The book of Job is immensely rich in its doctrine of God. We will examine the attributes of God and his relationship to the universe and his sovereignty. Therefore, the attributes of God’s greatness we will examine through from Job’s spiritual, personality, life, infinity, and incomprehensibility. The friends’ of Job held to a simplistic form of dogma. But it is not based on a simplistic dogma of divine retribution. I think the point of this book is to correct a simplistic dogma of divine retribution. Through this week reading and entire book there is a pattern of divine retribution and remuneration but God is the One who determines when and how it works out. It was based solely on God’s love for his own people and all human being to response properly by submission to the Sovereign …show more content…
Since God is the Sovereign Lord, Job had to submit to God’s sovereign will. Job had heard of God but when he saw God he developed a deeper commitment to him (42:5). In 42:3 Job acknowledged that he had spoken of things he did not understand. God’s ways were too complicated for Job to understand. He submitted to an absolutely Sovereign Lord. You see Job’s speeches pattern from the second cycle in his fifth and sixth speeches, he again wishes that an impartial mediator would serve as his defense attorney before God (16:18–22; 19:25–27). Job is convinced of his innocence and is confident that God will vindicate him, even if it is not in the present earthly sphere. However, Job’s conviction of his innocence prompts him to accuse God of having wronged him (19:6). In his seventh speech he ponders God’s system of justice in light of God permitting the wicked to live happy and long lives (21:7–26) and permitting them to even be buried with honor (21:27–34). Job is confused about God’s moral order. However, he is still convinced that he wants no part with the counsel of the wicked since they do not recognize that God is the ultimate source of their blessing
Each work shows how the relationship bet ween the gods and the humans work. In the Indian culture the gods is someone who can show the people the way but in the Hebrew culture their god test the loyalty of the humans. In both cultures from the works the people will seek their gods for guidance and wisdom but the outcomes are not the same in both places. There are similarities and differences between how the relationships between people and the gods work in the different cultures. Each work the main character has a problem that is troubling the throughout each work.
Rowlandson frequently alludes to the book of Job- drawing a parallel between herself and the perfect Christian martyr. By describing her captors in association with Hell, she casts them as, not only, enemies of the Puritans, but enemies of God as well. Rowlandson does suffer the wrath of her mistress; however, she is met with much kindness from other Natives. For example, she is even given a Bible by one of her “savage” captors (Rowlandson 263). She is offered food by many other Natives (Rowlandson 269).
I concurred with Job! I was not denying his existence, but I doubted his absolute justice.” (45) With this statement Eliezer is displaying that he still holds the belief in God, but chooses to keep his silence just as Job did when everything was taken from him. He cannot comprehend how a self-proclaimed God of “justice” can allow for such a monstrosity to occur, but he still believes in God’s existence. Towards the end of Night, Eliezer realizes family members have abandoned each other for a greater chance at survival and mentions “this God in whom I no longer believed.”
He still refers to Him as Almighty and recognizes His presence. Yet, he does question His righteousness and care for the Jewish people, when he questions why He would stay silent and why his fellow prisoners would worship Him. He explains his position, saying that “I had ceased to pray. I concurred with Job! I was not denying His existence, but I doubted His absolute justice” (45).
The book shows a lot about what to believe and who to believe in. But God plays a big part in the
As for me, I had ceased to pray. I concurred with Job! I was not denying His existence, but I doubted His absolute justice. ”(45). In the book you see other Jews experience a similar loss of faith.
The Book of Job provides an example of how people should praise God by illustrating a blameless, responsible, and fearing man who will always turn away from evil. Therefore, this book presents the same man tortured by outside forces lacking the possibility to acquire help from family and friends. Throughout the reading in particular (14:11) demonstrates how there was a moment of weakness in which Job fails and ask for his death, but after all, he did not commit sin and endured waiting for his torment to banish. In addition, the book reveals how men turned against a man in need and instead judged him without understanding the sources causing his disgrace. However, the book provides a comparison in how humans behave by providing vivid examples of characters who showed behaviors illustrating how humanity functions.
By putting God in business first he says “we should also consider how God belongs in the following: • Ownership • Productivity • Employment • Commercial transactions • Profit • Money • Inequality of possessions • Competition • Borrowing
To end the story a thunderstorm rolls in and Prometheus is left chained to the rock. The Book of Job is a story about a man who “feared God and turned away from evil” (Job 1:1, ESV). He was a very wealthy man who had ten children, many livestock, and many servants. Satan speaks to God one day and God gives him permission to test Job’s faith. Satan begins by taking away Job’s children, killing his livestock,
God will inflict punishment, therefore, people do not need to keep score. The moral to be learned from this book is to trust that God will handle evil as he says he
Job was a man of faith, he repented for little injustices. He was tested to prove his righteousness and succeeded. His children were killed, his cattle was killed, he was painfully diseased and his was wealth diminished. Through all this he remained faithful. His so called friends told him to abandon God as he had him.
I concurred with Job! I was not denying His existence, but I doubted His absolute justice” (45). Before his struggle, he was emotionally and spiritually connected to God and spent so much of his time studying the Jewish faith. In contrast, after he experienced living in a concentration camp he questioned God’s motives and no longer believed in absolute justice. He doesn’t believe in the same God he once did; before, he believed in a benevolent and kind father of humankind, he now can only believe in an apathetic and cold observer of the Jew’s
A job analysis will be conducted in order to determine the validity of Mr. Gregory Williams’s grievance claim against Comfort Assisted Living (CAL). Mr. Williams, currently the Senior HR Specialist for Comfort Assisted Living believes that the recently posted Deputy Vice President of Human Resources position entails duties he already performs and therefore he should be promoted to this role, rather than CAL posting the position for other candidates to apply. As described by SHRM (2017 ), a job analysis is a logical study of a job to determine which activities and responsibilities it consist of, as well as understanding each candidates individual qualifications necessary for performance of the job. The analysis will serve to determine the legitimacy
Packer describes a few incommunicable attributes of God. These particular attributes mankind cannot duplicate or strive to be, are Lord, King, Savior, infinite, eternal, unchangeable, and just (Packer, 1973, p. 20-21). God is the creator of the world, and the Messiah that came back to save the world (Packer, 1973, p. 50, 55). Furthermore, the Lord is the epitome of holiness.
The wicked must not think, simply because they are not physically in Hell, that God (in whose hand the wicked now reside) is not-at this very monument-as angry with them as he is with those miserable creatures he is not tormenting in Hell, and who-at this very moment-do feel and bear the fierceness of his wrath. At any moment God shall permit him, sat stands ready to fall upon the wicked and seize them as his own. All that wicked men may do to save themselves from Hell’s pains shall afford them nothing if they continue to reject Christ. God has never promise to save us from Hell, except for those contained in Christ through the covenant of Grace.