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  2. Dive into better understanding the book of Job in the Bible. Learn answers to common questions and explore videos, podcasts and more from BibleProject™.

  3. Job 42:10-16 ESV / 3 helpful votesHelpfulNot Helpful. And the Lord restored the fortunes of Job, when he had prayed for his friends. And the Lord gave Job twice as much as he had before. Then came to him all his brothers and sisters and all who had known him before, and ate bread with him in his house.

  4. Apr 30, 2019 · I did some extra reading on the book of Job over the past month. Here’s what I learned: Job is an unusually complex book, even for the Bible. It includes clear and possibly perplexing divisions in the text: the narrative prologue and epilogue in chapters 1-2 and chapter 42; the carefully structured speeches of the….

  5. Mar 6, 2024 · Brief Summary: At the beginning of the book of Job is a scene in heaven where Satan stands before God. God asks Satan, “Have you considered my servant Job?”. ( Job 1:8 ), and Satan immediately accuses Job, a righteous man, of fearing God only because God had prospered him.

    • Summary of The Book of Job
    • Author
    • Date
    • Language and Text
    • Setting and Perspective
    • Theological Theme and Message
    • Literary Form and Structure
    • Outline

    This summary of the book of Job provides information about the title, author(s), date of writing, chronology, theme, theology, outline, a brief overview, and the chapters of the Book of Job.

    Although most of the book consists of the words of Job and his friends, Job himself was not the author. We may be sure that the author was an Israelite, since he (not Job or his friends) frequently uses the Israelite covenant name for God (Yahweh; NIV "the Lord"). In the prologue (chs. 1 - 2; ), divine discourses (38:1 -- 42:6) and epilogue (42:7-1...

    Two dates are involved: (1) that of Job himself and (2) that of the composition of the book. The latter could be dated anytime from the reign of Solomon to the time of Israel's exile in Babylonia. Although the author was an Israelite, he mentions nothing of Israel's history. He had an account of a non-Israelite sage Job (1:1) who probably lived in ...

    In many places Job is difficult to translate because of its many unusual words and its style. For that reason, modern translations frequently differ widely. Even the pre-Christian translator(s) of Job into Greek (the Septuagint) seems often to have been perplexed. The Septuagint of Job is about 400 lines shorter than the accepted Hebrew text, and i...

    While it may be that the author intended his book to be a contribution to an ongoing high-level discussion of major theological issues in an exclusive company of learned men, it seems more likely that he intended his story to be told to godly sufferers who like Job were struggling with the crisis of faith brought on by prolonged bitter suffering. H...

    When good people (those who "fear God and shun evil," 1:1) suffer, the human spirit struggles to understand. Throughout recorded history people have asked: How can this be? If God is almighty and "holds the whole world in his hands" and if he is truly good, how can he allow such an outrage? The way this question has often been put leaves open three...

    Like some other ancient compositions, the book of Job has a sandwich literary structure: prologue (prose), main body (poetry), and epilogue (prose), revealing a creative composition, not an arbitrary compilation. Some of Job's words are lament (cf. ch. 3 and many shorter poems in his speeches), but the form of lament is unique to Job and often unli...

    Prologue (chs. 1-2)
    Dialogue-Dispute (chs. 3-27)
    Interlude on Wisdom (ch. 28)
    Monologues (29:1;42:6)
  6. Jun 14, 2004 · Although the book unquestionably contains discussion and information that would be invaluable to the exiles (especially the idea that God's wisdom is the basis on which his justice may be vindicated), the scenario in Job seems too unlike Israel of the sixth century to invite too close a correlation.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Book_of_JobBook of Job - Wikipedia

    The Book of Job ( / dʒoʊb /; Biblical Hebrew: אִיּוֹב, romanized: ʾĪyyōḇ ), or simply Job, is a book found in the Ketuvim ("Writings") section of the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh) and the first of the Poetic Books in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. [1] . Scholars generally agree that it was written between the 7th and 3rd centuries BCE. [2] .

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