Chapter 32 introduces a new young person, Elihu, who is the most long winded person I have ever heard speak. He started speaking because he was angry at both Job and his three friends: Job because he was trying to justify himself instead of God; his friends because they had nothing else to refute to Job. He had not spoken before because he respected Job and his friends for being older - but now he could no longer hold himself back. Elihu used the entire Chapter 32 to introduce himself and say "I'm going to say something, because I'm full of words and my spirit compels me."
At the beginning of Chapter 33, Elihu is still trying to ask Job and his friends to pay attention to what he's about to say. Then he claimed to have listened to Job carefully, that Job declared himself "pure and without sin; clean and free from guilt". He told Job that Job is not right, for "God is greater than men". He insisted that God actually listened to Job or spoke to Job through a vision or dream even though he may not have perceived it. God could use suffering to turn a soul from the pit to the light (from sin to righteousness). Here, he describes a beautiful picture of redemption of men by a mediator (not sure if this is almost like foreshadowing what is to come with Christ, but it's like restoration of righteousness by confession/praying.)
Elihu ends the chapter by continuing to ask Job to listen to him and he will teach Job wisdom.
P.S. I really don't like Elihu--even though some of the things he said were right!!
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