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Job delves into questions as old as humanity and as contemporary as today’s headlines. How does God’s justice work? How are we to understand suffering? More importantly, how are we to respond to it? Through careful analysis and explanation of Job’s dialogue, Wilson sheds light on its core message: a call to faithfully persevere by entrusting the answers to God.

him as one “blameless and upright; feared God and shunned evil” (1:1; compare 1:8). In addition, the prologue leaves the reader in no doubt regarding the reason for Job’s suffering; it is a divinely sanctioned test of his willingness to endure faithfully without payment. With these issues settled from the outset, the dialogue can no longer be about the reason for innocent suffering—we know why Job is suffering. Nor can the debate actively pursue the question whether retributive theology is an adequate
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