Send us a text What keeps a person from renouncing what they once swore by when life collapses in a day? We sit with Job on the ash heap, slow down the charged moment with his wife, and examine what “curse God and die” really means when rendered as renounce, reject, or deny. From that ground zero, we trace a pattern as old as Eden: temptation often reaches us through those closest to us, not to scapegoat loved ones, but to expose how grief, fear, and urgency can be weaponized. Job’s reply—“Sh...
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Send us a text What keeps a person from renouncing what they once swore by when life collapses in a day? We sit with Job on the ash heap, slow down the charged moment with his wife, and examine what “curse God and die” really means when rendered as renounce, reject, or deny. From that ground zero, we trace a pattern as old as Eden: temptation often reaches us through those closest to us, not to scapegoat loved ones, but to expose how grief, fear, and urgency can be weaponized. Job’s reply—“Sh...
LIVE DISCUSSION: The Calamities of Job Begin (Part 2 of 4)
The Bible Provocateur
35 minutes
6 days ago
LIVE DISCUSSION: The Calamities of Job Begin (Part 2 of 4)
Send us a text What if loss arrives all at once and refuses to explain itself? We sit with Job’s story to learn how to endure suffering without surrendering our witness, and we ask the harder question most of us avoid: not why pain happens, but how to walk through it with steady faith and honest hearts. We explore why Job’s character matters before the calamity and how Jesus and James anchor his story in history, not myth. That grounding changes everything: if God formed us from dust and spe...
The Bible Provocateur
Send us a text What keeps a person from renouncing what they once swore by when life collapses in a day? We sit with Job on the ash heap, slow down the charged moment with his wife, and examine what “curse God and die” really means when rendered as renounce, reject, or deny. From that ground zero, we trace a pattern as old as Eden: temptation often reaches us through those closest to us, not to scapegoat loved ones, but to expose how grief, fear, and urgency can be weaponized. Job’s reply—“Sh...