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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.

chaff and is a metaphor of divine judgment (Isa. 40:24; 41:15; Jonah 1:13). In Job 9:17, Job uses the related word seʿarah (beginning with the letter sin rather than samek) to describe his fear that, should he gain an audience with God, “He would crush me with a storm.” Thus Job (and the reader) cannot know at first what God’s intentions are in appearing as he does. The “storm” cannot be taken universally as a sign of judgment, however, since fierce storm imagery describes the presence of God in
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