Book of Job Essay

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    The Book of Job is a problematic piece of wisdom literature in that it presents a man “blameless and upright, one who feared God and turned away from evil,” (Job 1:1) and proceeds to destroy him in the face of God. God boasts about Job’s exemplary behavior as a loyal servant to a gathering of his sons. When the Adversary, who stood among God’s sons, wagers that Job would curse God if his possessions were decimated, God allows the Adversary to annihilate all that belongs to Job, including his servants

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    The Book of Job tells the story of a man who is a servant of God, “perfect in integrity, who fears God and avoids evil.” (Pg.6). The story centers on the profound suffering Job faces when an Accusing Angel decides to challenge Job’s faith in God (pg. 6). As Job is tested the following questions have risen from its readers. Is Job patient? Is he impatient? Some people read The Book of Job and think it tells the story of an incredibly patient man, who withstands immense trials and yet never experiences

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    In The Book of Job, the perfectly moral Job has everything taken away from him by God. He is the servant to God, a man of perfect integrity, and he did everything right even to the point of slight paranoia. For instance, he baptized his children every year just in case they sinned. Therefore, he strongly questions God when everything is taken away from him and even expresses his despair and curiosity to his friends. His friends believe he deserved everything because God is never unjust. In Oedipus

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    Suffering and The Book of Job      Life is difficult. "Suffering...is not an exception to the human condition, it is the human condition" (Gomes 405). The question of why life can be unjustly cruel is asked today and has been asked since the beginning of time.   And where is God in the midst of hardship? Is He non-existent, as the pagan statement, "It's Chance alone that moves and rules our lives" implies (Neiman 442). Or is God only partially in control of situations, as Harold

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    people, but they also include cautionary narratives of difficulty, loss, evil, and hatred. A prominent tale that demonstrates the brutality with which some lessons are learned is the story of Job in the Bible. This is well written, but unnecessary. Try to get immediately to your argument. In the Book of Job, the idea of sin and suffering are correlated. According to many stories in the Old Testament, without sin there is no suffering. The account of Adam and Eve is an quintessential example of how

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    The book of Job in the Hebrew Bible contains both poetry and prose features in one whole personal account that proposes a universal problem: Why does God allow the good to suffer? Secondary to this universal problem, the underlying question, implicitly stated by Job in a fit of agony, “You will seek me, and I shall be gone.” (Job, p.200, line 47). More explicitly put, there is an unbridled, significant and dependent relationship between God and the mankind he created to roam the earth. The book of

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    By classic definition, the character or being of the Satan is Job is not a main character, but the story is unable to happen without his involvement. The Satan is essential for the story of Job, because without the Satan, the trials and testing of Job would never have occurred in the first place. The role of the Satan is equally as important to proper understanding of the book of Job. Most scholars argue that the Satan here is a separate entity from the Devil or Satan in Jewish and Christian theological

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    The Changing Role of God in the Book of Job The Book of Job shows a change in God's attitude from the beginning to the end. At the beginning of the book, He is presented as Job's protector and defender. At the end He appears as the supreme being lecturing and preaching to Job with hostility, despite the fact that Job never cursed his name, and never did anything wrong.  Job's only question was why God had beseeched this terrible disease on him. I intend to analyze and discuss the different

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    In The Book of Job found in the Hebrew Bible, the character Job suffers when the Lord and Adversary are involved in a bet. The Adversary causes Job severe pain and kills his children and cattle to see if Job would curse the Lord. Though Job does not curse the Lord, he cries out to Him demanding a reason for his suffering. Job’s friends tell him that his suffering will end once he repents his sins, but Job believes otherwise for he knows he is blameless. The Lord proclaims his power over Job and seems

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    The Book of Job: An Attempt to Justify the Actions of a Omnipotent, Childlike God   The Book of Job from the Old Testament is a story in which an attempt is made by the Hebrew author to justify the unjustifiable actions of a seemingly malevolent god. The questioning by Job as to why the "good" must suffer is induced by a childish challenge, put forth by Satan and accepted by God, to test the loyalty of Job toward God. The uncharacteristic actions of a supposedly omni benevolent God must be

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