Ep 164 | Job, Come Follow Me (August 1-7)

Talking Scripture - A podcast by Mike Day & Bryce Dunford - Mercoledì

→ Show Notes: https://www.ldsscriptureteachings.org/2022/07/15/job-ep-164-quotes-and-notes/ → Enroll in Institute: https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/si/institute?lang=eng → Timestamps: 00:26 – An overview of the two parts of Job: the frame and the poem. 07:35 – In the frame, Job is described as a just and perfect man whose property and children are destroyed, yet he praises and blesses the Lord. In the end, he receives back more than he lost. 16:58 – The poem describes Job’s complaints. He even curses being born. 22:55 – Three friends come to “comfort” Job. How to properly engage with someone who is suffering. Rigid orthodoxies and a lack of true empathy can destroy relationships. 35:10 – Our capacity for joy is connected to pain. 40:38 – When we can’t see the purpose of pain, we can still trust in God’s wisdom. It is not possible for mortals to entirely understand his plan. After Job’s revelatory experience with God, his perspective changes. 46:58 – The ideology of the Deuteronomist is challenged in the poem. Why do bad things happen to good people? Why do good things happen to bad people? The answers may not come in this life, but pain will ultimately be resolved in “the third act.” 53:39 – Jesus, our Redeemer, will overcome all the injustices of mortality. 1:00:45 – Another way to see Job 19.25. The redeemer in this alternate reading is Job’s defender who will one day come and vindicate him, and will defend his statements regarding the injustice of God. 1:03:48 – A hymn to wisdom and then Job’s final speech. The Lord speaks to Job about his mighty works. God’s creative power and wisdom far exceed the Behemoth and the Leviathan. 1:09:43 – The book of Job can also be read as a temple text, a journey that returns Job back into God’s presence. → Bryce Dunford’s Website → Apple Podcasts → Google Podcasts → Spotify → Amazon Music → Stitcher → Facebook → YouTube

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