In this part, Job speaks of human misery and hardship in human existence. Job mentions the brevity of life (the focus later, in
chapter 14) and the lack of hope (verse 6) before addressing God directly (verse 7) calling God to act toward him ("remember") according to God's prior commitments to "the afflicted" (cf. Genesis 8:1; Exodus 2:24). In rejecting Eliphaz's optimistic view that hope remains for him (cf. Job 6:20), Job utilizes a pun on the Hebrew words for "hope" and "thread" (
tiqwah) as he thinks of himself as fragile and precarious as the useless 'small ends of the thread that are snapped off a loom after the weaving is completed' (cf. Joshua 2:18. 21).
Verse 7 :[Job said:]
"Remember that my life is a breath; ::
my eye will never again see good." • "Remember": This is apparently directed to God, as is clear from verse 11 on, because God is the one who breathed breath into man's nostrils (Genesis 2:7), so God is called to remember that man's life (, , also "age", "alive", "living") is but a breath (, ; also "spirit", "wind"). ==The short-lived nature of human life (7:9–16)==