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The Job debate;- Judging the Judge (Index Thread)

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posted on Dec, 15 2017 @ 05:04 PM
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It would be reasonable for someone to ask why these threads were not placed in the Philosophy forum.
I did think about it, in advance.
On the one hand, the issue which prompts the debate seems to be a branch of the old “Problem of Evil”, which is frequently regarded as a philosophical question.
On the other hand, I knew that the only answers provided in the book would be faith-based, and therefore religious in character.
So I made the decision on that basis.

Further reflection seems to confirm that this was the right choice.

For one thing, the Problem of Evil, “Why do things happen this way?,” does not really exist as a question for straight philosophy.
It only becomes a moral puzzle when we enter philosophy of religion and try to reconcile the way things happen with the God who makes them happen.
It is a question which confronts, or can be made to confront, believers rather than unbelievers.

Furthermore, the answer to that question cannot be found by straight philosophy.
That is because it depends on information not accessible to unassisted human reason.
If God has arranged the world, only God can fully understand his reasons for arranging it in this particular way.
“Theodicy” is a branch of theology seeking to fulfil Milton’s aspiration, to “justify the ways of God to men”. It’s a noble idea, but theodicy may be an exercise in repeating the mistake of Job’s comforters.
The problem is that both sides of the debate are attempting to judge God by human standards.
God’s accusers are setting up their own definitions of what is right and just and hoping to show that God does not meet them.
God’s defenders are setting up their own definitions of what is right and just, and hoping to show that God does meet them.
But who are we to set up standards of judgement and bring God under our own authority as judges?
How are we qualified, on either side of the argument?
That is why God, through his spokesman Elihu and in his own voice, condemns them both.
Since God is not subject to man, his ways are not ultimately subject to human judgement.

Finally, the book itself makes no attempt to answer that question.
While Job, as an individual, is asking repeatedly “Why do things happen this way?”, “Job”, as a book, is offering to answer a rather different question;
“How should we respond to the way things happen?”
The clues are there from the beginning.
In the opening verses, Job is offering sacrifice to cover the possibility that “my sons have sinned and cursed God in their hearts”.
Satan proposes to make Job “curse thee to thy face”, but he fails because Job “did not sin or charge God with wrong”.
In the second chapter, his own wife urges him to “Curse God, and die.”; but again Job “did not sin with his lips”.
However, his complaints during the following chapters come very close to the line, as he affirms the justice of God while asserting the injustice of what is happening in God’s world.
Therefore, when God speaks, Job is accused of uttering “words without knowledge”, and finally accepts the charge;
“I have uttered what I did not understand, things too wonderful for me”.
Clearly, the recommended response is not sitting in judgement on God.

In a word, Trust.
Or Faith.
We are not in a position to judge for ourselves what is right and just, in absolute terms, but faith says that God will do it.

Index of threads

The troubles of Job
Covering the first two chapters, which the scene for the debate.

Job’s complaint
Specifically, ch3. “I curse the day I was born”

Eliphaz and Job
The first exchange between them. Chs.4-7
Eliphaz; Only the wicked are punished by God.
Job; Why does God not leave him alone and ignore his transgressions?

Bildad and Job
The first exchange between them. Chs.8-10
Bildad; If Job is upright, God will hear his appeal.
Job; But how can he convince God that he is upright?

Zophar and Job
The first exchange between them. Chs.11-14
Zophar; God’s wisdom is obviously greater, so Job ought to repent.
Job wants the chance to argue his case with God in person.

Eliphaz and Job
The second exchange between them. Chs.15-17
Job wants to make a legal appeal against God in God’s own court of judgement, citing God himself as Job’s chief witness.

Bildad and Job
The second exchange between them. Chs.18-19
Though God is not responding to these appeals, Job is putting his trust in a Redeemer to vindicate him.

Zophar and Job
The second exchange between them. Chs.20-21
Zophar says the wicked are destroyed.
Job says the wicked are not destroyed. At least, not in the short term.

Third round speeches
Job responds to Eliphaz and Bildad (Zophar gives up). Chs.22-28
The paradox of the fact that God acts against Job, who is upright, yet fails to act against those who are truly unrighteous.

Job’s appeal to the jury
Chs.29-31
Job mourns the contrast between his current state and his former life.
He denies at length that he has been guilty of any kind of unrighteousness.

God in the voice of Elihu
Chs.32-37
Offering himself as spokesman for God, Elihu criticises both sides of the argument.
None of them are truly understanding God’s majesty and authority.

God’s answer
Chs.38-42
“I made the world.”

