Immerse: Bible Reading Experience - NLT Daily Bible In A Year

Exploring the Profound Wisdom of Job: A Study on Faith and Suffering

Join us on day three hundred and seventeen of the Immerse Daily Bible Reading Experience as we explore the powerful story of Job. Job, a man of complete integrity and faith, faces unimaginable suffering and challenges the conventional wisdom of his time. This episode dives into Job's dialogues with his friends, his unwavering faith, and God's ultimate response. We also witness the theophany where God directly questions Job, revealing deeper truths about suffering, faith, and divine justice. This profound wisdom drama teaches that our understanding of God and his ways is limited, yet our trust in His goodness should remain unwavering. Here, we see Job's eventual restoration and the dramatic transformation of his circumstances, illustrating that faith amidst suffering is crucial. Tune in to reflect on the enduring lessons from the Book of Job and strengthen your own faith journey.

00:00 Introduction to the Book of Job
00:32 Job's Prosperity and Sudden Catastrophes
00:52 Job's Friends and Their Confrontation
01:15 Job's Protest and Demand to Meet God
02:24 The Poetic Dialogues and Job's Complaint
03:17 God's Appearance and Response to Job
03:49 The Conclusion and Lessons from Job's Story
05:19 The Story of Job Begins
06:23 Satan's Challenge and Job's Suffering
11:20 Job's Lament and Curse of His Birth
12:33 Job's Despair and Longing for Death
14:13 Conclusion of Today's Reading

Buy Immerse: Poets Now!
Volume 5 
Immerse: Poets is the fifth of six volumes of the Immerse: The Bible Reading Experience. Poets presents the poetical books of the First Testament in two groupings, dividing the books between songbooks (Psalms, Lamentations, Song of Songs) and wisdom writings (Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Job). These writings all reflect the daily, down-to-earth faith of God’s people as they live out their covenant relationship with him in worship and wise living.

4 Questions to get your conversations started:
1. What stood out to you this week?
2. Was there anything confusing or troubling?
3. Did anything make you think differently about God?
4. How might this change the way we live?

QUICK START GUIDE
3 ways to get the most out of your experience
  1. Use Immerse: Beginnings instead of your regular chapter and verse Bible. This special reader’s edition restores the Bible to its natural simplicity and beauty by removing chapter and verse numbers and other historical additions. Letters look like letters, songs look like songs, and the original literary structures are visible in each book.
  2. Commit to making this a community experience. Immerse is designed for groups to encounter large portions of the Bible together
    for 8 weeks–more like a book club, less like a Bible study. By meeting every week in small groups and discussing what you read in open,
    honest conversations, you and your community can come together to be transformed through an authentic experience with the Scriptures.
  3. Aim to understand the big story. Read through “The Stories and the Story” (p. 483) to see how the books of the Bible work together to tell God’s story of his creation’s restoration. As you read through Immerse: Beginnings, rather than ask, “How do I fit God into my busy life?” begin asking, “How can I join in God’s great plan by living out my part in his story?”
And for more great Bible podcasts for Christians and small groups, check out https://lumivoz.com or search for Lumivoz in your podcast app of choice.

What is Immerse: Bible Reading Experience - NLT Daily Bible In A Year?

Take a breath, find your place, and read deeply. Discover the joy of reading God’s word with the Immerse New Living Translation (NLT) Bible.

This daily Bible podcast will take you through the Bible in a year following the Immerse Bible Reading Experience. So grab your family and small group and go through the Bible in a year together with Immerse. Each of the 6 volumes is available online or at your favorite Christian bookstore.

Henry: Welcome To Immerse: The
Daily Bible Reading Experience.

Day three hundred and seventeen.

Immersed in Job.

The story of Job begins by
telling us he was blameless,

a man of complete integrity.

He feared God and stayed away from evil.

Job is exactly the kind of person, the
Book of Proverbs and visions when it

calls for its readers to embrace wisdom.

According to Israel's wisdom tradition,
such characters should lead to

success and prosperity in life.

And when we first meet Job, he is indeed
prosperous and wealthy, surrounded by a

large family and respected for his wisdom.

But a sudden series of catastrophes
takes everything away, and he's left

in poverty, disfigured by disease, and
disgraced in the eyes of the community.

The book then presents an
extended dialogue between Job

and three of his friends who
come to comfort and console him.

But as it turns out, they have come
mostly to confront him with his

guilt, which they believe caused
his troubles in their unbending.

