Digital Logos Edition
Job 38–42 is the final volume in professor David Cline's monumental study of Job. This volume is devoted entirely to the response of the Lord from the tempest to Job and the replies of Job (Job 38–42), presenting the Lord's own explanation of his manifold purposes in creation and bringing to an unexpected conclusion Job's dramatic quest for justice.
Difficult portions of the Hebrew text are thoroughly handled, but the commentary is written for the non-technical reader and scholar alike. Clines uncovers the driving force of the argument and the drama of the book. Explanation sections at the end of each chapter brilliantly summarize the views of the speakers and offer thoughtful reflections on their theological value.
“In a nutshell, the view that will be argued here is that (1) in a legal sense, Job ‘submits,’ i.e., he withdraws his lawsuit against Yahweh, (2) since he has done no wrong, he cannot ‘repent,’ but having been in mourning, he now brings the period of mourning to an end by ‘accepting consolation,’ for his lost children as well as for the loss of his honor, a consolation that is being offered to him both from the friends and (in his own way) from Yahweh, and (3) the consolation he accepts is ‘for’ the ‘dust and ashes’ that have been the visible expression of his state of mourning.” (Page 1218)
“Whatever its mother is, it is not depicted as God’s handiwork at creation, but as an independent being.” (Page 1102)
“The genre of the speech as a whole is that of the disputation speech.” (Page 1087)
“In this speech, Job has three remarks to make: (1) he acknowledges the omnipotence of Yahweh (v 2), (2) he accepts that he has intruded into the area of ‘marvels,’ in which he has no competence (v 3b), (3) now that he has heard the utterances Yahweh has addressed personally to him (v 5), he abandons his suit against God (v 6a) together with his mourning and he intends to resume his normal life (v 6b) (if that is what that verse means). Remarks 2 and 3 are preceded by quotations he makes of the words of Yahweh, so that his remarks are presented as responses to particular utterances of Yahweh. Remark 1 is not so preceded, which may suggest that it is Job’s response to the divine speeches as a whole.” (Page 1212)
“The nodal verse is evidently the opening and headline sentence, ‘Who is this who obscures the Design by words without knowledge?’ (38:2). It leads us immediately to the essence of Yahweh’s argument, that Job’s appeal for justice has been a gross misunderstanding of Yahweh’s design for the universe, in which justice is far from being the supreme value.” (Page 1088)
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