bbyrd009
Groper
- Nov 30, 2016
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i would say that it calls the literal truth into question, not the spiritual one. Especially after satan is told that he cannot kill Job. Ergo the spiritual truth--whatever it is--is the only one that can be qualified. Imo "seven" sons and "three" daughters is purely symbolic language, otherwise you have to get into the salvational state of the children, and why they could be killed but Job could not, etc.What spiritual truth does that disqualify?
I understand that you don't like the idea of God allowing Job's children to be killed and for that reason you want to make Job an allegory. But how does that disqualify any spiritual truth?
Stranger
oh, and i guess i get your Q now; the spiritual truth might be disqualified here by taking the "seven" sons and "three" daughters as literal, wherein God is presented as capricious, in allowing satan to kill them and not Job, making God a respecter of persons, perhaps. The children are obviously objectified in Job, they remain nameless, etc. But Job is, to most Christians, an upright and sinless guy, when that is not what Scripture says. Job repented of his sin, twice, at the end.
and don't get me wrong here, i see no reason to believe that Job was not "real," but i might point out that he is still just a story to us, no matter what. It does strike me as awful funny though, that most Christians believe a story about Job that is not supported by the text; Job was a sinner, guilty of lack of personal relationship with God, who repented of his sin at the end of the story.
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