Within the structure, chapter 21 is grouped into the Dialogue section with the following outline:[10]
Job's Self-Curse and Self-Lament (3:1–26)
Round One (4:1–14:22)
Round Two (15:1–21:34)
Eliphaz (15:1–35)
Job (16:1–17:16)
Bildad (18:1–21)
Job (19:1–29)
Zophar (20:1–29)
Job (21:1–34)
Change Your Attitude to Me (21:1–6)
The Prospering of the Wicked (21:7–16)
Why Are the Wicked Not Punished? (21:17–26)
The Failure of the Friends (21:27–34)
Round Three (22:1–27:23)
Interlude – A Poem on Wisdom (28:1–28)
Job's Summing Up (29:1–31:40)
The Dialogue section is composed and formatted as poetry with distinctive syntax and grammar.[5]
Chapter 21 contains Job's last speech in the second cycle of debates with his friends, notably the only speech in which "Job confines his remarks to his friends".[11] The chapter can be divided into the following parts:[12]
Job's plea to the friends to change their attitude (verses 1–6)
Job questions why the wicked prosper (verses 7–16)
Job asks how often the wicked are punished (verses 17–26)
Job remarks on the failure of the friends' rebuttals (verses 27–34)[13]
Job's plea to the friends to change their attitude (21:1–6)
Job opens his speech with a plea for his friends to actually listen (instead of "mock") his words because if they were doing that, it would bring real comfort to him (verses 2–3).[12] Job's issue is that the friends are interfering with his complaint with God with their inaccurate presumption or silence toward his defense (verses 4–5).[14] The task of laying a complaint before an almighty God is dangerous. Hence, Job approaches this with trembling (verse 6).[14]
Verse 4
[Job said:] "As for me, is my complaint against man?
And if it were, why should I not be impatient?"[15]
"Why should I not be impatient": literally in Hebrew: "Why should my spirit/breath not be short" (cf. Numbers 21:4; Judges 16:16).[16] Job knows that his complaint is with God, not with any human beings, therefore he hopes that his friends would be his allies, but they instead add to Job's trauma by accusing him.[17]
Job explores why the wicked are not always punished as the friends insisted (21:7–26)
This section has two main parts in which Job explores the apparent anomalies of what the friends stated about the fate of the wicked:[18]
Why the wicked can prosper despite their attitude toward God (verses 7–16)
How often the wicked are punished (verses 17–26)
Job is suspicious of any attempt to trim the facts to fit into a 'tidy theological system', and he confronts the friends to match their neat imaginary world with the reality.[12]
Verse 7 contains the statement of the general problem for the first topic: "why the wicked not only exist but also live a long life ("advance to old age") and grow mighty in power and wealth".[14] The second topic is framed by the 'reality of death' (verses 17–18 and verses 25–26) as Job asks "how often do the wicked die prematurely" in a series of rhetorical questions with the expected answer: "hardly ever".[19] The implication of both topics is the arbitrariness (lack of connection) between 'a person's righteousness and the fullness of that person's life', thus the divine retribution is not actually reflected in the world.[20]
Verse 16
[Job said:] "Lo, their good is not in their hand: the counsel of the wicked is far from me."[21]
"Is not in their hand": implying that one's well-being is from God, although the wicked may enjoy prosperity as if it is their right.[22]
"The counsel of the wicked is far from me" or "far be from me their counsel';[23] an echo of Psalm 1:1 to prove that Job is not in the company of the wicked.[24]
Job remarks on the failure of the friends' rebuttals (21:27–34)
After challenging the friends' thinking process, Job criticizes them for being blind and deaf to reality because of their rigid theological systems.(verses 29–33).[20] Job closes the second round of debate by pointing out the insubstantiality of his friends' comfort until now ('mere hot air') and the faithlessness or treachery of what is left standing in their speeches (verse 34).[25]
Verse 29
[Job said:] "Have you not asked them who travel the road?
"Know their signs" refers to the custom of ancient merchants and travelers to write their names and thoughts (what they have seen and heard) somewhere at the main cross-roads; for example, the main roads of Sinai are 'dotted with these scribblings made by such passers of a day.'[27]
The Greek Septuagint version renders the verse as: “Ask those who go by the way, and do not disown their signs.”[28]
Estes, Daniel J. (2013). Walton, John H.; Strauss, Mark L. (eds.). Job. Teach the Text Commentary Series. United States: Baker Publishing Group. ISBN9781441242778.