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“Elihu also proceeded” (36:1). Barnes suggests that each of the friends has had three speeches, with the exception of Zophar who failed to speak up the last time, and now, according to Hebrew commentators this remark indicates that this is added, i.e. Elihu is proceeding into a forth speech (Barnes, notes to 36:1). “Suffer me a little” (36:2). Elihu appears to be struggling to hold his audience. Elihu does add to the narrative, but at this moment he has put off all four of his elders, none of which cares to dignify him with a reply.
“He that is perfect in knowledge is with thee” (36:4). Elihu promotes himself as a great teacher: “I have yet to speak on God's behalf. I will fetch my knowledge from afar, and will ascribe righteousness to my Maker” (36:2-3). As for whether, “He that is perfect in knowledge” indicates that Elihu believes God to be present, or whether Elihu believes himself to be perfect in knowledge, the context leaves it open to debate. But the fact that he immediately describes the ways in which he will summon knowledge and form eloquent praise would indicate that he believes himself to be the great teacher.
In actuality, both views seem remarkable. Elihu declares his words to be true and makes this statement, forming one sentence, (I don't know if this applies to the original Hebrew). The obvious assumption is that Elihu is saying his words are true because he is perfect in knowledge. If this is the case, this statement stands out as incredibly arrogant, if not blasphemous.
By the end of this chapter, the presence of God is descending in power, so it is possible that Elihu is genuinely sensing the Spirit. If this statement is Elihu's announcement that the Holy Ghost is present, it is the first time that anyone has acknowledged the immediate presence of God. Up to this point, God has been addressed in third person for the most part. When Job reaches desperation he has shouted to the Lord, as one shouts to the clouds above, fully admitting that he is not getting an answer.
Unfortunately, Elihu begins to trot out the same tired theology that all three men are well versed in, and which is not solving the questions of the hour. If he were genuinely sensing the spirit, I would imagine that he would make way. So, unfortunately we should conclude that Elihu believes himself to be the one perfect in knowledge.
Elihu's theology is predictable: those who obey God “shall spend their days in prosperity, and their years in pleasures” (36:11), and those who do not “shall perish by the sword, and they shall die without knowledge” (36:12). Both Elihu and Job have flashes of insight into deeper understandings of God and His workings. Essentially they both agree, those who do right are blessed and those who do wrong are torn asunder.
For Job, his present circumstances would seem to put him in the camp of the unrighteous. He is devastated in the physical, so his righteousness is called into question as well. Job is simply unable to explain his great affliction. His theology works against him, and yet he holds to it (21:17-20). He cries out, but God isn't answering (19:7).
Elihu and the three friends reach for the obvious answer: “thou hast fulfilled the judgment of the wicked” (36:17). They don't know what the sin is, but there must be one. Elihu goes on to warn Job, “beware lest he take thee away with his stroke: then a great ransom cannot deliver thee” (36:18).
The Spirit is moving again for Elihu. He softens his ‘what are you to God’ approach here: “Behold, God is mighty, and despiseth not any” (36:5), and “who teacheth like him?” (36:22). He warns Job, “Do not turn to evil; for you have preferred this to affliction” (36:21). Job is caught in an unseen balance. His choice is to harden himself against God, who appears for all intents and purposes to have abandoned him completely, or to turn to God in faith and believe that God's goodness is still there, even in his affliction. This is a very difficult choice. It is Job himself who clings the most firmly to the faith that God will not desert him in the final judgment (19:25-27). Elihu is still seeing things in black and white, lightning or gentle rain: “For by them judgeth he the people; he giveth meat in abundance” (36:31).
God will soon appear from out of a whirlwind. Elihu speaks of rain (36:27-28), the movements of the clouds, the thunder (36:29), and lightning (36:30). One almost feels the clouds gathering: “With clouds he covereth the light” (36:32), the thunder rumbling: “noise thereof”, and the cattle looking for shelter, (36:33). A powerful storm is approaching rapidly.
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