The Bible Recap - Day 008 (Job 17-20) - Year 8
Episode Date: January 8, 2026SHOW 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 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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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
Yesterday, as we finished our reading, Job was calling his friends miserable comforters.
Today, he continues talking to them, and he opens by saying,
My spirit is broken.
I just feel for him.
I've been there.
There were times when Job and Lamentations were the only book.
of scripture I wanted to read. I felt known by Job. In chapter 18, Bill Dad speaks again.
You probably remember Bill Dad as bad friend number two. He's the one who told Job that he needed
to repent. So now he's doubling down, just like Elifaz did yesterday, with reminders that God
punishes the wicked. This is a catch-22, because it not only means Job's suffering was
punishment for his wickedness, but also that if he doesn't change his ways, more punishment is
coming for him. But I love Job's reply in Chapter 19. He continues to point to God's role and
rescue in his troubles. He says things like, he has walled up my way so that I cannot pass,
and he has set darkness upon my paths. These sound like really hard things to say about God,
and yet, in 1925, Job says, I know that my Redeemer lives, and at the last he will stand upon the
earth. This quote isn't just hopeful on Job's part. It's actually prophetic. It points not only to
the first coming of Christ, which for us has already happened, but also to the second coming of
Christ, which is yet to come. At the last, he will stand upon the earth. We're not to the last yet,
but Zachariah 14-3 tells us more about Christ's return. And Revelation chapter 5 verse 10 and
chapter 20, verse 6, point to a future time when Christ will reign on earth. Even in his darkest moments,
Job points out eternal truths about God. In chapter 20, Zofar, bad friend number three speaks again.
He claims a spirit spoke to him, and he believes it was a word from God. The same thing happened a few
days ago when we read about the first time Elifaz spoke in 412 through 16. Elifaz said,
a word was brought to me stealthily. My ear received the whisper of it. A spirit glided past my
face, the hair of my flesh stood up. There was silence. Then I heard a voice. So far in Elavaz
presumably do this to add more weight to their words and force Jogue to listen and comply.
But here's what's interesting to me. This spirit or spirits that they're referencing in chapter
four and chapter 20, they never identify themselves. Scripture doesn't tell us who those spirits are.
Hold on to that thought as we continue reading, because there might be some conclusions
you could reach about who this spirit was or spirits were.
One of the things that's important for us to do is to weigh carefully where the Word of God
intersects with our own thoughts.
For instance, I want to be really careful to separate out my own opinions of things
from what Scripture is actually teaching.
At some point, you're likely going to disagree with one of my opinions.
That's a good thing.
I'm not trying to convince anyone to agree with anything I say,
from Scripture. Are there times when God speaks to us? I believe God's spirit does give impressions
to his children. After all, one of his names is guide. But I'm always aiming to be careful with how I relay
that information. Saying, God told me X carries a lot of certainty with it. I'd be more likely to say
it this way. I feel like God was saying X, or I feel like God was impressing this on my heart. I'm also really
careful not to ask God to tell me what he is going to do or reveal the future to me. Few things have
gotten me into greater confusion and error than that. Probably because asking those questions is like
my own subtle attempt to control my future and not have to trust God, which really gives
an opportunity for me to hear my flesh speak more loudly than God. But back to Job. Remember how I
told you I thought Job's friends might have been jealous of him? That last part of Zofar's speech today
reinforces that whole idea for me, because in chapter 20, verses 12 through 29, it seems like
Zofar is accusing Job of being greedy and selfish. He says things like, he has crushed and abandoned
the poor. He seized a house that he did not build. He knew no contentment in his belly. He will not
let anything in which he delights escape him. That sounds terrible. But we have to weigh Zofar's
words about Job against God's words about Job. And we see they don't align. These
These passages with Job's friends are the ones I usually reference when I'm urging people not
to take Scripture out of context, because if you were to pull some of their quotes out of this
section, you would think Job was wicked. Are the statements in Scripture? Yes, and Scripture
is God's Word. But this particular passage is a personal quote within God's word. It's God
quoting someone else. We have to pay close attention to context, or we'll miss what's actually
being communicated to us by God.
What was your God shot for today's reading?
The attribute of God I saw portrayed in today's reading was when Job said,
I know that my Redeemer lives, and at the last, he will stand upon the earth.
This not only says a lot about Job that he could believe this in the midst of his struggle,
but it says a lot about God.
First, we see God's relationship with Job even on his worst days.
Job doesn't just call God a Redeemer or the Redeemer.
but my redeemer. It's personal. It's intimate. Second, we see that God is a redeemer. To redeem
means to buy back. Job has hope that this isn't the end of his story, even if it's the end of his life.
Job trusts that God will redeem this somehow. Third, we see that God is alive. My Redeemer lives.
So many of Job's loved ones had passed away, but not
God, he knows that God is still with him and he will be forever. At the last, he will stand up on the
earth. I hope I have this kind of trust in God when trouble inevitably comes my way again.
And storing up these truths about him like we're doing as we read right now is one way to make
sure our feet are on solid ground when the storms come, because he is the solid ground. And he's
where the joy is. If you're ever listening to an episode and you think, whoa, Tara Lee, slow down,
I have a great news for you. You are the boss of how fast I talk. If I'm talking too fast,
maybe I'm actually talking too fast, or maybe you've accidentally hit the button on your
podcatcher that speeds up my voice. Most podcatchers have a button where you can choose from a variety
of speeds, faster or slower. If you don't know how to adjust the speed, just do a web search
for the phrase, how to adjust the speed of a podcast, plus the name of the app you use to listen.
Hopefully this helps.
