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The Devil’s Devices. ( From Luxury To Landfill (Job). Job. Rejoice and be glad, O daughter of Edom , You who dwell in the land of Uz ! – Lam.4:21. Real person (Job 1:1; Ezk.14:14, 20) Lived in Uz (1:1) East (1:3) Edom? ( Teman , 2:11) Patriarchal period. I. Job’s Attributes.
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The Devil’s Devices (From Luxury To Landfill (Job)
Job Rejoice and be glad, O daughter of Edom, You who dwell in the land of Uz! – Lam.4:21 • Real person (Job 1:1; Ezk.14:14, 20) • Lived in Uz(1:1) • East (1:3) • Edom? (Teman, 2:11) • Patriarchal period
1. Blameless Lord Fam. Gov. ? • Not sinlessly perfect • Whole; upright • Partial = immature, imperfect (Mt.5)
1. Blameless2. Upright • Straight, i.e., not crooked / perverse • Jg.17:6 • “What you see is what you get”
1. Blameless2. Upright3. Feared God • Fear, reverence, honor
1. Blameless2. Upright3. Feared God4. Turned away from evil • Turn aside • Pr.3:7
1. Blameless2. Upright3. Feared God4. Turned away from evil5. Family man, 2, 4-5 • Concerned over children’s spiritual status – especially at parties • Job, priest of family • Regular practice • Before Moses • No written revelation
1. Blameless2. Upright3. Feared God4. Turned away from evil5. Family man, 2, 4-56. Rich • Multitudes, 3 • Each son owned a house, 4 • Yet, he is righteous
1. Blameless2. Upright3. Feared God4. Turned away from evil5. Family man, 2, 4-56. Rich7. Respected, popular judge Job 29:7-25
I. Job’s Attributes II. Job’s Adversary
Job 1:6-12 Admits Job’s morals Attacks Job’s motives 6: ‘sons of God’ – heavenly context 7: 1 Pt.5:8 8: God ‘rubs it in’ (Ac.1:24) 9-10: satan the cynic “For nothing?” [rich uncle] “Hedge” [invisible fence] Slanders God (bribery) and Job (price)
Job 1:6-12 Gn.3: promises pleasure to entice Job: provides pain to break him 6: ‘sons of God’ – heavenly context 7: 1 Pt.5:8 8: God ‘rubs it in’ (Ac.1:24) 9-10: satan the cynic 11: curse (lit.: bless) 5; 1 K.21:10; Ps.10:3 12: God in control, not satan
I. Job’s Attributes II. Job’s Adversity III. Job’s Afflictions
Job 1:13-19 Job cannot recover from one shock before hearing another What did Job lose? Wealth (happy occasion – birthday?) • Two natural disasters • Two man-made disasters
Job 2 Formerly, fence; now, flesh 7: one big sore; 8 Varietyofsymptoms: 7:4-5, sleep, skin, worms, 7:14, nightmares 19:20, weight loss 30:30, skin, bones Wealth Health, 2:4-8
Job 2 . . . Wealth Health, 2:4 Wife, 2:9-10 Friends, 2:11-13 / 19:13-19 Reputation, 4:7; 30:1… [Jn.9:2; Lk.13] Peace of mind, 10:2
I. Job’s Attributes II. Job’s Adversity III. Job’s Afflictions IV. Job’s Approval
1. God honored Job Job Worship 1:20 Self-control 2:10 Teaches us how to respond in time of crisis Trusted him to disprove satan’s lies (1:9, 20; 2:3) • 1 Pt.1:6-7 • 1 Pt.2:12
1. God honored Job2. Job trusted God 1 Very idea of judging God is absurd 2Job loves God more than ‘things’ (Gn.22) In prosperity In adversity • 42:3 – • Does not explain suffering • Does not justify God’s ways w. man • Extols deep faith in spite of suffering • 42:5, ‘now my eye sees You…’ • 42:6 – maturity agonizes over sin
1. God honored Job2. Job trusted God3. God defended Job Job’s friends were not the last people who thought theywere speaking for God 42:7-8 – “My servant” [1 Pt.5:7] • Christians boast in cross of Christ • God boasts in His children
1. God honored Job2. Job trusted God3. God defended Job4. Satan, our adversary Wants to destroy us Lk.13:…16 2 Co.12:7-10. God overrules for good
Conclusions 1 counter satan’s slanders 2 comfort sufferers. Ja.5:11 1. God allowed Job to suffer in order to . . . 2. Moses’ law required double restoration for stealing ‘ox, donkey, or sheep’ (Ex.22:4)
Conclusions 3. God is worthy of worship at all times, 1:20 4. God does not explain suffering; trust, 42:3 5. To see God, first see ourselves, 42:5-6 6. Easier to see other’s faults, 42:7-9 7. It’s not all bad; somewhere a Job…