#2024 GOAL – Reading Through The Bible Chronologically, days 7 & 8

Job 14-16
Our guy Job begins the chapter with, “Man who is born of a woman is few of days and full of trouble,” and you might agree with him.
Did you know Moses agreed too?  Psalm 90:10 says, “The years of our life are seventy, or even by reason of strength eighty; yet their span is but toil and trouble; they are soon gone, and we fly away.”
Next in this sad saga, old Eliphaz (Friend #1, in this second round) comes back with more unkind and mistaken condemnation of Job (15). Job (16) says Eliphaz is not much of a friend. He calls him a “miserable comforter,” a blow-hard talking about what he knows nothing about!!
Then Job laments more about his suffering. He accuses God of shattering, shaking, shooting at, and slicing him.   (Just imagine his pain from that horrible skin ailment, that he must constantly scrape scabs/puss away with broken pottery.)
And I complain about a bit of arthritus or allergy! God forgive me.
Job 17-20
(Yes, I know it’s Monday. It’s been a  whole week since we began. We are still in Job! And it’s depressing!  Oh, please don’t quit. Carry on.  Persevere. Endure to the end (of Job, and the Bible!!)
Job is again thinking of death (Wouldn’t YOU if you were enduring all this and without compassionate understanding?). But if he dies, then he asks, “Where then is my hope?”  Oh, Job, remember your words in chapter 13! “Though He slay me, I will hope in HIM,
Then Bildad (friend #2, in this second round) takes the “podium” and accuses Job of more badness. He asks why Job thinks they are “stupid” in his sight. (Well, duh!)  Bildad waxes eloquent about the “wicked” intimating that this is what poor Job is, ending that it is just the place of the person who knows not God.  (Don’t you wish he could review those first verses in the book that describe Job as upright and blameless?)
Job fervently answers his accuser(s) in chapter 19, “How long will you torment me and break me in pieces with words?”  Yeah! What happened to the concept – “weep with those who weep”?  (Romans 12:15)  But as in a few other places, Job’s soul rises to God and he exclaims, “For I know that my Redeemer lives, and at the last He will stand upon the earth. And after my skin has been destroyed, yet in my flesh shall I see God,” (19:25)  Wow.
Despite, Job’s gasping faith, his third friend, Zophar, cuts him down with, “The wicked will SUFFER!”
We’ve not heard the last of these three “friends,” and even a fourth one will appear in chapter 32 who at first rebukes the others, but then hammers down on Job too.  (Oh, just wait and see how God will treat these guys at the end of chapter 42.  (You can peek at it now, but it will be more satisfying when we get there.)
KEEP READING! Remember the blessing God promised to those who read His word.

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