Moral universe, goodness is
always rewarded, and wrongdoing

is invariably punished.

So if Job has gone from prosperity to
suffering, There must certainly be some

great sin or failure in his life for
his part job, relentlessly protests

that he's innocent, that the Almighty
has apparently made some mistake in

allowing these tragedies into job's life
in the strength of his moral certainty.

Job demands to meet with God
and present his case directly.

The reader learns at the start of a
book that there's more to the story

than any of the players on earth know.

But the drama of Job's, arguments with
his friends and his extended complaint

to God has to play itself out since
the secret remains unknown to them.

The Book of Job is a daring exploration
of the deepest questions regarding our

faith in God and his role in the world.

According to the Bible, wisdom
is the ability to understand

the order God gave to the world.

But what happens when that ability
is stretched to its limits?

What are we to do when
our explanations fail?

What if the order in the world
itself seems to be fractured?

The Book of Job is made up of a series
of long poetic dialogues that are

bookended by brief explanatory narratives.

The poetic dialogues are
marked by powerful imagery

and elegant serious tones.

There are three rounds of these speeches
between Job and his three friends.

And all are contained within
Job's overall protest, which

is really directed toward God.

The discussion is not merely
theoretical or abstract, but rather

is set in an ongoing drama with
job's, unexplained catastrophes

squarely at the center as readers.

We will see this drama worked out as
the conflict continues throughout the

course of the book, but Job wearies of
listening to others, speaking for God.

He wants to confront God in person.

Then it happens.

There is no more talking about God.

A theophany occurs.

God appears.

Now the questioning is reversed.

In a series of magnificent poems,
God declares his creative power and

mastery over the entire creation.

God questions, job on things
he knows nothing about.

And job's, protests now appear
to be small and uninformed the

question, am I being treated justly?

Takes on new meaning in relation to
the larger context of God's intimate

knowledge and oversight of all things.

The Book of Job teaches us that any good
understanding of the mystery of our lives

begins with the knowledge that God alone
is the creator and sustainer of the world.

We learn much at the end of Job's drama.

Those who claim to speak for God
confidently attributing guilt to those who

suffer, are shown to be gravely mistaken.

God is always free unbound by any
human formulation about what he

must do in a particular situation.

He is above and beyond us doing
things We know nothing about Job's.

Suffering has not been because of
his sin and his honest protests

about his innocence are shown
to have been legitimate and

even in his complaints to God.

Job has been rooted in faith.

He never lost his trust, that
only God could intervene to

justify him and make things right.

This profound wisdom drama
concludes with God freely changing

job's, circumstances once again.

But the lesson has been learned.

We are to find no easy comfort or
blame in our formulas about God.

The creator alone sees all things.

Our lives are to be lived in faith.

Trusting the God who is good to
set all things right in the end.

The Book of Job

there once was a man named Job
who lived in the land of us.

He was blameless, a man
of complete integrity.

He feared God and stayed away from evil.

He had seven sons and three daughters.

He owned 7,000 sheep, 3000 camels, 500
teams of oxen and 500 female donkeys.

He also had many servants.

He was in fact the richest
person in that entire area.

Job's sons would take turns preparing
feasts in their homes, and they

would also invite their three
sisters to celebrate with them.

When these celebrations ended,
sometimes after several days

job would purify his children.

He would get up early in the
morning and offer a burnt offering

for each of them, for job.

Said to himself, perhaps my
children have sinned and have

cursed God in their hearts.

This was Job's regular practice.

One day the members of the heavenly court
came to present themselves before the Lord

and the accuser, Satan came with them.

Where have you come from?

The Lord asked Satan.

Satan answered the Lord.

I have been patrolling the earth
watching everything that's going on.

Then the Lord asked Satan, have
you noticed my servant job?

He is the finest man in all the earth.

He is blameless a man
of complete integrity.

He fears God and stays away from evil.

Satan replied to the Lord.

Yes, but Job has good reason to fear God.

You have always put a wall of protection
around him and his home and his property.

You have made him prosper
in everything he does.

Look how rich he is, but reach out
and take away everything he has and

he will surely curse you to your face.

All right.

You may test him.

The Lord said to Satan, do whatever
you want with everything he possesses.

But don't harm him physically.

So Satan left the Lord's presence.

One day when Job's, sons and daughters
were feasting at the oldest brother's

house, A messenger arrived at job's home.

With this news y oxen were plowing
with the donkeys feeding beside them.

