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Job 3

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After this opened Job his mouth, and cursed his day.

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And Job spake, and said,

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Let the day perish wherein I was born, and the night in which it was said, There is a man child conceived.

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Let that day be darkness; let not God regard it from above, neither let the light shine upon it.

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Let darkness and the shadow of death stain it; let a cloud dwell upon it; let the blackness of the day terrify it.

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As for that night, let darkness seize upon it; let it not be joined unto the days of the year, let it not come into the number of the months.

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Lo, let that night be solitary, let no joyful voice come therein.

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Let them curse it that curse the day, who are ready to raise up their mourning.

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Let the stars of the twilight thereof be dark; let it look for light, but have none; neither let it see the dawning of the day:

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Because it shut not up the doors of my mother’s womb, nor hid sorrow from mine eyes.

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Why died I not from the womb? why did I not give up the ghost when I came out of the belly?

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Why did the knees prevent me? or why the breasts that I should suck?

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For now should I have lain still and been quiet, I should have slept: then had I been at rest,

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With kings and counsellors of the earth, which built desolate places for themselves;

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Or with princes that had gold, who filled their houses with silver:

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Or as an hidden untimely birth I had not been; as infants which never saw light.

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There the wicked cease from troubling; and there the weary be at rest.

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There the prisoners rest together; they hear not the voice of the oppressor.

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The small and great are there; and the servant is free from his master.

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Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery, and life unto the bitter in soul;

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Which long for death, but it cometh not; and dig for it more than for hid treasures;

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Which rejoice exceedingly, and are glad, when they can find the grave?

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Why is light given to a man whose way is hid, and whom God hath hedged in?

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For my sighing cometh before I eat, and my roarings are poured out like the waters.

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For the thing which I greatly feared is come upon me, and that which I was afraid of is come unto me.

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I was not in safety, neither had I rest, neither was I quiet; yet trouble came.

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Job 3

Job breaks the seven-day silence with a lament of extraordinary bitterness, not cursing God directly but cursing the day of his birth and wishing he had died in the womb or in infancy, expressing the depth of his psychological and spiritual torment. Job's curse reveals his conviction that existence itself has become unbearable, that non-being would be preferable to the consciousness of suffering, and that his birth was a cosmic mistake that should never have occurred. The theological significance of Job's curse lies not in its impiety but in its honest expression of despair: Job does not minimize his suffering, pretend it is good, or accept it with false equanimity, but rather articulates the full weight of human anguish. His lament functions as a counterpoint to the friends' misguided theology: Job will not pretend that suffering is explainable or that his pain serves some purpose he can discern, instead giving voice to the experience of torment that theory cannot accommodate. This chapter establishes that authentic faith need not suppress or deny the reality of suffering, and that lament and complaint, far from being unfaithful, may be the most honest and faithful response to unjust suffering. Job's lament becomes normative within Scripture as a legitimate form of prayer and response to God, establishing that the life of faith encompasses not only praise and thanksgiving but also protest and the articulation of incomprehension.

Job 3:1

Job breaks the silence by cursing the day of his birth, initiating the movement from passive acceptance of suffering to active lament and interrogation of existence itself. His curse—directed not at God but at the day and night that witnessed his conception—begins the expression of anguished questioning that will dominate the dialogue. This lament emerges not from sin or rebellion but from the extremity of suffering that calls fundamental existence into question.

Job 3:2

Job's formal speech opening parallels the structure of wisdom literature and prophetic speech, transforming his grief into articulated complaint and theological interrogation. The fact that he speaks establishes his capacity for language and thought despite the degradation of his body, asserting that consciousness and rationality persist even in extremity. His lament becomes the vehicle through which the book will explore the unanswerable questions of innocent suffering.

Job 3:3

Job curses the day of his birth, calling for it to perish and for God to ignore it, expressing a wish to undo the fundamental fact of his existence. The curse targets not his parents' sin or his own failing but the day itself, as if existence itself is the problem to be remedied. This curse articulates the despair that suffering produces: the wish that one had never been born represents the ultimate negation of the goodness of creation and life.

