Who Was Elihu in the Book of Job? The Forgotten Voice Before the Whirlwind

Brent Pollard

Imagine the scene: three friends have argued themselves hoarse. Job has wrung every drop of grief from his heart. The conversation settles into that uneasy silence when men have said too much and helped too little. Then, without preamble, a young man steps forward to speak. His name is Elihu. Until Job 32, no one in the book has even breathed his name.

An Unexpected Fourth Voice in Job

Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar are introduced when they arrange to visit Job (Job 2.11). They arrive, mourn, and argue together. Elihu, by contrast, appears with no warning. He seems to have been present, listening and growing more agitated with each speech. The text never signals his presence; he is simply there.

Why Some Scholars Doubt Elihu’s Place

Within academia, Elihu’s abrupt appearance has prompted many to dismiss him as an interpolation—a later editorial addition to the text. Their reasoning is straightforward: since he wasn’t mentioned at the beginning and the narrative flows without him, they argue he does not belong.

Yet, tidy is not the same as true. Before handing Elihu over to scholars ready to cut him from the Bible, consider three crucial arguments for his place in the narrative.

Elihu’s Genealogy: A Family Tied to Abraham

The author of Job states who Elihu is: “Elihu the son of Barachel the Buzite, of the family of Ram” (Job 32.2). This is presented as verifiable information, not fiction.

The name Buz is not random. When Abraham received word about his brother Nahor’s family, he learned that Nahor had eight sons by his wife, Milcah. The second of those sons was Buz (Genesis 22.21). Elihu the Buzite is thus a descendant of Abraham’s nephew. He is, in the broadest sense, a member of the patriarchal family.

A storyteller inventing a character would not connect him to a well-known family line. The genealogy suggests factual detail rather than fiction.

The Land of Uz and Why Elihu Lived Nearby

Nahor’s firstborn son was named Uz (Genesis 22.21). Job lived in the land of Uz (Job 1.1). The connection is not accidental. As firstborn, Uz would have inherited his father’s holdings. Nahor held enough standing that an entire city bore his name (Genesis 24.10). It’s no surprise if his eldest son had similar honor.

This explains what might seem puzzling. Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar had to travel to reach Job. They came from elsewhere. Elihu, as a Buzite, likely lived in the area where the events unfolded and may have been distantly related to Job. He was a local. That is why he is introduced without explanation—he was already there.

Inspiration Settles the Question

Suppose Elihu’s chapters were added later. Even so, we cannot dismiss his words. The men who wrote the Old Testament were not speaking on their own; they were guided by the Holy Spirit (2 Peter 1.20-21). Whatever they wrote, they did so under God’s guidance (2 Timothy 3.16).

The Bible is not a collection of human opinions. It is the inspired, inerrant word of God. No editor inserted Elihu into the canon by mistake. If Elihu’s six chapters are in the Bible, it is by divine intention.

The Bridge to the Whirlwind

What is Elihu doing there at all? Read the book without him, and you will feel the absence of a voice that bridges the arguments of Job’s friends and God’s response. Read the book with him, and you see how Elihu uniquely prepares both Job and the reader for the encounter with God. He stands as a distinctive mediator, introducing themes and tensions that the others miss.

Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar exhausted themselves accusing Job of secret sin. Their theology was a calculator: suffering equals punishment, righteousness equals reward, no exceptions allowed. They were wrong, and God Himself rebukes them at the book’s close (Job 42.7).

Elihu is different. Unlike the others, his role is to respond not with accusations about Job’s character or secret sins, but by addressing the words Job has spoken in anguish. Those words have grown sharp and have begun to question the goodness and justice of God. Elihu’s complaint is not about Job’s life. It is about Job’s mouth.

And in that complaint, Elihu is not entirely wrong. Job had begun to speak presumptuously. He began demanding an audience with God, as if he could match Him in a courtroom. Elihu sees this clearly and says it plainly. A man may be righteous and still grow arrogant in the face of suffering. A man may suffer unjustly and still answer his God unwisely.

What Elihu’s Words Reveal About God

Notice what Elihu does next. After correcting Job’s tongue, he turns to talk about God. He mentions God’s majesty, wisdom, and control over cloud, lightning, and rain (Job 36.26–37.13). He describes the storm on the horizon: “Around God is awesome majesty” (Job 37.22). As Elihu finishes, the storm breaks. “Then the LORD answered Job out of the whirlwind and said…” (Job 38.1).

What a transition. Elihu’s role is not to steal God’s thunder but to announce it. He is the herald who speaks before the King appears. While the friends pointed Job inward, asking him to examine sins he never committed, Elihu points upward, lifting Job’s eyes from the ash heap to the heavens as the heavens open.

