Job 15:31
Let not him that is deceiued, trust in vanitie: for vanitie shalbe his recompence. Job 15:31 (KJV)
The warning against trusting in vanity is stark and uncompromising. The passage declares that those who are deceived by empty pursuits will receive vanity as their recompense. In other words, the very thing they trust in becomes the measure of their loss. This principle is reinforced by the contrasting image of a diligent farmer. “He that tilleth his land shall have plenty of bread,” the writer observes, showing that honest labor produces abundance. By contrast, “he that followeth vanity shall have poverty enough,” indicating that a life oriented toward fleeting, meaningless goals inevitably ends in lack.
Both statements together form a clear moral lesson: the outcomes of our choices are directly linked to the nature of those choices. When one invests effort in productive, tangible work—tilling the soil, cultivating crops—there is a promise of sustenance and plenty. When one pursues vanity, the pursuit itself is empty, and the result is poverty. The text therefore urges believers to examine where they place their trust. If the trust is placed in deceptive, superficial allurements, the inevitable recompense is the very emptiness they sought. Conversely, a commitment to diligent, honest effort yields the opposite result: provision and satisfaction.
The study calls for a reflective response: to turn away from vanity, to avoid being deceived, and to embrace the disciplined work that leads to true and lasting bounty. By aligning one’s actions with the principle of reaping what is sown, the believer safeguards against the poverty that vanity inevitably brings.
