Chap.r64 An Expofition upon the Book-of J OB. Verf.=. 209 140000$011t°;eatak0a&r49ke°e'"0^00#$kcar9.ßeai 44.``4`0ib7°Di`.`â140444`.1% j O B, 'C H AP. 16. Verf. 1,2,3,4,5. Then fob anfweredandJaid, I have heard many fucb things Miferable comforters areye aé. Shall vain words have an end ? Or what emboldeneth thee that thou anfwereff ? I aljo couldfpeak as ye do ifyour Souls were inmy Souls Bead, I couldheap up words agaiaffyou, and'hake mine headat But Iwouldfrengthen you with my mouth , and the moving of my lipsfhouldaffwageyour grief. H IS Chapter, and that which follows, con- ; tain fob's fecond anfwer to the fecond chargeof Eliphaz. He calls it an anfwer, but in iïrietnefs of fpeech it is a rejoynder ; and he rejoyns with Come acrimony , and fharpnèfs of fpeech. The longer contextiort is maintained , the hotter are the fpirits of the contenders ; and the more we are put to anfwer , the more angry are our anfwers. `Verf. i . Then yob anfwered, and Paid. And what faid he ? His anfwer confi(ts of threegeneral parts. In the firff, he confutes what Eliphazhad afferted ; which he doth to the eighteenthVerfe of this fixteenth Chapter. Secondly , He proceeds to corroborate and confirm his own Tenet, or Opinion ; which hedoth to the eleventh Verfe of the feventeenthChapter. Thirdly , He renews his former complaints, and defires; which he doth from that eleventh Verfe to the end of the Chapter. The fish part of his anfwer, is confutation ; and he begins hisconfutation with an accufation with an accufation of thofe'who had difputed with him : and that's the fubjed of theftfive vrfes,inall which he taxeth,orchecks his-friends for E e their
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy OTcyMjk=