A Forgotten Voice Worth Hearing

We are quick to skip Elihu. Six chapters from a man who appears suddenly and is never mentioned again—it is tempting to skip ahead to the theophany. But if we do, we miss a crucial bridge in Scripture. Elihu reminds us that even faithful sufferers can speak rashly. God’s silences are not indifferent. The storm we fear may bring the Lord near. When you come to Job 32, do not rush past the young Buzite. Listen. The whirlwind is closer than you think.


Books by the Pollards

A Tiny Spark Snail Mail Club (Kathy Pollard)

IRONY IN JOB

Dale Pollard

In Job you find all kinds of interesting things like references to the earth’s rotation (Job 38.14), ocean floor vents (38.16), and even the movement of star clusters like the Pleiades (38.31).

But, there are a couple of powerful verses that also include a heavy dose of irony.

“Oh, that my words were recorded, that they were written on a scroll, that they were inscribed with an iron tool on lead, or engraved in rock forever!”

Job 19.23-24

A moment in the middle of Job’s pain and agony he seems to cry out those words, but they’re buried under many other laments and arguments concerning his terrible situation. The reader, though, already knows all of this because later in life Job wrote down his pain, questions, and his defense– on a scroll and engraved them forever. Just like he wanted!

Well, he desired to be remembered accurately. Job isn’t just venting. He wants future readers to know that his suffering was real and that his struggle with God came from a good place of honesty, not rebellion. An eternal scroll was proof that his story mattered to God, but also a reminder that God could in fact hear every word at a time when he felt like God couldn’t.

At the same time, this moment shows Job’s faith wrestling out in the open for all of us to benefit from. He believed that truth ultimately matters, even if it is not recognized right away. Ironically, Job’s wish is fulfilled. His words are preserved and read thousands of years later. What felt like a desperate plea is turned into his story of suffering before God that wasn’t wasted. God hears it all and answers every cry of confusion, and He can turn it into a lasting story of faith.

Will You Serve God For Nothing?

Saturday’s Column: Learning From Lehman

Dave Eubank

Recently at the suggestion of some teachers and podcasts I listen to, I took some time and in one setting read through whole books in the Bible. If you haven’t done this I would highly recommend it. Just read through the book not looking for anything or zeroing in on any specific point; just read through the book and let it teach you its main themes and allow it to speak for itself. One of the books I recently read through and want to briefly discuss is the book of JOB. We are very familiar with this book and story and can learn a lot of things from it including sufferings, patience, steadfastness, God’s perspectives, and others. However, I would like to share with you what really stood out and stayed with me as I read through the 42 chapters of this book. Job 1:8-9 says,

Then the Lord said to Satan “Have you considered My servant Job, that there is none like him on the earth, a blameless and upright man, one who fears God and shuns evil?” So, Satan answered the LORD and said, Does Job fear God for nothing?

Right there is the true question: “Will you fear and serve God for nothing.” It is not only a question that Satan asks the Lord referring to Job, but it is also for us today. Satan was assuming that Job would have a transactional relationship with God, that as long as he was doing what was righteous that Job would assume that he has earned his blessings or somehow God is obligated to bless him. Do we fall into this mindset that Satan is stating her is verse 9? Is it easy to fear and serve God while things are going good in our life or for fear of punishment? Do we have this transactional relationship that says I have done all these righteous X’s so I deserve these Y’s (blessings)? Would we serve God if everything (wealth, family, health) in an extremely short period of time was taken from us and we were in the situation Job found himself in? Satan is saying that taking comforts of this life away will push even the strongest to curse God to his face. Satan states this in Ch 1:11 and notice that as early as 2:9 Job’s wife actually uses the same language when she tells Job, “Do you still hold fast to your integrity? Curse God and die!”

Sometimes bad things happen because we make bad decisions and we must deal with those consequences. However, Job shows us that sometimes bad things happen outside of our decisions and we do not know all like our Creator GOD. God lays this out in his answer to Job out of the whirlwind in Chapters 38-42 basically stating that, “I created everything and have it all under My control, I AM GOD, even when you don’t realize it and so you must trust Me no matter what circumstances you find yourself in.” In chapter 42 we read exactly what Job did in response to God’s challenge to Job. Now as he repents and fears God he is in dust and ashes. This is the definition of serving God for nothing. Every worldly comfort had been taken from him and he had nothing, not even physical health, and nothing as of yet had been restored to him. But he through great tribulation feared God for nothing except he is God the creator and sustainer of everything.

We do need to serve God just because he is God and the creator of all things but the good news is we don’t serve him for nothing. Read Job 19:25: For I know that my Redeemer lives, and he shall stand at last on the earth; Just as we read Job and see his longing for a mediator between him and God, we now have that through Jesus. God gives us eternal life that can be found in Christ our mediator, not because we deserve it like a transactional agreement but because He is a benevolent, gracious and loving God.