On-Line Study Group - The Book of Job
- JewelSong
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On-Line Study Group - The Book of Job
Voronwë mentioned this and I think it might be enlightening and kind of fun to do an on-line study of the Book of Job.
I have found a pretty good study-guide that might help direct our conversation and give us sort of a time-line.
Here it is.
I think in order for this to work, people would have to be pretty committed! But we would only need a few people to make it interesting and to have some decent dialog! And actually, people could come in and out as long as they kept up with where we were in the discussion.
So...I thought maybe people could take a look at the study guide and see if this is something they might like to participate in. We could do one "lesson" a week and I would take the responsibility of keeping the thread "on track" and changing the thread title to denote the particular lesson.
What say you? Anyone up for it?
I have found a pretty good study-guide that might help direct our conversation and give us sort of a time-line.
Here it is.
I think in order for this to work, people would have to be pretty committed! But we would only need a few people to make it interesting and to have some decent dialog! And actually, people could come in and out as long as they kept up with where we were in the discussion.
So...I thought maybe people could take a look at the study guide and see if this is something they might like to participate in. We could do one "lesson" a week and I would take the responsibility of keeping the thread "on track" and changing the thread title to denote the particular lesson.
What say you? Anyone up for it?
"Live! Live! Live! Life is a banquet, and most poor suckers are starving to death!" - Auntie Mame
I would like to be up for it, Jewel! RL may intervene, as my good intentions of reading the Sil have not yet been fulfilled either, but I'll try.
My take on the message of Job is quite simple, but the book has been analyzed so many ways, it will be interesting to become familiar with other people's views.
And thanks for undertaking this! Really, it's quite a venture.
Jn
My take on the message of Job is quite simple, but the book has been analyzed so many ways, it will be interesting to become familiar with other people's views.
And thanks for undertaking this! Really, it's quite a venture.
Jn
A fool's paradise is a wise man's hell.
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Very interested but I'm not putting my name down here - as they say, the spirit is willing but the flesh is over-committed.
I'll read along and suck it up, if you don't mind - stealing nuggets of insight as they fall. And should there be some unexpected and totally unique insight of my own that I'm just bursting to share I guess I'll do it. Seems unlikely though - I don't really have rumination time and I'm not exactly known for my incisive interjections.
I'll read along and suck it up, if you don't mind - stealing nuggets of insight as they fall. And should there be some unexpected and totally unique insight of my own that I'm just bursting to share I guess I'll do it. Seems unlikely though - I don't really have rumination time and I'm not exactly known for my incisive interjections.
- Voronwë the Faithful
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Wow, I hadn't really anticipated anything quite so organized (or so soon), but I will certainly try to participate to the extent that I can (as long as I don't have to lead the discussion).
"Spirits in the shape of hawks and eagles flew ever to and from his halls; and their eyes could see to the depths of the seas, and pierce the hidden caverns beneath the world."
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- truehobbit
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I have the deepest mistrust of study guides, I must admit.
Have you read it through and seen whether is has any bias or agenda?
I'd of course be interested to read the text, because I never have. I know the story only as far as it is popularly known, and I read some parts cursorily after finishing the fabulous novel "Job" by Joseph Roth (which I might take the opportunity to recommend once again ), in order to find out how much of it was parallel to the biblical Job.
Have you read it through and seen whether is has any bias or agenda?
I'd of course be interested to read the text, because I never have. I know the story only as far as it is popularly known, and I read some parts cursorily after finishing the fabulous novel "Job" by Joseph Roth (which I might take the opportunity to recommend once again ), in order to find out how much of it was parallel to the biblical Job.
but being a cheerful hobbit he had not needed hope, as long as despair could be postponed.
It probably does have bias, but we're diverse enough here to catch the bias where it appears. I don't particularly care is a source is biased as long as I know what the bias is, and there is someone who knows enough about the competing view to point out where bias has colored the text.
Jn
Jn
A fool's paradise is a wise man's hell.
Can I ask this question, right at the start?
Job, Chapter 1, verse 6: "Now there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord, and Satan came also among them."
Leaving Satan aside for now, who were "the sons of God"?
I haven't read this for a long time. I didn't remember this part at all.
Job, Chapter 1, verse 6: "Now there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord, and Satan came also among them."
Leaving Satan aside for now, who were "the sons of God"?
I haven't read this for a long time. I didn't remember this part at all.
Dig deeper.
I don't know, vison. I've heard it said that the book of Job is the oldest book in the Bible, so it's happenings could coincide with the early chapters of Genesis, where these 'sons of God' are also mentioned (Chap. 6) as taking wives from among the daughters of men, whose offspring it says were mighty. Angels maybe?
