The Writings
The Book of Job
11/30/2011
Religion and Its Monsters, Timothy K. Beal
God: a Biography; "Confrontation and Fiend", Jack Miles
FINAL: DECEMBER 15TH AT 3PM, SAME ROOM
Paper due: December 12th by 11:59pm
Job
a response to Wisdom literature: do good and blessings will follow
(Qoheleth is another response)
- Job is from Uz, in the East -- NOT an Israelite
- very wealthy and big family, great reputation
- God brags about Job's devotion to the Adversary
- "He's only great because nothing bad has ever happened to him" -- hasatan
- the wager: hasatan thinks he can break Job's devotion so that he curses God
- hasatan's infliction
- loses possessions and family -- Job does not curse God
- boils and extremely poor health
- friends come to "comfort" Job
- Job must have done something sinful
- because God is ultimately just
- friends speak and Job responds
- Job stands beside his innocence
- Job 21:1-7, 17 -- friends "mock;" Job's impatience; good things happen to the wicked
- Where is God's justice?
- God comes in a whirlwind
- God's answer: "I am all-powerful"
- justice not addressed
- Job's response
- Job 42:1-6 -- "I cannot speak"
- God asserts that Job is right and his friends are wrong
- why?
- Job is restored to his wealth and new family
Religion and Monsters -- Beal
- Job wants to conjure up chaos
- undoing what God has done, e.g. creating him
- suffering = undoing
- Job SUFFERS
- true suffering cannot be escaped -- Beal
- Job wants to die
- God watches Job from the panopticon --
- derived from the idea of a whole prison which can be seen from one point all the time\
- likewise, Job cannot escape God's gaze
- conjure
- Yam
- Leviathan
- chaos, in general
- an opposition to Genesis
- "let there be darkness"
- **chaos is the only answer to Job's intense suffering
- God's response
- He "out-monsters" Job -- Beal
- God controls the chaos monsters
- Leviathan
- a huge sea dragon
- in some cases in Scripture, God creates it
- other cases, God conquers it
- 41:9-11 -- use of pronouns
- talk of self and talk of self
- "who can take a stand before me"
- **God can out-chaos Job (or anyone else) -- Beal
- has harpoons and fishing spears
- has animal parts, fish and human parts
- very strong
- "classificatory obfuscation" -- descriptions don't fit together!!
- cannot be understood
- "a linguistic smokescreen"
- supporting God's sovereignty and power
- according to rabbinic Judaism, when the Messiah returns, God will hold a feast of Leviathan
God: A Biography, Miles
- focuses on Job's responses to God's speech from the whirlwind
- pg 317 -- in first response Job just gives up (Jerusalem Translation)
- Mile's translation
- "you haven't answered my question!"
- in essence, Job rests his case
- if asking why is God unjust, then God "royally changes the subject"
- no direct answer to the question of justice
- rather, God asks his own questions and asserts his power
- Job's second response
- what does it mean to repent?
- "to turn around" -- in Hebrew
- ketiv and qere
- "write" and "read"
- the Masoretes distinguish the differences between the actual text and how it ought to be read
- a more literal answer:
- "now that i see you, I shudder for mortal clay"
- no repentance
- Job terrified for humanity because he is greatly disappointed with the God he sees -- Miles
- basically, Job is sarcastic: so what if You're powerful?
also see A Serious Man, the movie