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04 August, 2016

Search The Scriptures —Study 9 — Job 18 and 19. Bildad's second speech and Job's reply

Study 9 From the Book of Job is: Job 18 and 19. Bildad's second speech and Job's
reply
  1. In 18 the sequence of events which happen to the wicked and the ungodly.
  2. In 19 Job says he feels imprisoned and alone. List the metaphors under which he pictures his solitary confinement. How does he picture his release? To what grand assurance does his faith triumphantly rise?
Notes
  1. 18:2. 'How long before you make a capture of mere words'? i.e, before you stop mouthing empty ideas. 'Consider' i.e., say something worth saying, and our answer will be weighty.
  2. 18:4. The world's natural laws will not be altered to suit Job.
  3. 19:25-27. Even if Job had no hope of vindication in this life he believed that God must vindicate him and that, after death, he would see God and find God on his side. Cf. Rom. 8:33-39.
  4. 19:28b. 'The real cause of the trouble is himself' possibly expresses the sense intended.
  5. 19:29. 'Trouble will come to them if they go on rejecting his cries for pity' is what Job here means.

03 August, 2016

Search The Scriptures —Study 8 — Job 15-17. Eliphaz' second speech and Job's reply

Study 8 From the Book of Job is: Job 15-17. Eliphaz' second speech and Job's reply

  1. Read chapter 15 and compare its tone and approach with Eliphaz' first speech in chapters 4 and 5. Note the emphasis on human depravity. How should Eliphaz have dealt with a younger man who would not agree with him? Why was he so sure he was right? To whose shortcomings was he blind?
  2. 16 and 17. Even in the depths, Job finds some particles of hope. What form do these take?
Notes
  1. 15:4. Eliphaz accuses Job of being an enemy of true religion and godliness because he denies the traditional orthodoxy.
  2. 17:11b. A reference to the earlier speeches of Job's friends.
  3. 15:18-19. Eliphaz claims that his doctrine is ancient and pure, untainted by foreign heresies.
  4. 16:2. Ronald Knox renders this: 'Old tales and cold comfort; you are all alike.'
  5. 16:19, 21. A further reference to the mediator.
  6. 17:16b. Taken as a statement, not a question, this indicates a sudden further advance in Job's hopes.

02 August, 2016

Search The Scriptures —Study 7 — Job 13 and 14. Job speaks again

Study 7 From the Book of Job is: Job 13 and 14. Job speaks again


For convenience the first cycle has been considered as ending at 14. It could equally finish at 12, with 13 and 14 beginning the fresh round of opposing speeches.
  1. What is Job's chief accusation against his friends? What two demands does he now make to God?
  2. In the long dirge on man's uncertainties in chapter 14 there is one small but significant gleam of hope. What is it? Compare and contrast the Christian's view of this hope with Job's. (Note, however, that in chapter 18 Job relapses into a deeper pessimism still.)
THE SECOND SPEECH CYCLE OF SPEECHES (15-21)
Unable to persuade Job that he is wrong, his friends now use blunter accusation and scarcely-veiled threats. They dwell on the fate of the wicked. Job, by this time very upset, sinks into repeated moanings about his troubles. Then, quite suddenly, at the deepest point of misery he revives a little (16:19; 19:25 and in 21 attacks this antique idea of his friends that 'It's always the bad who get the pain' and accuses them of preaching a dogma denied by life. Their observations are inaccurate.

01 August, 2016

Search The Scriptures —Study 6 — Job 11 and 12. Zophar's first speech and Job's reply

Study 6 From the Book of Job is: Job 11 and 12. Zophar's first speech and Job's reply

1. Observe (a) the sharp rebuke in 11:6; (b) the steps to repentance in 11:13, 14; (c) the picture of blessing in 11:15-19. Why do you think Zophar failed to help Job?
2. Eliphaz spoke of visions, and research, Bildad of the wisdom of the ancients. To what authority does Zophar appeal to support his conviction that sin and suffering are inevitably linked?
  1. Zophar and Job each speak of divine wisdom. Compare the various examples of it which they cite.
Note. 12:5-12. Perhaps Job is ironically quoting Zophar's view back at him. Job's point is that these platitudes are irrelevant to his situation. He does not deny them.

31 July, 2016

Search The Scriptures —Study 5 — Job 9:25 – 10:22. Job's reply to Bibldad (continued)

Study 5 From the Book of Job is: Job 9:25 – 10:22. Job's reply to Bibldad (continued)

  1. 9:33. The 'umpire' is mentioned for the first time in the book. Keep a list of the occurrences, noticing what new features each fresh mention brings. Suggest ways in which Jesus Christ has made Job's great wish a reality for us.
  2. What is Job's main desire in chapter 10? Do you think God is angered by such plain speaking? Cf. Pss. 55:1-8, 22; 62:8.
Notes
  1. 9:35. 'Deep in my heart I have no guilty fears.'
  2. 10:12. An extraordinary verse to find in a long complaint. Either it means 'Even in deep misery I am aware of an overriding loving purpose'; or 'Even my past happiness was designed as a prelude to my present misery'.

30 July, 2016

Search The Scriptures —Study 4 — Job 8:1 – 9:24. Bildad's first speech and Job's reply

Study 4 From the Book of Job is: Job 8:1 – 9:24. Bildad's first speech and Job's reply

  1. To what authority does Bildad appeal for what he says? How trustworthy do you think that authority is? What are Bildad's views (a) about God, and (b) about wicked men?
  2. What difficulties does Job find in this way as he tries to make God explain Himself?
Notes
  1. 8:4. A cruel remark. Job's children died because they sinned, according to Bildad.
  2. 8:11. Reeds wither without water. So wicked men fade away.
  3. 9:2. The meaning is, 'How can a man establish his righteousness before God?
  4. 9:13b. Rahab is probably another name for the dragon. . See RSV mg. Note to 9:8b.

