: anonymous
: The Book of Job
: Aroha
: 9798312164220
: 1
: CHF 26.40
:
: Religion/Theologie
: English
: 100
: kein Kopierschutz
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB
The Book of Job A poetic biblical work exploring the themes of suffering, faith, and divine justice. Job, a righteous man, endures profound loss and trials, questioning God's fairness. Ultimately, the narrative delves into human limitations in understanding divine wisdom and the importance of faith through adversity.






The idea is, Let the day of my birth be got rid of, so that no other come into being on such a day; let God pass from it—then He will not give life on that day. Mingled in this is the old world notion of days having meanings and powers of their own. This day had proved malign, terribly bad. It was already a chaotic day, not fit for a man's birth. Let every natural power of storm and eclipse draw it back to the void. The night too, as part of the day, comes under imprecation.











The vividness here is from superstition, fancies of past generations, old dreams of a child race. Foreign they would be to the mind of Job in his strength; but in great disaster the thoughts are apt to fall back on these levels of ignorance and dim efforts to explain, omens and powers intangible. It is quite easy to follow Job in this relapse, half wilful, half for easing of his bosom. Throughout Arabia, Chaldæa, and India went a belief in evil powers that might be invoked to make a particular day one of misfortune. The leviathan is the dragon which was thought to cause eclipses by twining its black coils about the sun and moon. These vague undertones of