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Job defends his innocence and purity in a negative confession, touching on themes of lust, justice, and idolatry. Learn how Job's chapter 31 relates to the Sermon on the Mount and the Egyptian Book of the Dead.
10 cze 2018 · Job 31 Commentary: Have you ever found yourself in the position of needing to give a defense of your actions? Or even a defense of your character? It’s difficult to do. And one thing that makes it so difficult is that you’re not wanting to boast of yourself. You’d rather let the lips of another…
“Chapter 31 is Job’s Sermon on the Mount, for in it he touches on many of the same issues of spiritual ethics that Jesus covers in Matthew 5-7, including the relationship between lust and adultery (Job 31:1, 9-12), loving one’s neighbor as oneself (Job 31:13-15), almsgiving and social justice (Job 31:16-23), and the love of money and ...
Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary. 31:1-8 Job did not speak the things here recorded by way of boasting, but in answer to the charge of hypocrisy. He understood the spiritual nature of God's commandments, as reaching to the thoughts and intents of the heart.
What are the signs of a person transformed through faith in Jesus Christ? Job Chapter 31 describes several signs. These include a life of: (1) purity, (2) integrity, (3) faithfulness, (4) kindness / compassion, (5) justice, (6) contentment, and (7) love. First, Job swore that he had made a covenant with his eyes to keep himself pure.
Job 31, the final chapter of Job's monologues, stands as a passionate and poignant proclamation of his integrity and virtue in the face of profound suffering. Within its verses, Job lays bare his moral character, detailing the ways in which he has sought to live an upright life.
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