So you would agree that it would be a problem if Elihu were speaking of himself in 36:4?
But let's look at the context. In 36:2 he says suffer "
me" a little, and "
I " will show you... Then in 36:3 he says "
I " will fetch "
my " knowledge from afar... And in 36:4 he says "
my " words shall not be false. In this context he is consistently talking about himself.
So on the heels of emphasizing
his communication with Job and friends, his claim is that "one" who is perfect in knowledge is
with them. He's talking about himself, and he has also already claimed that he is present with Job to speak on behalf of God to Job and that he is there in God's stead, so he claims.
Elihu is clearly speaking of himself here, and however you look at it, he is obviously exalting himself above everyone else and equating himself with God. Elihu is the embodiment of the antithesis of the character of Jesus, and this is just one of the problems with him if you look closely.
Another instance is in Job 34:2-4:
2Hear my words, O ye wise
men; and give ear unto me, ye that have knowledge.
3For the ear trieth words, as the mouth tasteth meat.
4Let us choose to us judgment: let us know among ourselves what
is good.
Let "us" choose to "us" judgment? Know "among themselves" what is good? Does that sound right to you? Have you noticed that Job actively prays to God all throughout this story. Job reaches outside of himself to find the answer to what is happening to him. He talks through it with his friends, but Job also consistently seeks God and prays to Him for answers.
Do you see Elihu praying to God? Do you see him seeking God at all? According to Elihu's own words, he believes in "knowing among themselves". Even if he had the answers (which I don't believe he does) how does this thinking and this attitude comport with Jesus? Even Jesus was constantly seeking God, both privately in prayer and publicly in prayer. Again, Philippians 2. Elihu displays the opposite.