+++
Some commentaries on Job focus on the concept of ”redemptive suffering”, and offer that as a point of contact between Job and Christ.
I’m not able to come at the book from that angle.
But I’m going to summarise a tract called “The Joyful Vocation to Suffering”, which I find on my bookshelves, for the benefit of anyone who might find that approach helpful.






edit on 15-12-2017 by DISRAELI because: (no reason given)



posted on Dec, 15 2017 @ 05:05 PM
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The Witness of Edith Barfoot

Edith Barfoot was brought up in east Oxford (the more industrial part of the city).
She was an Anglican, but her church life was at the more “Anglo-Catholic” end of the Church of England. In particular, she was brought into contact with the local Society of St. John the Evangelist, a religious order popularly known as “the Cowley Fathers”.
Her thoughts on suffering were first written down at the request of one of the Fathers, who was committed to preaching a sermon on the topic and needed inspiration. Then he showed them to the Superior General of the Society, who was moved enough to want to see them in print.
That was the origin of “The Joyful Vocation to Suffering”, a simple pamphlet made available at the back of her church. But Edith had made friends with the local bookselling magnate, Sir Basil Blackwell, who volunteered to publish it himself under his own imprint.
The resulting “Witness of Edith Barfoot” makes a slim volume. I have the updated edition published after her death. The basic tract fills a dozen pages, and the rest of the book is eked out with biographical material and tributes.
The biographical material helps to establish her right to speak on the subject of suffering.

When she was a girl, Edith had hopes of entering the nursing profession. However, she was already getting pains in her limbs, after a bout of scarlet fever at the age of eight. The pain was a form of rheumatism, which developed in her teens into progressive rheumatoid arthritis.
This was a severe challenge to medical science at the beginning of the twentieth century. For a time, they sent her to bathe in brine baths. Her knees were contracting, and they tried to straighten her legs by pulling them down, as she lay in bed, with 56 pound weights. “They were going to cut my legs off just above the knees, but they found they had just got me in time to straighten the sinews and nerves, and so they did that under an anaesthetic and forced the knees down and strapped the legs on splints.”
The eminent doctor, Sir William Osler, stood at her bedside and was told that this was a case of arthritis; “Poor child, poor child, I am sorry.” More than fifty years later, she was still dating her ”martyrdom” from that moment.
She remained bed-bound, and an attack of kidney trouble twenty years later left her house-bound. By the time she was eighty, she had lost her sight, her sensitivity to touch, and most of her hearing.
Although, as she pointed out herself, “I can still talk. I have not arthritis in my tongue.”

The Cowley Fathers found a useful occupation for her, so long as her sight held out. One of them was transcribing books into braille, for the use of the blind. Since he was blind himself, her task was to read the book aloud while he bashed away at a braille typewriter. She also trained herself to proof-read the braille sheets by sight. The completed sheets were then taken away and pasted up into books.

Apart from that, her central occupation was prayer, especially after her sight went, and during many sleepless nights.
In effect, she had become what the Middle Ages would have recognised as an anchorite.
As a virtual anchorite, she received many visitors, including the bishop of Oxford. On one of his visits, feeling beset with problems, he asked her to pray for him, and was firmly reminded; ”Bishop DEAR, I pray for you several times every day and in the night too!”

Edith died at the age of eighty-seven.


The Joyful Vocation to Suffering


Deep down in every child of his there is the longing to be called by our Father to do something special for him

The expectant soul is prepared for such a call, up to a point, but cannot foresee everything that it might mean. It might mean the way of sacrifice, which spells suffering in its most acute form.

To every child of his comes the call to suffer in some way or other: spiritually, mentally, or physically, in a lesser or greater degree…
But to some of his children he gives the vocation to physical suffering…
When the subconscious longing to answer God’s call has become the conscious longing of his child, the call to suffering does not come unexpectedly, but it does come in unexpected ways, making unexpected demands which make her see her own utter weakness and unworthiness.

The call requires the child to give up many things, like physical freedom, the activity of youth, and all the blessings of health. This includes giving up her own ideas about the way she was going to serve him.

The call has come to surrender herself wholly to him in ways before unknown, to give up entirely all her own self-made plans…
Because it is simply the call to follow him in this particular vocation of pain-bearing and helplessness, the soul senses the joy which the call holds for her in striving to follow after and do his will even through all the pain it entails; for it is just his own way of leading the soul directly to himself: and this is comfort unspeakable, and she experiences the joy of discovery in the fact that this is the process which will fashion the child to appear before the Father one day in his own likeness.


The other sections are “The child’s response” and “The Father’s help ever-present”.
Edith describes a growing process, a gradual readjustment of ideas. As the pain grows greater, the initial fear changes into trustful response. The response must be willing, holding nothing back. The soul’s response to the Father’s call must also be active and alert,

for through it he gives vast opportunities for work...
When he takes away her physical activity, he gives her a greater spiritual activity than she ever had before.