When the Sabeans raided us, they stole all
the animals and killed all the farm hands.

I am the only one who escaped to tell you.

While he was still speaking, another
messenger arrived with this news.

The fire of God has fallen
from heaven and burned up your

sheep and all the shepherds.

I am the only one who escaped to tell
you while he was still speaking a

third messenger arrived with this news.

Three bands of Aldean Raiders have stolen
your camels and killed your servants.

I am the only one who escaped to tell you.

While he was still speaking, another
messenger arrived with this news.

Your sons and daughters were feasting
in their oldest brother's home.

Suddenly a powerful wind swept in from the
wilderness and hit the house on all sides.

The house collapsed and
all your children are dead.

I am the only one who escaped to tell you
job stood up and tore his robe in grief.

Then he shaved his head and
fell to the ground to worship.

He said, I came naked from my mother's
womb and I will be naked when I leave.

The Lord gave me what I had
and the Lord has taken it away.

Praise the name of the Lord.

In all of this, job did
not sin by blaming God.

One day the members of the heavenly
court came again to present

themselves before the Lord.

And the accuser, Satan came with them.

Where have you come from?

The Lord asked Satan.

Satan answered the Lord.

I have been patrolling the earth
watching everything that's going on.

Then the Lord asked Satan, have
you noticed my servant job?

He is the finest man in all the earth.

He is blameless a man
of complete integrity.

He fears God and stays away from evil.

And he has maintained his
integrity, even though you urged

me to harm him without cause.

Satan replied to the Lord, skin for Skin.

A man will give up everything he
has to save his life, but reach out

and take away his health and he will
sure surely curse you to your face.

All right.

Do with him as you please.

The Lord said to Satan,
but spare his life.

So Satan left the Lord's
presence and he struck job with

terrible boils from head to foot.

Job, scraped his skin with
a piece of broken pottery.

As he sat among the ashes, his
wife said to him, are you still

trying to maintain your integrity?

Curse God and die, but Job replied,
you talk like a foolish woman.

Should we accept only good things from
the hand of God and never anything bad.

So in all this job said nothing wrong.

When three of job's friends heard
of the tragedy he had suffered, they

got together and traveled from their
homes to comfort and console him.

Their names were Alfa.

The Timon night Bill, dad,
the shoe height, and Zohar.

The Neite.

When they saw job from a distance,
they scarcely recognized him.

Wailing loudly.

They tore their robes and threw
dust into the air over their

heads to show their grief.

Then they sat on the ground with
him for seven days and nights.

No one said a word to job for.

They saw that his suffering was too
great for words at last job spoke,

and he cursed the day of his birth.

He said, let the day of my birth be
erased, and the night I was conceived.

Let that day be turned to darkness.

Let it be lost even to God on
high and let no light shine on it.

Let the darkness and utter gloom
claim that day for its own.

Let a black cloud overshadow it
and let the darkness terrify it.

Let that night be blotted off the
calendar never again to be counted

among the days of the year, never
again to appear among the months.

Let that night be childless.

Let it have no joy.

Let those who are experts at
cursing whose cursing could

rouse leviathan curse that day.

Let its morning stars, remain dark.

Let it hope for light, but in vain,
may it never see the morning light

curse that day for failing to shut
my mother's womb, for letting me

be born to see all this trouble.

Why wasn't I born dead?

Why didn't I die as I came from the womb?

Why was I laid on my mother's lap?

Why did she nurse me at her breasts?

Had I died at birth, I
would now be at peace.

I would be asleep and at rest,
I would rest with the world's

kings and prime ministers whose
great buildings now lie in ruins.

I would rest with princes rich in gold,
whose palaces were filled with silver.

Why wasn't I buried
like a stillborn child?

Like a baby who never lives
to see the light for in death?

The wicked cause no trouble
and the weary are at rest.

Even captives are at ease in death
with no guards to curse them.

Rich and poor are both there and
the slave is free from his master.

Oh, why give light to those in misery
and life to those who are bitter?

They long for death and it won't come.

They search for death more
eagerly than for hidden treasure.

They're filled with joy when they finally
die and rejoice when they find the grave.

Why is life given to those with no future?

Those God has surrounded with
difficulties I cannot eat for sighing.

My groans pour out like water.

I.

What I always feared has happened to me.

What I dreaded has come true.

I have no peace, no quietness.

I have no rest.

Only trouble comes.

This concludes today's
Immerse Reading experience.

Thank you for joining us.