What does Job 20:11 mean?
What is the meaning of Job 20:11?

The youthful vigor

Zophar is zeroing in on the peak of earthly strength.

Psalm 103:5 reminds us the LORD “renews your youth like the eagle,” showing how prized youthful energy is.

Proverbs 20:29 notes, “The glory of young men is their strength.”

Job 20:11 starts by acknowledging that vitality; yet Zophar’s tone tells us it is fleeting. He is talking about the wicked man’s prime—strong, confident, seemingly unstoppable—while hinting that this very asset is temporary.


That fills his bones

The words move from general vigor to the very “bones,” the deepest part of the body, where life and strength are thought to reside.

Job 21:24 describes the prosperous man whose “bones are well moistened,” highlighting full, healthy life.

Proverbs 3:8 promises that trust in the LORD “will bring health to your body and nourishment to your bones.”

Zophar uses the same imagery but flips it: even strength that feels built-in, structural, undeniable cannot outlast God’s judgment.


Will lie down

The picture shifts from robust activity to stillness. “Lie down” signals the end of exertion and the beginning of final rest—death.

Job 21:26: “Together they lie down in the dust, and worms cover them.”

Psalm 104:29: “You take away their breath; they die and return to the dust.”

The contrast is sharp: what once propelled the wicked man now reclines helplessly, unable to rise again.


With him

The vigor does not depart before him; it accompanies him to the grave. Everything he counted on falls when he falls.

Psalm 49:17 warns, “When he dies, he will carry nothing away.”

1 Timothy 6:7 echoes, “We brought nothing into the world, and we cannot take anything out of it.”

Zophar’s point: personal strength, wealth, achievement—all go down together. No separation, no rescue.


In the dust

“Dust” is the unmistakable marker of death and decay.

Genesis 3:19: “For dust you are, and to dust you shall return.”

Ecclesiastes 12:7: “The dust returns to the earth as it was.”

Daniel 12:2 speaks of “those who sleep in the dust of the earth.”

Zophar sees the wicked man’s story ending exactly where every human story ends—back to dust—yet without hope because he refused to repent.


summary

Job 20:11 drives home one truth: human vigor, even at its youthful peak and rooted deep in the bones, cannot outrun mortality or God’s justice. Strength, achievements, and self-reliance lie down with a man in the grave. Only righteousness granted by God endures beyond the dust.

In what ways does Job 20:10 challenge the prosperity gospel?
Top of Page
Top of Page