29 July, 2016

Search The Scriptures —Study 3 - Job 6 and 7. Job's reply to Eliphaz

Study 3 From the Book of Ephesians is: Job 6 and 7. Job's reply to Eliphaz


Job is hurt by Eliphaz's attitude. He had hoped for help, not criticism(6:14). He flings questions at God.
  1. 6:1-30. What does Job's condition make him long for (a) from God, and (b) from men? What may we learn from his double disappointment?
  2. 7:1-10. By what metaphors does Job describe his present life? 7:11-21. What is the substance of his complaints against God?
Notes
  1. 6:5, 6. Even animals cry out in misery: and human beings exclaim at distasteful food. Why shouldn't Job complaints?
  2. 6:20. Thirsty caravans perish in the desert pursuing a mirage. Job is similarly cheated by his friends.
  3. 6:30. 'Cannot my taste...' means 'Am I quite without good reason for my complaints?

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28 July, 2016

Search The Scriptures —Study 2 — Job 4 and 5. Eliphaz's first speech

Study 2 From the Book of Job is: Job 4 and 5. Eliphaz's first speech


The First Cycle of Speeches 4 – 14)
The three friends, seeing Job's suffering, assume his guilt, and with mounting zeal urge him to repent. At first, Job is only grieve and hurt by this lack of understanding, but soon becomes irritated and angry. He wants God to explain Himself, and is acutely miserable.
  1. 4: 1-11. According to Eliphaz, what was Job forgetting?
  2. 4:12 – 5: 7. What did Eliphaz learn from his vision?
  3. 5:8-27. What is his view of Job, or God, and of divine chastening?
Notes
  1. 5:2. 'Vexation: an impatient querulous or presumptuous attitude.
  2. 5:6-7. Troubles in life come as sparks come, from somebody's actions. There must be a human cause. Cf. 4:8.
  3. 5:27. An appeal to scholarly research to buttress his orthodoxy.

LINK TO THE VERSES LISTED

27 July, 2016

Search The Scriptures —Study 1 — Job 1-3

Study 1 From the Book of Job is: Job 1-3

  1. 1:1 -2:6. What is said here about Job's character, (b) position in life, and (c) sufferings?
  2. 2: 7 -3:26. In 2: 10 Job expresses his faith in God. In 3: 11 he wants to die; and in 3: 23 blames God for his troubles. How are we to account for this change?
Notes

  1. 2:13. The seven – day silence of Job's friends is a rite of mourning for a man they consider as good as dead, struck down because of his sins.
  2. Compare 3:1-26 with Je. 20: 14-18.                                                                                   LINKTO THE VERSES LISTED

26 July, 2016

Search The Scriptures —Study 0 — The introduction of Job

Study 0 From the Book of Job is: The introduction of the book of Job
Introduction
Outside the book itself, the chief character, is mentioned only in Ezk. 14:14, 20 and Jas. 5:11. We know very little about him therefore, and the date and the placing of the story are matters of surmise. All absence of clear links with the patriarchal or post-conquest. Israel point to an early date, and it is reasonable to take the descriptions of scenery and climate as referring to a country on the western edge of the desert. The book is written in Hebrew by a Hebrew.
We are given a portrait of a good man suddenly overtaken by extraordinary disasters. The main action of the book lies in a series of speeches between Job, his three friends, the young man Elihu, and, in the end, God Himself. In these speeches interest is sustained throughout by the presentation of opposing ideas about Job's misfortunes. Sharp divergences temperament and belief reveal themselves. The friends insist that suffering comes only when a man has sinned. So let Job knows that he has not sinned, at least not so greatly as to deserve so devastating a punishment. The principal agony lies, not in his diseased body, but in his bewildered mind. His cry to God to explain Himself is maintained with growing impatience. Job's real trial is theological. For he, like his friends, had once believed that men suffer here for their sins.
At last his desire is granted. God speaks to him, but very differently from his expectation. The sole divine answer consists of a vision of God's great power. Job, seeing his small concerns against this vast back-cloth, is humbled and silenced. Then God commends him, and he is restored.
The book is usually considered to be an enquiry into the reasons for innocent sufferings, with Elihu seeing furthest into its meaning, and purpose. Suffering is a merciful deterrent, aimed at reforming. Yet, from the standpoint of the Prologue, it is disinterested goodness which is under discussion. Satan asks, 'Does Job fear God for nought?' Implying that he fears God because he has been weighed down with wealth and possessions. Job then, by divine permission, becomes a test case, to see whether he does fear God for the inducements to do so which he gets from it. Stripped of family, wealth, health, reputation and friends, he emerges at last from the experiment unscathed and believing God when all comforting proofs of His presence has been withdrawn.
Perhaps this book also teaches in a limited way how God justifies a man who hash faith. He does it, not by explaining to him why life is as it is, still less by vindicating his alleged sinlessness. He does it by a personal showing of Himself to the man who cries for Him to hear, and clings to the hope of a revelation. And in that marvelous vision of power with which the book ends, totally unexpected, yet coherent and convincing as it is, Job like Thomas before the risen Christ, is delivered from his doubt, and bows in worship. God, in showing Himself to a faithful man, in the very act justifies him. Revelation in response to faith is justification. Job was 'right', but not for the reasons he supposed.
The study of the subordinate themes in the book is well worth the time. Job's preoccupation with death, for example, and his hopes of an after-life; his certainty that somewhere a mediator will be found; his irony, his reactions to his suffering, and his character; the characters, too, of his friends, so full of truths, so far from the truth. To these, and other matters, attention is drawn in the Notes and the Questions.