Job Ch 13 – Study

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Additional notes are Black

For those who may wish to ‘study’ this chapter, the following simple resources are provided for you. Each passage has a four-Part approach to help you take in and think further about what you have read.

A. Find Out
  1. What does Job now claim? v.1,2
  2. But what does he say he wants to do? v.3
  3. What does he say about his ’friends’? v.4,5
  4. What does he ask them to do & what is his concern? v.6-9
  5. What does he say God would do and why? v.10-12
  6. What does he realise about him speaking to God? v.13,14
  7. Yet what does he believe? v.15,16
B. Think:
  1. What does Job think about his friends?
  2. What concern has he about speaking out to God?
  3. Yet what is his confidence?
C. Comment:

This is quite a remarkable passage. First of all Job declares that he is aware of the truth of all that he has just said (v.1), that God is sovereign, and this understanding shows he is not inferior to his friends (v.2). Nevertheless he wants to speak to the Lord (v.3). Arguing with them isn’t doing any good (implied) for they don’t speak the truth about him (v.4) and they’d do better to remain silent (v.5). He wants them to listen (v.6). He implies that as they have sought to speak on God’s behalf they have not told the truth (v.7), nor have they been impartial (v.8). If He examined them they would not show up well (v.9) and He would tell them off if they were not impartial, even if they tried to hide it (v.10). His greatness would terrify them (v.11) and all their words appear as ashes (v.12), so they should keep quiet and let him speak (v.13).

Yet now he realises he is treading on dangerous ground, daring to challenge the Lord (v.14), but then comes an amazing statement of confidence in the Lord: even if God should kill him (v.15) for daring to speak (implied), he will yet trust the Lord (for his eternal destiny?) and speak out the truth as he sees it. Indeed, he feels his speaking out will be the cause of his deliverance (v.16a), for his very confidence is a sign of his righteousness (v.16b)

D. Application:
  1. Do you and I have such confidence in God’s love and goodness?
  2. Do we declare our righteousness?
A. Find Out
  1. What does he ask, what has he done & what does he expect? v.17-19
  2. What two things does he ask of the Lord? v.20-22
  3. What 3 things does he ask of the Lord? v.23-25
  4. What does he feel the Lord does? v.26
  5. What does it feel like the Lord has done? v.27
  6. What is an end result of such things? v.28
B. Think:
  1. Summarise verses 17-19.
  2. What again are the two things he asks of the Lord?
  3. What does he then go on to ask the Lord?
C. Comment:

Having declared his assurance in being able to approach the Lord (v.15,16), Job now challenges his friends over what he has to say (v.17) because he has thought this through (v.18) and is confident that he is innocent (v.19). He asks just two things of the Lord (v.20a) and will then willingly stand before the Lord to answer anything else (implied (v.20b).

He first asks the Lord to lift off His hand that seems to bring him such strife (v.21) – presumably to allow him to be more clear headed, to be more clear thinking – and then asks the Lord to bring him into His presence and let him speak (v.22). He then proceeds with his questions, assuming he is in the Lord’s presence.

First he asks what his sins are (v.23), why it is that it seems that the Lord has withdrawn from him (v.24). It seems to him that the Lord is pursuing him (v.25) and bringing him to account for all the failures of his youth (v.26) so that it feels like he is chained in this place of suffering from which he can get no relief (implied v.27). The consequence of this – for him and for any such person – is that it feels like he is slowly rotting away (v.28).

Remember that this is what Job FEELS the situation is, not what it actually is, for the Lord has allowed this NOT because of Job’s sin but for exactly the opposite – because he is righteous!

D. Application:
  1. Sometimes feelings can make life feel bad.
  2. Sometimes feelings don’t convey the truth.