Well, I'm glad to see that you finally agree with me. Job's words without knowledge was precisely what I said earlier and you now agree with: Job was self-righteous in his own eyes, feeling totally unworthy of his troubles...AND because of this he wanted to confront God about the justice of it all! (Again, see Job 40:8). Job did bring into question God's justice.
However, 40:2 should be understood in its immediate context. Job explains what he means in the following verses. Job is not referring to God's plan for creation, rather Job is acknowledging that God had a plan for Job that included his afflictions. And Job admits that he spoke wrongly about God and his justice out of his desire to justify himself. But all this is a very far cry from discrediting the entire book of Job (which by the way was inspired by God!), which essentially is what you want to do because you don't like Job's brand of anthropology. And you continue to overlook the fact that God did tell Job's three friends that they did not speak rightly of Him "the way my servant Job has". Obviously, God did not view Job in the same way you do.
As far as Job's servanthood is concerned, he was a believing servant; whereas Cyrus was not. Cyrus is called a "servant" of God because this godless king actually did serve God's purpose in terms of freeing Israel from their captivity. But Cyrus never acknowledged God. Job, conversely, was a godly saint who feared God and shunned evil. But now you're going to put him and Cyrus on equal footing in terms of their service to God? What Cyrus proves is that God can and does work through anyone (regardless of spiritual status) to accomplish his purpose. God demonstrated this truth through Balaam, as well!
You're ignoring chapter 38 and 39, 71 verses of immediate context, which catalogues the extensive ignorance and impotence of Job on many issues, to which God then invites Job to respond in v. 40:1 saying: "Shall he that contends with the Almighty instruct Him? He that reproves God, let Him answer
it." What is the "
it" referred to here? It can only be the 71 verses where God asks Job a series of questions.
38:1 Then the LORD answered Job out of the whirlwind and said, "Who is this that darkens counsel by words without knowledge. Gird up now your lions like a man.
For I will demand of you, and you answer Me.
Where were you...? Who has laid...? Or who has stretched out...? Who has laid...? Or who has stretched...? Whereupon are...? Or who laid...? Or who shut up ...? Have you commanded... and caused....? Have you entered...? Or have you walked...? etc. etc. Question after question.
But you ignore all of these questions which God has said in 38:1 that He will ask and will demand Job answer. Instead you frame the response of Job by taking his two verse response, ""Behold, I am vile; what shall I answer You? I will lay my hand on my mouth. Once I have spoken, but I will not answer; yes twice, but I will proceed no further," and reading into it a confession of LOUPI Omni-faceted Imperfection.
However, God continues on to ask Job questions, to plumb the depths of his ignorance and impotence, not the depth of his moral degeneration.
40: 6 Then answered the LORD to Job out of the whirlwind, and said, "Gird up your loins now like a man. I will demand of you, and you declare to me. Will you also disannul (i.e. absolutely deny) My justice? Will you condemn Me that you may be righteous? Have you an arm like God? Or can you thunder with a voice like Him? Deck yourself now in with majesty and excellency, and array yoiurself with glory and beauty... And continues on for another 48 verses challenging Job's ignorance and impotence.
So the immediate context of the 71 preceding verses and the 58 subsequent verses are God challenging Job's ignorance and impotence, you ignore and latch on to a few words in Job's embarrassed response, as if those are what God was aiming to elicit from Job, and they prove all men suffer from Omni-faceted Imperfection. You are clutching at what look to you like two LOUPI straws in a sea of verses that are about Job's folly in judging God from Job's position of abject ignorance and impotence.
Job was commended for having spoken rightly AFTER his humble confession of chapters 40 and 42. That in no way validates the ignorant professions he had been spouting PREVIOUSLY in chapters 3-31, for which God reproved him in chapters 38-41, and which you are leaning on because they sound compatible with LOUPI.