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Job 21 refuses easy math: many who ignore God prosper and die in peace, while others suffer long. Scripture widens the horizon to God’s timetable and a future public judgment, steadying worship and compassion today.
Zophar’s speech in Job 20 warns that evil collapses quickly and that God exposes hidden guilt. The wider canon agrees with the warning but corrects his compressed timetable, directing us to patience, refuge, and a public day when the Lord sets all things right.
Job 19 records social collapse and a plea for pity, then rises into the confession, “I know that my redeemer lives.” The chapter anchors hope in a living Defender and looks ahead to seeing God with our own eyes.
Bildad’s second speech catalogs how evil unravels but misreads Job by forcing a quick verdict. This study sets his warnings inside Scripture’s longer horizon of patient justice, real refuge, and unfailing light.
Job 17 moves from a broken spirit to a bold plea for God to be his guarantor, then asks where hope can be found. Scripture answers with a Person who secures our case and strengthens clean hands to endure.
Job 16 exposes counsel that wounds and teaches lament that tells the truth to God. At the center stands a “witness in heaven,” pointing readers to the Advocate who pleads for his friends and steadies faith in the dark.
Eliphaz magnifies God’s holiness and human sin yet turns general truths into a verdict against Job. This study shows how Scripture corrects that error, calls for compassionate counsel, and anchors hope in God’s just and patient rule.
Job 14 speaks plainly about short, troubled lives and wonders if the dead will live again. Scripture carries that ache to Christ’s resurrection, where forgiveness is sure and hope endures beyond the grave.
Job 13 models candid faith that refuses slogans and seeks God himself. It warns counselors against partiality and steadies sufferers with resilient hope.
Job 12 confronts easy answers and centers us on God’s unsearchable wisdom and unstoppable power. Learn how creation, conscience, and history all testify to his faithful rule and how that shapes humble, compassionate living today.
Zophar’s first speech blends true doxology with a verdict God never gave. This study weighs his claims, shows their limits, and points to the Mediator whose wisdom holds justice and mercy together while we wait for noonday.
Job 10 brings complaint into the presence of the Creator who formed bone and sinew. It shows how faith appeals to God’s kindness, seeks pardon without bargaining, and asks for a “moment’s joy” while awaiting the day when darkness and disorder are no more.
Job 9 pairs a hymn to God’s power with a courtroom dilemma no mortal can win. The chapter ends in longing for a mediator—answered in Scripture by the One who removes the rod and opens fearless access to God.
Bildad defends God’s justice with vivid images and confident maxims, yet misapplies them to a blameless sufferer. This chapter helps us prize true doctrine, resist weaponized proverbs, and seek God earnestly while we wait for promised joy.
Job 7 addresses God directly with images of hired labor, the weaver’s shuttle, sleepless nights, and the sea’s chaos. The chapter dignifies lament, asks for measured mercy, and pleads for pardon—preparing the road toward the Redeemer who answers our nights.
Job 21 Chapter Study
Published by Brother Woody BrohmJob 21 refuses easy math: many who ignore God prosper and die in peace, while others suffer long. Scripture widens the horizon to God’s timetable and a future public judgment, steadying worship and compassion today.