take away all authority from the existing text of the Hebrew Scriptures, and to open a door to any amount of wild suggestion and conjectural emendation. The other hypothesis - that of Eichhorn - that Job is here simply anticipating what his adversaries will say, though a less dangerous view, is untenable, since Job never does this without following up his statement of the adversaries' ease with a reply, and here is no reply whatever, but a simple turning away, after ver. 23, to another subject. The explanation of the contradiction by supposing that Job's former statement was tentative and controversial, or else hasty and ill-considered, and that now, to prevent misconception, he determines to set himself right, is, on the other hand, thoroughly defensible, and receives a strong support from the remarkable introduction in ver. 11, which "prepares us, if not for a recantation, yet (at any rate) for a modification of statements wrung from the speaker when his words flowed over from a spirit drunk with the poison of God's arrows" (see the remarks of Canon Cook, in the 'Speaker's Commentary,' vol. 4. p. 90, which are in substantial agreement with those of Ewald said Dillmann). Verse 11. - I will teach you by (or, concerning) the hand of God. Job is now at last about to deliver his real sentiments respecting God's dealings with men in the world, and prefaces his. remarks with this solemn introduction, to draw special attention to them. He is aware that his previous statements on the subject, especially in Job 24:2-24, have been overstrained and exaggerated, and wishes, now that he is uttering his last words (Job 31:40), to correct his previous hasty utterances, and put on record his true views. That which is with the Almighty will I not conceal. By "that which is with the Almighty" Job means the Divine principles of action.

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(11) I will teach you.--Better, I will teach you of the hand of God; or, what is in the power of God.