Job 25

Job 25
Bildad
Bildad speaks again. It is the last time the three friends are heard, and his remarks are few. He seems to have felt the uselessness of saving anything more about Job's character; in fact about everything bad that the three could have thought to accuse the poor man of, had been said already.
Job had asked the same question (chapter 9:2), and gone into it very fully, but he could not give the answer. The three friends had entirely failed to meet the needs of poor tried and deeply suffering Job. They had only tried to fasten wickedness on him, of which he had not been guilty, because they had decided that his having been brought into such sore distress must have been the judgment of God on him. It was not what they thought at all. He was nearer to God than they who judged him.