25:1Meaning
The next speaker is identified Bildad is named as the one who speaks next, and he is described as “the Shuhite,” marking his social background.
Preparing Context
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Book
World Stage
Structure
Historical Setting
Job 25:1
The chapter opens by marking Bildad as the speaker, setting a brief reply that follows Job’s preceding speech.
Meaning in context
The chapter opens by marking Bildad as the speaker, setting a brief reply that follows Job’s preceding speech.
Section 1 of 5
Bildad takes up the response
The chapter opens by marking Bildad as the speaker, setting a brief reply that follows Job’s preceding speech.
Movement
Suffering before the living God
Artifact
Wisdom debate and divine answer
Biblical Timeline
Patriarchs
Job context: 2000 BC - 1500 BC
Biblical Timeline
Patriarchs
Job context
Patriarchs / 2000 BC - 1500 BC
Job context is set in the patriarchs, where Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and the covenant family.
Scripture Text
Thesis
The chapter opens by marking Bildad as the speaker, setting a brief reply that follows Job’s preceding speech.
Verse by Verse
The next speaker is identified Bildad is named as the one who speaks next, and he is described as “the Shuhite,” marking his social background.
The speech is framed as a reply The verb “answered” signals that Bildad is responding within an ongoing exchange, linking his coming words to what Job has just said.
Transition without content No reasons or claims are stated yet; the verse functions mainly as a transition into Bildad’s next speech (see Job 25:2 for where the substance begins).
Literary Context
Job is structured as an extended series of speeches in which Job and his friends respond to one another in turns. This line functions like a scene cue, introducing the next speaker and implying continuity with what came before. It follows Job’s preceding remarks (immediately before this chapter) and prepares the reader for Bildad’s final contribution in the cycles of debate. Similar speaker-introductions appear throughout the book, keeping the argument’s flow clear while the content is delivered in poetic speeches (compare Job 2:11 for the friends’ initial arrival and identification).
Historical Context
The setting assumed by Job resembles an early, clan-based world where respected men debate suffering and integrity through formal, public speech. Individuals are identified by personal name and group affiliation, here “the Shuhite,” suggesting a recognized social origin rather than a government office. Such labels fit a wider ancient Near Eastern environment of tribal and semi-tribal communities, where elders and companions could contest ideas about life’s order and misfortune through wisdom-style argument. The verse itself offers no dates, rulers, or cities, only the social cue of who is now speaking.
Theological Significance
Questions
Keep Studying
Job 25:1 is a narrative handoff in the debate. It identifies Bildad as the next speaker and labels him “the Shuhite.” The line also frames what follows as an “answer,” meaning Bildad’s words come as part of a continuing back-and-forth, not as an isolated speech (compare the way speakers are introduced elsewhere in Job).
This verse itself does not state Bildad’s argument, whether he is right, or how strong his response will be. It mainly keeps the reader oriented as the dialogue moves from Job’s prior speech to Bildad’s next one.
Two details can be taken in more than one way:
“Answered”: Some read it as implying a direct rebuttal to Job’s last claims; others see it as a conventional way to mark the next turn in a formal discussion, without promising a point-by-point response.
“Shuhite”: Some take it mainly as a geographic label; others as a family/tribal affiliation. Either way, it functions to identify Bildad’s social origin.
Why the disagreement exists The verse is very short and uses stock speech-introduction language. Because it offers no content of the reply, interpreters differ on how much to infer from “answered.” Also, “Shuhite” is a group label without explanation in this verse, so readers supply context from broader ancient naming practices.
What this passage clearly contributes It marks a new turn in the conversation: Bildad speaks next, and his speech is presented as a response within the dialogue. The book’s structure depends on these introductions to track who is speaking and to maintain the rhythm of claim and counterclaim as the debate approaches its end (the substance begins in Job 25:2).
answered (way·ya·‘an)