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Related: About this forumIs there justice in the Book of Job
This is without doubt due, in part, to the Books amorality. I believe that if you woke a lot of people in the middle of the night, and asked them why they cared about the Book of Job, they would name the most troubling, least sympathetic character in that document: God. He, not Job, is the star of the Book, and though he is not loving or fair, that seems to be part of the attraction. Once God appears and speaks, you are almost blown to the ground. Hast thou an arm like God? he demands. Then, in a rolling magnificat, he names the things that he has created: the earth, the sea, the night, the light, the constellations, the clouds, the winds, the dew, the rain, the snow, the hail, the frost, the thunder and lightning. He goes on to the animals: the goats, the asses, the hinds, the peacocks, the ostriches, the grasshoppers. In two celebrated passages, he describes with pride the monsters he created: Behemoth and Leviathan, Behemoths counterpart in the sea: His breath kindleth coals, and a flame goeth out of his mouth. Gods description of the warhorse is even more exalting, because this creature is unquestionably real, not fantastic. Likewise the eagle: She dwelleth and abideth on the rock, upon the crag of the rock, and the strong place. From thence she seeketh the prey, and her eyes behold afar off. She brings pieces of flesh back to her children. They feed on the blood.
Gods speech slaughters the moral, the what-should-be, nature of the rest of the Book of Job. It is the knife flash, the leap, the teeth. And despite, or because of, its remorselessness, it is electrifying. It is like an action movie, or a horror movie. Of course, Job is important in the story, but today he seems the pretext, the one who is like us, and makes the argument that we would make. As for God, he makes the argument that, at least as far as nature is concerned, is true.
New Yorker Dec 16
Is there justice in the Book of Job? http://nyr.kr/1kbJS5D
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Is there justice in the Book of Job (Original Post)
Warren Stupidity
Dec 2013
OP
rug
(82,333 posts)1. That's a long read.
Bookmarked for later.
dimbear
(6,271 posts)2. A nice softball for a Sunday afternoon,,,,,,,,,
NOT A CHANCE.
It has always puzzled me why that service group called Job's Daughters chose such a fatal name.
Daughters aren't really fungible.
Not really.