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The Bible Recap

Day 004 (Job 1-5) - Year 7

Sat, 04 Jan 2025

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FROM TODAY’S RECAP: - Video: Job Overview - Revelation 12 Note: We provide links to specific resources; this is not an endorsement of the entire website, author, organization, etc. Their views may not represent our own. PREP EPISODES (in case you haven’t listened yet): 1. Let's Read the Bible in a Year (Chronological Plan)! 2. How I Learned to Love (Reading) the Bible 3. Why Reading the Whole Bible is Important (interview with Lee McDerment) 4. Preparing to Read the Bible 5. Avoiding Common Mistakes: What to Look for When You Read the Bible 6. Reading the Bible in Community SHOW NOTES: - Follow The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | TikTok | YouTube - Follow Tara-Leigh Cobble: Instagram - Read/listen on the Bible App or Dwell App - Learn more at our Start Page - Become a RECAPtain - Shop the TBR Store - Credits PARTNER MINISTRIES: D-Group International Israelux The God Shot TLC Writing & Speaking DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.

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Full Episode

1.955 - 25.893 Tara-Leigh Cobble

Hey Bible Readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for The Bible Recap. Today's reading landed us about 400 years post-flood, and we met a man named Job. Initially, he sounds a lot like Noah. He's blameless and upright and fears God. In Noah's story, things got really dark. Then there was some relief at the end.

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26.053 - 46.169 Tara-Leigh Cobble

And not to give spoilers, but we'll see the same type of thing playing out in Job's story. Based on our conversation from day two, you may have noticed that Job 1.6 referred to the angels as sons of God, including Satan, who in his created form is an angel. In Job 1.8, God initiates a conversation about Job with Satan.

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46.929 - 66.843 Tara-Leigh Cobble

One thing worth noting here, the word Satan means adversary, one who resists, accuser. There's some debate about this, but many people believe Satan is not necessarily a proper name that refers to one being, but that it's a general term referring to God's adversary, in this instance, a fallen angel who opposes God's reign.

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67.717 - 89.011 Tara-Leigh Cobble

Later in scripture, we have references to a specific fallen angel named Lucifer. But there's reason to believe that the word Satan doesn't always refer specifically to Lucifer. There are many fallen angels who are God's adversaries. In fact, a lot of people believe that Revelation 12 indicates that one-third of all the angels God created ended up rebelling against him and were cast from heaven.

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89.211 - 108.323 Tara-Leigh Cobble

So there are a lot of Satans. And I think if I were to pronounce that word correctly, it would be Satan. But I'm not going to try to get too weird here. After God initiates the conversation about Job with one of his enemies, the enemy concocts a plan to test Job and we see God allowing it. Here's what's noteworthy to me in this section.

108.823 - 128.133 Tara-Leigh Cobble

God didn't create the plan for testing Job, but he allowed it. He wasn't the active agent in the evil perpetrated by Satan, but he was still sovereign over it. And in his mercy, he limited it. Satan was on a leash. He was not allowed to take Job's life. Satan attacked Job in a variety of ways.

128.474 - 150.331 Tara-Leigh Cobble

In 1.11-19, we saw that his losses came twice as acts of men, the Sabaeans and the Chaldeans, and twice as acts of nature, fire from heaven and wind. Quick sidebar, I wonder if the phrase fire from heaven is an old school way to refer to lightning. Regardless, God granted Satan the opportunity to influence both of those things, the acts of man and the acts of nature.

150.911 - 175.913 Tara-Leigh Cobble

For God to allow Satan to influence those things means that God himself is the one who has control over those things. You can't give someone influence over something that isn't in your domain. Job's response to all this trouble was humble. 122 says, In all this, Job did not sin or charge God with wrong. In 210, Job acknowledged that everything comes from God's hand, and he received it.

176.854 - 193.986 Tara-Leigh Cobble

He's handling his grief pretty well until three of his friends show up on the scene. They came to show him sympathy and comfort, and they did a great job of that during the seven days when they sat in silence with him. The problem was when they started to talk. Maybe you've had friends like that, or maybe you've been a friend like that.

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