Job 3:4

Job extends the curse to the night of conception, calling for darkness and shadow to reclaim it, suggesting a reversal of the creative word by which God separated light from darkness in Genesis. His demand that God not look upon it and that no light shine upon it represents a wish for cosmic un-creation, as if that moment could be removed from the record of being. The rhetorical intensity of the curse reveals the depth of existential despair that suffering has provoked.

Job 3:5

Job wishes for darkness and shadow to claim the night and for a cloud to settle upon the day, extending the curse into a cosmic wish for the obscuration of the time of his birth. The piling up of images of darkness and obscurity reveals the psychological reality of depression: the wish to extinguish the painful fact of existence through the erasure of its origin. The hyperbolic language of curse becomes the only adequate vehicle for expressing such comprehensive negation.

Job 3:6

Job curses the night that may have conceived him, wishing that it bring forth no fruitfulness but remain barren and empty of joy, extending the sterility curse from the day to the reproductive capacity of the night itself. The sexualized language of conception and barrenness reveals the deep entanglement of existence with bodily reproduction and the mystery of how life emerges from the union of opposites. His curse wishes to reverse the generative power of creation itself.

Job 3:7

Job wishes for the night to be solitary and empty of the joyful shout that marks the announcement of a child's birth, reversing the blessing implicit in the cry of newborns and the celebration of fertility. The absence of the joy cry represents the negation of maternal blessing and social recognition, reducing the night to a wasteland of diminished meaning. This reversal of fertility blessings reveals the inversion of all positive meaning that suffering produces.

Job 3:8

Job calls upon those who curse days and are skilled in rousing the sea-serpent (Leviathan) to curse the day of his birth, invoking the aid of cosmic powers and sorcerous practitioners. The reference to Leviathan—the primordial chaos monster—suggests an appeal to the destructive powers of chaos itself to undo the ordered creation that brought him forth. This invocation of mythic rebellion reveals the extremity of his desire to negate existence.

Job 3:9

Job wishes that the stars of the dawn remain dark and that the day wait in vain for light, extending the curse into a cosmic disturbance that would interrupt the normal progression of day and night. The darkening of the stars and the withholding of light represent a comprehensive reversal of creation's foundational work. His curse imagines a universe in permanent darkness, unable to complete its diurnal cycles.

Job 3:10

Job curses the day because it did not shut the doors of the womb, preventing his birth and sparing him the knowledge of trouble. The image of closed womb-doors reveals the wish for maternal protection that would have kept him from entering a world of suffering. This regret at birth inverts the normal blessing of fertility and maternal love, treating the womb as a haven tragically left behind rather than a source of life to be celebrated.

Job 3:11

Job questions why he did not die at birth or expire as he came from the womb, articulating a wish that his life had terminated before suffering could touch him. The rhetorical question format reveals not accusation but puzzlement: if death was possible, why was it not merciful? This question expresses the fundamental despair that suffering produces: the wish that mercy had spared him consciousness and sensation.

Job 3:12

Job questions why the knees received him and the breasts nursed him, asking why the elemental acts of maternal care occurred rather than an alternative outcome of death. The intimate imagery of maternal embrace and nursing reveals that even the deepest human bonds of love and care are now experienced as tragic, because they preserved him for later suffering. Maternal love, which is typically celebrated as sacred, becomes in the context of suffering a vehicle for perpetuating pain.

Job 3:13

Job reflects that if he had died, he would now be at rest and asleep, aligned with kings and counselors and those of high status who also find peace in death. The leveling power of death, which makes all humans equal, becomes attractive as a refuge from the hierarchies of the living world. Death is reimagined not as punishment or loss but as peace, the great equalizer that releases all beings from the burden of existence.

Job 3:14

Job imagines the peace of those who rebuild ruins and gather gold, suggesting that the relief death provides transcends all human distinctions of labor, wealth, and accomplishment. The ruins and gold represent the human projects of construction and accumulation that occupy the living, all of which are rendered meaningless by the universal fact of death. This vision of death-peace negates all earthly striving as ultimately futile.

Job 3:15

Job reflects that in death or in the womb, he would not have seen the light and would have been like infants who never saw daylight, imagining a state of peaceful non-consciousness prior to the emergence into suffering. The contrast between the womb and the world of light and consciousness reveals the existential despair that suffering produces: consciousness itself becomes a burden to be avoided. Life and light, the basic goods of creation, are reimagined as sources of pain.

