Introduction: The End? Why would you start a new study of the book of
Job and call the first lesson, “The End?” Ask my wife. When she reads
a book, she reads the end first. I’ve never done that, but my wife
wants to know how things will come out because that gives her comfort
as she reads the book. Following in the tradition of my wife, let’s
dive into the study of Job by looking at the end!

  1. Job’s View of Himself and Justice


    1. Since we are starting at the end, let me give you a brief
      overview of the Book of Job. Job is a great man who is
      blessed by God. However, in series of terrible events, he
      loses everything, including his health. The great question
      in the book is “Why?”


    2. Read Job 31:1. This is Job speaking. What does he say
      about his sexual purity? (That he deliberately refuses to
      look lustfully at women.)


    3. Read Job 31:2-3. What should be the result of this purity?
      (God is supposed to give ruin to the wicked, not to the
      good. How can bad things be happening to me, Job asks, if
      God is paying attention?)


      1. When Job speaks of “man’s lot from God above” and
        “his heritage,” what is he saying about God’s
        obligation? (The gift from God to humans is that
        those who do wrong suffer.)


        1. How is that a gift, a heritage? (If you avoid
          wrong, bad things will not happen to you – now
          that is a gift.)


    4. Read Job 31:5-6. What other merit does Job claim? (He is
      honest.)


    5. Read Job 31:9-11. What does Job say about his conduct in
      addition to not coveting other women? (He has also not
      been sleeping with them.)


    6. Read Job 31:13-15. What does Job say is his attitude
      towards those in his employ? (He gives them justice
      because he knows that he and his employees must both
      answer to God.)


    7. Read Job 31:16-18. How does Job treat the poor and the
      powerless? (He treats them as if they were his children.)


    8. Read Job 31:24-28. Job was a very wealthy man. What was
      his attitude towards money?


      1. What was his attitude towards the sun and moon? (Job
        asserts that he neither trusted in wealth nor trusted
        in the heavens. His trust was in God.)


    9. Read Job 31:29-30. What is Job’s attitude toward his
      enemies? (He does not rejoice when they fail, and he does
      not curse them.)


    10. Assume Job is telling us the truth, what does this say
      about him? (When it comes to purity, honesty, compassion,
      and trust in God, he is faithful.)


  2. Job’s Demand for Justice


    1. Read Job 31:35-37. “Defense,” “answer,” “indictment” –
      these are all legal terms. What is Job saying? (He wants
      someone to be a judge between him and God. Job says, “I am
      willing to accept responsibility for my actions.” I want
      someone greater than God to judge whether I have been
      faithful or not.”)


      1. Why does Job want to sue God? (Re-read Job 31:2-3.
        Bad people are supposed to suffer, not good people.
        Job says “I understand the rules of the system, I’ve
        done what is right. God has done me an injustice, God
        is not playing by His rules. I am willing to prove
        that I have been obedient.”)


      2. Read Deuteronomy 28:1-2 and Deuteronomy 28:15. Is Job
        wrong about God’s system? (No. Job understands the
        way God’s system is supposed to operate.)


    2. Read Job 32:1. Have we mistaken what Job is arguing? (No.
      The three men with him understand Job is arguing that he
      is righteous and what is happening to him is unfair.)


  3. God’s Response to Job


    1. Read Job 38:1. What mental picture should we have when we
      read that God answers “out of the storm?” (God comes from
      a place of power and danger.)


    2. Read Job 38:2-3. Is God giving Job his trial? (Yes, sort
      of. God says that He will question Job and Job will have
      to answer.)


      1. What does God mean when He refers to “darkens my
        counsel with words without knowledge?” (He means that
        Job does not know all the relevant information. Job
        thinks that his own behavior and God’s general rules
        are the only matters that are relevant, but God says
        Job is missing some important information.)


    3. Read Job 38:4-7. What is God’s point with this set of
      questions to Job? (God created the world and Job did not.)


    4. Read Job 38:16-18. What is God’s point with this set of
      questions? (That Job does not know very much about his own
      world. God knows the world inside and out.)


    5. Read Job 38:19-21. What is God’s point with this set of
      questions? (Job does not know about the sun or the moon or
      the movements of the galaxies. His knowledge is limited
      because his life span is so short.)


    6. Read Job 39:26-28. What is God’s point with this set of
      questions? (Job does not know how to fly, must less how to
      design birds to fly.)


    7. Read Job 40:1-2. Is God giving Job his hearing? (Yes! God
      demands an answer from Job – if he is brave enough to give
      one.)


  4. Job’s Courtroom Response


    1. Read Job 40:3-4. What kind of answer is this? (Job admits
      that he is unworthy to haul God into court and demand that
      God explain Himself.)


    2. Read Job 40:5. Has Job conceded his “law suit” against
      God? (He says he will “say no more.” The answer is “yes,”
      he admits he was wrong.)


  5. God’s Courtroom Rebuttal


    1. Read Job 40:6-8. This is a very different question. What
      is God’s concern with Job’s complaint and request for a
      hearing? (That he is discrediting God’s justice.)


      1. Notice this question, “Would you condemn me to
        justify yourself?” How many people blame God when it
        is obvious (even to you) that they are responsible
        for their own problems?


      2. Wait a minute! If Job is righteous (and he is), how
        is God’s response appropriate? What about Deuteronomy
        28 which says behavior has consequences?


    2. Read Job 40:15-19. What animal is described here? (It
      seems like a description of the dinosaur.)


      1. What does God say about the dinosaur? (He created it
        and He can kill it.)


        1. Is the inference that since God created Job, He
          can kill him too?


    3. We are going to skip the rest of this chapter and the
      next, because they are a series of similar statements by
      which show God’s absolute power over the creation.


  6. Job’s Surrender


    1. Read Job 42:1-3. What does Job admit about the extent of
      his knowledge of God and His creation? (He is ignorant. He
      does not understand.)


    2. Read Job 42:4-6. Job listed all of his righteous actions.
      For what is he repenting? Why does he despise himself?
      (Job did not trust God when Job had imperfect knowledge.)


      1. Is that what should most concern us, whether we trust
        God?


    3. When we study the Book of Job, we will find that there is
      a very clear explanation about why Job suffered so much.
      God never gives Job that explanation. Instead, God simply
      says what we just reviewed. Why? Why not tell Job what was
      going on? (What shouts out at us is that God told Job,
      “I’m God and you are not. Sit down, shut up and trust Me.
      I have absolute knowledge, understanding and power. Your
      job is to trust Me.)


      1. Is that a satisfactory answer for you when troubles
        come?


    4. Read Job 42:10-16. How does Job’s life end? (He is rich,
      blessed, has a great new family, and he got to see his
      great, great grandchildren. He died of old age.)


    5. As we will see next week, God pulls back the curtain for
      us to show us exactly why Job suffered. Why does God tell
      us, but not explain it to Job? (God wants us, like Job, to
      simply trust Him when trouble comes. But, God is willing
      to show us that His decisions make sense.)


    6. Friend, will you trust God?


  7. Next week: The Great Controversy.