Job 19:16
I called my seruant, and he gaue me no answere: I intreated him with my mouth. Job 19:16 (KJV)
The verse sits within the larger narrative of Job, a man described at the outset as righteous and blameless. God permits Satan to test Job by stripping him of wealth, health, and children, and the book records Job’s intense dialogues with his friends, who repeatedly suggest that his suffering must be the result of hidden sin. Throughout these exchanges Job maintains his innocence and repeatedly questions divine justice.
In Job 19:16 the suffering patriarch expresses a specific, painful frustration. He calls his servant, expecting a response, yet receives none. Even his verbal pleading—”I intreated him with my mouth”—goes unanswered. This moment captures the depth of Job’s isolation, not only from God but also from those closest to him. The lack of reply underscores a broader sense of abandonment that pervades his lament.
Some scholars interpret the servant symbolically, seeing the figure as a stand‑in for Job’s friends or other human companions. In that view the silent servant represents the disappointment and silence of those who should offer comfort but instead leave Job to wrestle with his anguish alone.
The passage highlights several enduring themes. It confronts the reality of suffering that appears undeserved, challenges assumptions about the cause‑and‑effect relationship between sin and pain, and reveals the profound loneliness that can accompany trial. Moreover, it calls readers to a compassionate response: to recognize when others are crying out for help and to answer, rather than remain indifferent.
Ultimately, Job 19:16 invites believers to reflect on how they support those in distress, to question simplistic explanations for suffering, and to trust that God’s purposes, though hidden, are not indifferent to human pain.

