What is the meaning of Job 10:14? If I sinned - Job speaks hypothetically, not admitting fresh rebellion but acknowledging the universal reality that “all have sinned” (Romans 3:23). - This mirrors David’s cry in Psalm 51:3, “For I know my transgressions.” - Job’s wording shows he understands sin is personal and accountable, never an abstract idea. You would take note - Job affirms God’s absolute awareness: “You know when I sit and when I rise” (Psalm 139:2). - Nothing escapes the Lord’s attention (Proverbs 15:3). - The implication: God is neither indifferent nor forgetful; even a single offense is logged in His perfect record (Malachi 3:16). and would not acquit me - Job recognizes that God’s justice cannot overlook wrongdoing (Nahum 1:3, “the LORD will by no means leave the guilty unpunished”). - He grasps that divine acquittal demands either full payment or a substitute sacrifice (foreshadowing Isaiah 53:5). - This foreshadows New Testament clarity: “without the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness” (Hebrews 9:22). of my iniquity - “Iniquity” points to twisted, willful departures from God’s ways, not merely accidental missteps (Psalm 38:18). - Job feels the weight of moral debt that separates humans from a holy God (Isaiah 59:2). - The verse highlights the dilemma humanity faces: a righteous Judge and a guilty defendant. summary Job 10:14 underscores God’s keen surveillance of sin, the inevitability of His just verdict, and the serious nature of iniquity. Job’s lament exposes the need for a Mediator who can satisfy divine justice—anticipating the full atonement later revealed in Christ. |