Job 3:16

Job laments that he was not hidden in the ground like a stillborn child, comparing his fate unfavorably to the infants who die unborn or shortly after birth and escape the burden of conscious existence. The image of the hidden grave represents a merciful obscurity granted to those spared the full weight of life's suffering. His comparison reveals the tragic paradox that non-existence appears preferable to existence burdened with pain.

Job 3:17

Job reflects that in Sheol (the underworld), the wicked and the weary find rest, imagining an afterlife or death-state where labor ceases and the conflict between justice and suffering resolves through the universal peace of the grave. The reference to the wicked and the weary together suggests that death is the great democratic equalizer, transcending the moral distinctions that trouble the living. This vision of underworld peace becomes more attractive than earthly suffering.

Job 3:18

Job imagines that in Sheol, the prisoners hear no sound of the overseer and that both servant and master are equal and free from bondage and oppression. The vision of freedom from hierarchical oppression reveals that death offers not merely cessation of pain but liberation from the structures of domination and servitude. The erasure of social distinction becomes desirable when life itself has become unbearable.

Job 3:19

Job reflects that in death, the small and the great are alike, all finding the equality that the living world denies them through the universal fact of mortality. The leveling of all humans before death becomes in the context of suffering a source of consolation, suggesting that the extremities and inequalities of life are temporary while the peace of the grave is universal. This egalitarian vision of death inverts the normal hierarchy that privileges the living.

Job 3:20

Job questions why light is given to a man whose way is hidden and whom God has hedged in with darkness, articulating the apparent cruelty of keeping alive someone whose path is obscured and whose existence is circumscribed by suffering. The image of God hedging in Job with darkness inverts the typical image of divine protection, suggesting that God's activity has become a source of imprisonment rather than care. This questioning implies that God's preservation of life in the face of such suffering is incomprehensible.

Job 3:21

Job laments those who long for death but it does not come, who search for the grave more than for hidden treasure, articulating the desperation of those whose suffering has become so unbearable that death becomes the supreme good to be pursued. The image of death as a treasure more desirable than any earthly wealth reveals the inversion of values that extreme suffering produces. The longing for death articulates a rejection of existence itself as incompatible with human dignity.

Job 3:22

Job questions why life is given to those who find no joy in it, whose life becomes like one long journey through darkness, suggesting that the preservation of consciousness in the face of unbearable suffering is itself a mystery and perhaps a cruelty. The image of endless journey through darkness represents the sense that life has become purposeless wandering, devoid of destination or meaning. This question challenges the assumption that life is inherently good and worth preserving.

Job 3:23

Job again questions why he has not been granted death, why his path is hedged in when he desires to go to the grave rather than continue in suffering. The repeated refrain of questions emphasizes that the suffering is not merely passive acceptance but active interrogation of the apparent divine decision to keep him alive and conscious. The persistence of the questions reveals that no answer comes, only the brute fact of continued existence.

Job 3:24

Job describes his sighing as his bread and his groaning poured out like water, indicating that his suffering has become his constant sustenance and companion, replacing normal nourishment with expressions of pain. The poetic transformation of suffering into a kind of nutrition reveals the way that prolonged anguish can become the basic reality of existence, replacing all other experiences and meaning. His body has become a vehicle for the expression of suffering rather than for the enjoyment of life.

Job 3:25

Job reflects that what he feared has come upon him and what he dreaded has overtaken him, suggesting either that he had feared this suffering or that his very being seems somehow to generate catastrophe. The internalization of suffering as the fulfillment of anticipated dread reveals the existential quality of his affliction: it is not merely external but has become the deep reality of his nature. This reflection invites the question of whether his suffering is somehow connected to his own deeper nature or fears.

Job 3:26

Job concludes his lament by declaring that he has no peace, no quiet, and no rest, only trouble coming to him—a final affirmation of his total immersion in suffering and despair. The absence of peace mirrors the lack of peace that Leviathan itself knows according to biblical tradition, suggesting that Job has become identified with the cosmic forces of chaos. The lament concludes without resolution or comfort, leaving Job suspended in his despair.