Job / Christopher R. Smith.
Series: Understanding the books of the BiblePublication details: Downers Grove, Ill. : IVP Connect, ©2012.Description: 126 pages ; 23 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780830858095
- 0830858091
- 223.106
- BS1415.52 .S55 2012
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Academic Resource Center at Levitt General Stacks (LOWER Level) | BS 1415.52 .S55 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 49114 |
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BS 1415.3 .B57 Living patiently : a devotional study of the book of Job / | BS 1415.3 .R67 1980 Job / | BS 1415.4 .G37 1989 Portraits of perseverance / | BS 1415.52 .S55 2012 Job / | BS 1422 1970 The Psalms for modern man. Today's English version. | BS 1422 .P65 1973 Psalms and Proverbs in two versions with commentary. | BS 1423 .B75 1982 Songs from green pastures : selections from the Psalms in the New King James version / |
A study guide to the Book of Job, including study questions.
Experiencing the Book of Job as a whole -- The adversary destroys Job's possessions, family and health -- Job wishes he'd never been born -- Eliphaz urges Job to trust God -- Job asks his friends to understand and sympathize -- Bildad urges Job to "plead with the Almighty" to escape the fate of the wicked -- Job wishes he could take God to court -- Zophar appeals to the hidden side of wisdom -- Job insists he's as wise as his friends and again asks God for a hearing -- Job looks for someone to believe in him -- Accused by his friends, Job declares that God will be his redeemer -- Zophar accuses Job of becoming rich by oppressing the poor -- Eliphaz renews the charge that Job has oppressed the poor -- The friends finish speaking with Job -- Where can wisdom be found? -- Job describes the losses he's suffered -- Job guarantees his innocence with a sevenfold oath -- Elihu insists that God has already been answering Job -- Elihu challenges Job to respect God's authority -- Elihu compares God's power to an approaching storm -- The Lord portrays a wild world outside the realm of humanity -- The Lord describes the terrible power of Behemoth and Leviathan.
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