Synopsis of Book of Job
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Chapter:Verse(s) |
Structure |
Action |
Notes |
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1:1
- 2:13 |
Prose |
Prologue
(The Legend) |
Yahweh
and Satan wager; Satan inflicts (God allows) evil/suffering |
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1:1 - 5 |
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Narrative
Introduction to Job |
Yahweh
proclaims Job His most righteous man – God-fearing and free from sin –
essentially provoking Satan (the Accuser; the Adversary) |
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1:6 -
12 |
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First
Scene in Heaven |
Yahweh
and Satan (or Job’s adversary?) wager to prove Job’s righteousness, that is,
to discern whether Job is purely pious, uninterested in reward or blessing
(“Just don’t lay a hand on him.”) |
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Job's
First Test and Its Outcome |
Job
suffers loss of prosperity/possessions (oxen, asses, herdsmen; sheep,
shepherds; camels, camel drivers) and children, but remains righteous |
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2:1 -
7a |
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Second
Scene in Heaven |
Yahweh
and Satan make a more pointed wager – to strike Job bodily (“Just don’t kill
him.”) |
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2:7b -
10 |
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Job's
Second Test and Its Outcome |
Deepening
calamity – Job suffers loss of personal health (“skin for skin” – skin ulcers,
leprosy; skin is stripped away; ritualistically symbolic); wife speaks; Job
makes ambiguous response but remains patient |
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Narrative
Conclusion |
Narrator
introduces Job's friends and alludes to Job’s growing pain/suffering; Job and
friends wait seven days and nights in silence (meditating/reflecting?) |
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3 -
14 |
Poetry |
First
Round of Discourses |
Job,
Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar |
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3 |
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Job's
Cry of Pain (or Job’s Lament) |
"To
Have Been or not to Have Been" – Job looks at the miseries of man’s life
and regrets the day he was born (Did seven days alter Job’s
consciousness/psyche?) |
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4 - 5 |
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Eliphaz's
First Speech |
"Remember
the Consolation You Have Given Others" – Eliphaz charges Job with
impatience and notes suffering results from sinfulness |
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6 - 7 |
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Job's
Response to Eliphaz |
Job
maintains his innocence, complains of his friends, declares the miseries of
man’s life, and addresses God |
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8 |
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Bildad's
First Speech |
"Trust
the Tradition of the Ancestors" – Bildad defends God’s justice, accuses
Job, and exhorts him to return to God |
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9 - 10 |
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Job's
Response to Bildad |
Job
seeks common ground with God in law and workshop, acknowledges God’s justice
(though He often afflicts the innocent), laments, and begs delivery |
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11 |
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Zophar's
First Speech |
On the
hidden depths of divine wisdom – Zophar reproves Job for justifying himself
and invites him to repent |
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12 - 14 |
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Job's
Response to Zophar |
Job
extols God’s power and wisdom, maintains his innocence, reproves his friends,
declares the days of man short, and talks of afterlife – does it exist? |
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15 -
21 |
Poetry |
Second
Round of Discourses |
Job,
Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar |
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15 |
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Eliphaz's
Second Speech |
Response
to Job challenging his implied standpoint – Eliphaz returns to the charge of
sinfulness against Job and describes the wretched state of the wicked |
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16 - 17 |
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Job's
Response to Eliphaz II |
On
comfort, witness, and the energy of hope – Job appeals to the judgment of
God, again proclaims his innocence and hope in God, expects rest in death |
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18 |
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Bildad's
Second Speech |
The
place of the wicked in a moral universe – Bildad again reproves Job and
describes the miseries of the wicked |
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19 |
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Job's
Response to Bildad II |
A sense
of kinship beyond a sense of total abandonment – Job complains of his
friends’ cruelty, describes his sufferings, and looks to judgment and vindication
by God, but wants it in this life (“while still in my flesh”) |
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20 |
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Zophar's
Second Speech |
The
portion of the wicked in a moral universe – Zophar declares the shortness of
the prosperity of the wicked and their sudden downfall |
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21 |
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Job's
Response to Zophar II |
The
true horror of the fate of the wicked – Job shows that the wicked often
prosper in this world, even to the end, wants them – not their sons – judged! |
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22 -
27 |
Poetry |
Third
Round of Discourses |
Job,
Eliphaz, Bildad (possibly Zophar); dialogue begins to break down |
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22 |