Actually, my bible (NIV) interprets that word as "angels".
It says One day the angels came to present themselves before the Lord, and Satan also came with them.
I have a study bible, and the footnotes (which I dig in a really big way) say:
1:6 the angels. Literally, the sons of God. This phrase is used of angels elsewhere in Scripture (38:7; see note on Gen. 6:2). This interpretation harmonizes with the fact that Satan, himself an angelic being, joined them on this occasion.
It says One day the angels came to present themselves before the Lord, and Satan also came with them.
I have a study bible, and the footnotes (which I dig in a really big way) say:
1:6 the angels. Literally, the sons of God. This phrase is used of angels elsewhere in Scripture (38:7; see note on Gen. 6:2). This interpretation harmonizes with the fact that Satan, himself an angelic being, joined them on this occasion.
"What do you fear, lady?" Aragorn asked.
"A cage," Éowyn said. "To stay behind bars, until use and old age accept them, and all chance of doing great deeds is gone beyond recall or desire.”
― J.R.R. Tolkien, The Return of the King
"A cage," Éowyn said. "To stay behind bars, until use and old age accept them, and all chance of doing great deeds is gone beyond recall or desire.”
― J.R.R. Tolkien, The Return of the King
The Hebrew text says "b'nai ha-el", sons of God, as far as I can tell, and the translation from Hebrew reads "Now it fell upon a day, that the sons of God came to present themselves before the LORD, and Satan came also among them." Which is subtly different from "came with them" in that it seems to imply that he didn't just show up uninvited but did indeed have a place among the "sons of God".
"What a place! What a situation! What kind of man would put a known criminal in charge of a major branch of government? Apart from, say, the average voter."
Terry Pratchett, Going Postal
Terry Pratchett, Going Postal
I believe 'sons of God' does refer to the angels ... but this is also a colloquial expression in Hebrew meaning someone blessed or protected by God. In the context of Job the colloquial Hebrew can probably be ruled out. 'Sons of man' would be the descendants of Adam, i.e. us.
Cerin, I was googling last night about the date of this book. Speculation seems to be all over the map. There are scholars who date it with Abraham, others with Moses, and others with David. But the consensus seems to put it no earlier than the 6th nor later than the fourth century BCE. That would mean it probably originated during the Babylonian exile, and the present form was fixed in the 4th ce around the time of Plato and Aristotle.
There's also a later Greek version which is different from this one.
There are nice long articles about the historicity of Job in Wikipedia and The Jewish Encyclopedia,
One of the interesting things I found - I think it was in the Jewish Encyclopedia - was the that book is believed to be a composite from two sources. Scholars believe that the beginning and the end were authored and placed like bookends around an earlier tale to give it new context. This fits my own (admittedly dilletante) view of the story, though I did not know about this when forming my opinion. My own opinion is that the point of the story is contained in the very last scene, in the conversation between Job and God. If there is any analysis that has treated this conversation as non-rhetorical I'm not aware of it; but it seems to me that the book only make sense if this conversation is not rhetorical. If the appearance of God at the end was indeed added to an existing tale about the arbitrariness of Divinity (and a front end would have been needed then for narrative consistency), I would feel bolstered in my opinion about the point of the story.
Jn
Cerin, I was googling last night about the date of this book. Speculation seems to be all over the map. There are scholars who date it with Abraham, others with Moses, and others with David. But the consensus seems to put it no earlier than the 6th nor later than the fourth century BCE. That would mean it probably originated during the Babylonian exile, and the present form was fixed in the 4th ce around the time of Plato and Aristotle.
There's also a later Greek version which is different from this one.
There are nice long articles about the historicity of Job in Wikipedia and The Jewish Encyclopedia,
One of the interesting things I found - I think it was in the Jewish Encyclopedia - was the that book is believed to be a composite from two sources. Scholars believe that the beginning and the end were authored and placed like bookends around an earlier tale to give it new context. This fits my own (admittedly dilletante) view of the story, though I did not know about this when forming my opinion. My own opinion is that the point of the story is contained in the very last scene, in the conversation between Job and God. If there is any analysis that has treated this conversation as non-rhetorical I'm not aware of it; but it seems to me that the book only make sense if this conversation is not rhetorical. If the appearance of God at the end was indeed added to an existing tale about the arbitrariness of Divinity (and a front end would have been needed then for narrative consistency), I would feel bolstered in my opinion about the point of the story.
Jn
A fool's paradise is a wise man's hell.