What is the meaning of Job 20:14? Setting the Scene Zophar is answering Job for the second time (Job 20:1-3). He insists that God swiftly repays the wicked, even if they seem prosperous for a moment (Job 20:4-11). This backdrop helps us hear verse 14 as part of a larger warning: whatever a wicked person “eats”—whatever gains he swallows—will not stay pleasant for long. Cross references echo the same conviction: Psalm 73:18-20 pictures the wicked “swept away by terrors,” and Proverbs 10:2 says, “Ill-gotten treasures profit nothing.” The Initial Bite: Taking In the Delicacy • The wicked “swallow” wealth, pleasure, and power as though it were a feast (Job 20:12-13). • Proverbs 20:17 notes the same pattern: “Food gained by deceit is sweet to a man, but afterward his mouth is filled with gravel.” • Hebrews 11:25 reminds us of the “fleeting pleasures of sin.” Sin often starts with an attractive taste. The person thinks, “I can handle this,” unaware that poison is already on the fork. The Sudden Sour: When Pleasure Turns Toxic “Yet in his stomach his food sours” (Job 20:14). • Numbers 11:33 shows meat still “between their teeth” when judgment struck Israel. • Psalm 106:14-15 says God “sent a wasting disease among them” when they craved intensely. • Revelation 10:9-10 pictures a scroll “sweet as honey” in John’s mouth, but “sour” in his stomach—an illustration that God’s message of judgment can be both delightful and distressing. What begins as sweetness quickly turns rancid. Sin promises satisfaction; reality delivers nausea. The Venom Inside: Deadly Consequences “…into the venom of cobras within him” (Job 20:14). • Deuteronomy 32:33 warns, “Their wine is the venom of serpents.” • Psalm 140:3 and Romans 3:13 describe evil speech as “poison of serpents.” • Isaiah 59:5-6 likens wicked schemes to hatching viper eggs that kill whoever eats them. Zophar heightens the image: the sour mass isn’t merely unpleasant—it becomes lethal. Cobra venom is swift, paralyzing, and impossible to neutralize once injected. Likewise, unrepented sin moves from inner discomfort to spiritual death (James 1:14-15). Timeless Truths for Today • Sin’s payoff is always temporary pleasure followed by lasting judgment (Galatians 6:7-8). • Wealth or success obtained unrighteously will eventually become self-destructive (Proverbs 13:11; 1 Timothy 6:9-10). • God’s justice may appear delayed, but it is certain and thorough (Ecclesiastes 8:11-13; 2 Peter 3:9-10). • True satisfaction comes only from what God provides in righteousness (Psalm 34:8; John 4:13-14). summary Job 20:14 warns that whatever a wicked person greedily consumes will rot inside him and become deadly like cobra venom. The verse exposes sin’s deceptive sweetness, the inevitable souring of illicit gain, and the lethal consequences that follow. God ensures that unrighteous pleasure turns into judgment, underscoring the need to seek satisfaction in Him alone. |