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Eliphaz's
Third Speech |
Response
to Job, direct attack, and renewed appeal for submission – Eliphaz falsely
imputes many crimes to Job, but promises him prosperity if he repents |
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23 - 24 |
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Job's
Response to Eliphaz III |
A
search for Yahweh in space and time – Job wishes to be tried at God’s
tribunal and talks of God’s providence and the ways of the wicked; speaks
again of injustice and prays for “direct” justice for the wicked |
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25 |
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Bildad's
Third Speech |
The
dialogue begins breaking down – Bildad proclaims God’s justice before whom no
man can be justified (in five short verses) |
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26 - 27 |
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Job's
Response to Bildad III (possibly Zophar III around 27:8) |
Job
declares his view of the wisdom and power of God, asserts again his own
innocence; and notes that hypocrites will be punished in the end (or is this Zophar
III at 27 or 27:8?); talk is of eventual justice (on descendents, widows) |
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28 -
31 |
Poetry |
Soliloquy |
Job’s
monologue, dramatic reflections |
|
28 |
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A
Meditation on Wisdom |
The
inaccessibility of Wisdom (is this Job?) – Man’s industry searches for many
answers, but true wisdom is taught by God alone |
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29 |
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Job
Begins His Summation |
For the
defense: Recollection of things past;
total harmony w/ Yahweh – Job relates his former happiness and the respect
that all men showed him |
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30 |
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More
Summation |
Recognition
of things present; total God-forsakenness – Job shows the wonderful change of
his temporal estate, from welfare to great calamity |
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31 |
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A Final
Oath |
Total
integrity – Job, to defend himself from the unjust judgments of his friends,
gives a sincere account of his own virtues, and brings his words to an end |
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32 –
37 |
Poetry |
A
Voice for Yahweh |
Elihu’s
Speech; some translations choose to leave out (as if not original with rest
of story/drama) |
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32:1 –
37:24 |
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Elihu
Speaks as Prophet (Mediator?) – Perhaps moves emphasis from justice to
wisdom? Or to what? Prepares the way
for Yahweh’s appearance? |
The sudden appearance of Elihu as inspired
(brash?) young prophet – angry at Job for seeking (and questioning God’s) justice;
angry at friends for condemning Job; blames Job for asserting his own
innocence; reminds Job that God is greater than man; charges Job with
blasphemy; sets forth the power and justice of God; declares that the good or
evil done by man cannot reach God, but God will look into the causes of each;
shows God’s wisdom and power by His wonderful works; speaks of
representative/advocate for man to God at 33:23; notions of justice, wisdom,
irrationality/randomness of justice?
“wise of heart” cannot perceive God |
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38:1
- 42:6 |
Poetry |
Job
Gets His Trial |
Yahweh
makes his case and Job responds |
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38:1 -
40:2 |
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Yahweh's
First Speech or Interrogation |
The
voice from the Whirlwind – God interposes and shows from the things He hath
made that man cannot comprehend His power and wisdom |
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40:3 –
5 |
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Job's
Response to Yahweh |
Job
submits (or repents, a more Christian notion). N.B.: these verses go missing from the Latin
Vulgate, Aquinas’s translation for his exposition on Job |
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40:6 -
41:34 |
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Yahweh's
Second Speech or Interrogation |
God (unsatisfied
with Job’s first response?) initially confronts Job about his assertions
regarding divine justice and God’s apathy and uninvolvement in the world; then
God boasts of His power in the behemoth and the leviathan (hippopotamus and
crocodile) – the first of all his creations, even before man |
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42:1 –
6 |
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Job's
Response to Yahweh II |
Job's
second submission (or repentance again, in most Christian translations);
speaks this time of understanding, knowing, seeing; Does he indicate he
understands? Has Job finally
encountered/achieved wisdom? Has God? What does this “ending” imply for Job’s
consciousness? For God’s? |
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42:7
– 17 |
Prose |
Epilogue |
Order
and freedom in felicity |
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42:7 - 10a |
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Yahweh's
Response to the (3) Friends (Where’s Elihu?) |
Job's
last test – God reprimands Eliphaz and his two friends (Bildad and Zophar),
telling them to sacrifice through Job so that God might accept Job’s prayer |
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42:10b
- 17 |
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Restoration
and More |
Happy
ever after? – God gives Job twice as much as before; (returns?) seven sons
and three daughters; daughters (not sons) are named and given status equal to
sons (meaning anything?); Job lives a long, happy life |
Sources: Compiled from Alden, Aquinas (Exposition on Job), ben Joseph (Book of Theodicy), Janzen, Mitchell (The Book of Job), Sacks (Book of Job with Commentary), Wharton, the Holy
Bible (Douay Version), the Tanakh (JPS translation),