The soul holds on to the faith which never doubts her Father’s presence, even when his light is concealed behind the cloud. He has an untiring, unceasing, patience with her impatience.

During an interview on local radio, she added;

Always I come back to the same conclusion, that it is the Holy Spirit within me who is working; it is not I myself, I am only his instrument, and he uses me according to his will; and it is a wonderful thing, Sir Basil, to remember some words I read many years ago when I was sighted, “Within the circle of the love of God, there is no near or far”, that every one of us, no matter where we are, we are in our prayer times at one in him.



posted on Jun, 18 2021 @ 09:09 AM
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Did you ever wonder what Satan was doing in heaven in the first place?

He had been cast out of heaven. Did he sneak back in when he knew the sons of God where going to seek an audience with God?

That is one thing I don't understand, and it throws me.

edit on 18-6-2021 by NightSkyeB4Dawn because: (no reason given)



posted on Jun, 18 2021 @ 10:29 AM
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a reply to: NightSkyeB4Dawn
Perhaps the traditional understanding of what happened to Satan needs to be reassessed. How much of it is Biblical?



posted on Jun, 18 2021 @ 11:14 AM
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originally posted by: DISRAELI
a reply to: NightSkyeB4Dawn

Perhaps the traditional understanding of what happened to Satan needs to be reassessed. How much of it is Biblical?


I do agree. I think there is a lot we get wrong from the Bible. Too many people only know the Bible from the passages the pastors mention in their sermons, and the common ones that they memorize as children.

I started really studying the Bible about four years ago. I have learn that it is not chronological. I learned that when people only use one translation, they may miss some of the nuances in the words and distort the meaning.

I have read the same passage numerous times to suddenly receive a different message, so I do not believe there is a devious reason behind the differences in the translations.

I do think it helps a lot if you know who was speaking, when the words were spoken, or written, what was happening at the time, and why the words were preserved.

I am not telling anyone what they need to do to have a relationship with God. That is a personal journey we each have to make. Or not.
edit on 18-6-2021 by NightSkyeB4Dawn because: Format fix.



posted on Jun, 20 2021 @ 11:20 AM
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From whence evil cometh.

The book of job does seem to pointing out that God would be the root of all evil, which doesn't fit in with the Christian or N.T theology, where as God is described as a loving one, an a healer.

Judaism or the O.T is more predisposed to it being an absolute fact, that if God is the source of all things. The O.T an the N.T are polar opposites to an extent, an tend to lead into moral compassing questions, like Nature vs Nuture, or sometimes to heal, one has to cut type of deal.

He is very well responsible for Satan making an well being, along with Satan managing to fool God sort of speak. All the while in Judaism, Satan is completely subservient an only fears God, while in Christianity an even Islam, Satan is rebellious.

I do recall reading somewhere that the Behemoth could be identified prophecy, while the Leviathan has something to do morals an maybe the after math i guess. Also Ziz, is no where found, an he should be the Elephant in the room.


edit on 20-6-2021 by Proto88 because: (no reason given)

edit on 20-6-2021 by Proto88 because: (no reason given)



posted on Jun, 20 2021 @ 12:14 PM
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a reply to: Proto88
No, it's pointing out that men are not qualified to say if God is being evil or not.
That's where Job was going wrong, and that''s what he repents doing in the last chapter.

Leviathan is the representative of everything that is evil (see the last thread linked in the index above). It is not created by God (Behemoth, which is less great, is called "greatest in God's creation). But for the moment it is tolerated.
edit on 20-6-2021 by DISRAELI because: (no reason given)



posted on Jun, 20 2021 @ 12:36 PM
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a reply to: DISRAELI

Yet, is not God the creator of all things, to say he is not, boasts doubt, doesn't it not?

Thing is for Job to be put to such extremes just because Satan questioned how strong is his belief. And God satisfying the Devils curiosity, to have everything that was given unto him by whom made the world an it prince, was taken back?

Isn't that a little, counter intuitive?



posted on Jun, 20 2021 @ 12:42 PM
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a reply to: Proto88
Perhaps our intuition is a little flawed.
I refer you to the first two and last two threads in the series, where these things are argued out in detail



posted on Jun, 20 2021 @ 04:10 PM
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a reply to: DISRAELI

Idk, the more I look at the Story of Job, it sounds like a cataclysm happened, an it involve a stumbling beast shaking the earth, an a sea dragon causing tidal waves.

I hate to be Devils advocate of Frankenstein Monster, but Satan never really get blamed by Jobs troubles even though he is the root cause.

All while like you said, he does come close to cursing God, while everyone else is dying an cursing him. He ends up surviving all of the madness that was dumped unto him.

Maybe he knew it was smart not to piss him off? Fear the Lord an all that.



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