JbJob

1.Job's righteousness and his wealth and family are described. Satan challenges God to test Job's faith.
2.Job's suffering increases as he loses his wealth, children, and health. His wife urges him to curse God, but Job remains faithful.
3.Job's friend Eliphaz accuses him of wrongdoing and warns of consequences for his perceived sins.
4.Job's friends Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar try to console him, but Job laments his suffering and questions God's justice.
5.Job questions the reason for his suffering and desires death, expressing his despair and longing for relief.
6.Job laments his suffering and longs for death, expressing his anguish and frustration.
7.Job laments his life, feeling hopeless and longing for death. He questions God's treatment of him and asks for relief from his suffering.
8.Job questions the reason for his suffering, expressing his longing for death and his belief that God has turned against him.
9.Job expresses his despair, wishing for an intermediary between him and God. He questions the suffering of the innocent.
10.Job questions why God is treating him so harshly and feels abandoned and unfairly judged.
11.Zophar accuses Job of speaking foolishly and urges him to repent to be restored by God.
12.Jó laments his suffering and questions why the wicked prosper while he suffers. He expresses his desire for God to answer him.
13.Job expresses his frustration with his friends, longing to plead his case directly to God and seeking understanding of his suffering.
14.Job expresses his despair and longing for death, asking God for relief from his suffering and reflecting on the fleeting nature of life.
15.Eliphaz accuses Job of speaking empty words and reminds him of the consequences of sin.
16.Job expresses his disappointment and grief, feeling abandoned by his friends and by God, longing for someone to advocate for him.
17.Job laments his suffering and feels like he is facing the end. He feels abandoned by his friends and is overwhelmed with grief.
18.Job's friend Bildad speaks, warning of the fate of the wicked and the consequences of turning away from God.
19.Job expresses his anguish and longing for justice, while also declaring his belief in a future Redeemer who will vindicate him.
20.Zophar accuses Job of wickedness and predicts his downfall, emphasizing the fleeting nature of worldly success.
21.Job questions why the wicked prosper while the innocent suffer, and laments the lack of justice in the world.
22.Eliphaz accuses Job of wickedness and urges him to repent and seek God's forgiveness.
23.Job longs for a chance to present his case to God and to understand why he is experiencing such suffering.
24.Job laments that the wicked go unpunished, crying out for justice and questioning why God allows such suffering.
25.Bildad accuses Job of being foolish and arrogant in attempting to argue with God, emphasizing the power and majesty of God.
26.Job acknowledges God's sovereignty and power, expressing awe and reverence for His wisdom and understanding.
27.Jó acknowledges the power and justice of God, and that the wicked will face punishment while the righteous will be rewarded.
28.Job reflects on the value of wisdom and the difficulty of finding it, acknowledging that only God truly understands wisdom's depths.
29.Job reminisces about his former prosperity and the respect he had in the community before his suffering.
30.Job describes his current suffering and the way he has been treated by others, expressing his deep distress and despair.
31.Job defends his integrity, stating he did not indulge in lust, deceit, or injustice, and did not mistreat his servants and the poor.
32.Elihu speaks out, rebuking Job's friends for failing to refute his arguments and for being unable to answer his questions.
33.Job questions God's justice and desires to present his case before Him.
34.Elihu rebukes Job's friends for not answering his arguments and condemns Job for speaking without knowledge.
35.Job demands an explanation from God for his suffering and questions the justice of his situation.
36.Job acknowledges his own ignorance and the greatness of God's wisdom, power, and sovereignty.
37.Job speaks to God, acknowledging His power and wisdom, and he expresses repentance and humility.
38.Jó's friends are rebuked by God for speaking wrong things about Him, but Jó prays for them and receives blessings.
39.God's wisdom and power are beyond human understanding, and Job humbly acknowledges this and repents for his previous arrogance.
40.God challenges Job to explain the mysteries of creation and the natural world, humbling Job in his limitations.
41.God challenges Job to explain the mysteries of creation and shows his power through the wonders of nature.
42.Job acknowledges God's omnipotence and repents in humility for questioning His ways.