If iniquity be in your hand, put it far away, and let not wickedness dwell in your tents.
Read Chapter 11
Didymus the Blind
AD 398
Zophar introduces himself as teacher and exhorts Job with the words, “Even if you are very clean, so clean that you stretch your hands continuously in prayer and ask for God’s gifts, be still prepared to reject the evil that remains within you. Iniquity shall not reside in you.” That means, “Even if you somehow start to do unrighteousness, iniquity shall not stay to nest in your life.” Here Zophar means the following: Moral virtue must correspond to the purity of soul [and reason]. Similar to this is, “Lifting up holy hands without anger or argument.” But Zophar is wrong if he deems it possible to have a pure heart and unjust deeds [at the same time]. The opposite, one could say, would be possible, namely, to have righteous deeds and an impure heart. One would thereby indicate that if someone acts mercifully with an impure heart only to be seen by the people, the deed looks the same. - "Commentary on Job 11.13–14"
26. Every sin is either committed in thought alone, or it is done in thought and deed together. Therefore ‘iniquity in the hand’ is offence in deed; but ‘wickedness in the tabernacle,’ is iniquity in the heart; for our heart is not unfitly called a tabernacle, wherein we are buried within ourselves, when we do not shew ourselves outwardly in act. Zophar therefore, in that he was the friend of a righteous person, knows what he should say, but in that he reproached a righteous person, bearing the likeness of heretics, he does not know how rightly to deliver even the things which he knows. But let us, treading under our feet all that is delivered by him in pride of spirit, reflect how true his words are, if they had but been spoken in a right manner. For first he bids that ‘iniquity’ be removed from the ‘hand,’ and afterwards that ‘wickedness’ be cut off from the ‘tabernacle;’ for whosoever has already cut away from himself all wicked deeds without, must of necessity in returning to ...
Here times are changed, and the meaning is, “If you want to obey me, open your arms in prayer to God with a pure heart, and you will never commit iniquity or transgression, and those things which Zophar mentions later will happen to you.” And here it seems that Zophar is giving advice to Job, save that he himself strikes him by saying that Job is punished for his sins. - "Commentary on Job 11.13–14"