The Bible Says Commentary on Job 42
Please choose a passage in Job 42
Job 42:1-6 records Job’s answer to God’s questions. Job is humbled and realizes that he can add nothing to God’s perspective. God is the standard. God knows everything. He has His good reasons for all that He does and allows. Job, having spoken with God, is simply awed and eager to know God more. No longer does he want to persuade God of anything. Job sees that he lacks understanding, where God lacks nothing, and so Job implores God to speak and teach him.
Job 42:7-9 records God’s message to the men who gave Job bad advice—Eliphaz and his friends. They spoke wrongly about God. They shamed Job and urged him to repent of sin, which Job had not committed, because they viewed God as transactional. If life was good, it meant you were good and God was blessing you. If life was bad, you were to blame. Although God placed cause-and-effect into His creation, He can’t be manipulated by our actions. What we do does not obligate God in any direction. Bad things can happen to good people. God’s plan is beyond our understanding. He used these trials to grow Job’s faith and knowledge in Him. Eliphaz and his friends are forgiven after they sacrifice many animals and Job prays on their behalf.
Job 42:10-17 concludes Job’s trials and story. God doubles Job’s livestock and wealth which he had previously before his trials began. His family renews their relationships with him and give him lavish gifts. Job has ten more children: seven sons and three daughters. His daughters grow up to be beautiful and receive an inheritance from their father. Job lives a long life, another 140 years, and is able to see his grandsons four generations down the line. Then, an old man who has lived a prosperous, God-honoring life, Job dies and goes to be with the God he loved.
Job answers God’s questions. Job is humbled and realizes that he can add nothing to God’s perspective. God is the standard. God knows everything. He has His good reasons for all that He does and allows. Before this, Job had only known of God from what he had heard of Him; now he has spoken with God, and is simply awed and eager to know God more. No longer does he want to persuade God of anything. Job sees that he lacks understanding, where God lacks nothing, and so Job implores God to speak and teach him.
God then speaks to the men who gave Job bad advice—Eliphaz and his friends. They spoke wrongly about God. They shamed Job and urged him to confess sin which Job had not committed, because they viewed God as transactional. If life was good, it meant you were good and God was blessing you. If life was bad, you were to blame. Although God placed basic cause-and-effect into His creation, He can’t be manipulated by our actions. What we do does not obligate God in any direction. Bad things can happen to good people. God’s plan is beyond our understanding. He used these trials to grow Job’s faith and knowledge in Him.
Eliphaz and his friends are forgiven after they sacrifice many animals and Job prays on their behalf.
Job’s trials have ended. God doubles his livestock and wealth. His family renews their relationships with him and give him lavish gifts. Job has ten more children: seven sons and three daughters. His daughters grow up to be beautiful and receive an inheritance from their father. Job lives a long life, another 140 years, and is able to see his grandsons four generations after himself. Then, an old man who has lived a prosperous, God-honoring life, Job dies and goes to be with the God he loved.
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