update from sparkleup

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Madison Scott-Clary 2022-04-27 22:45:20 -07:00
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<p>God appears to Job and his friends and expounds on the fact that none of them do &mdash; nor indeed can &mdash; possibly understand the ways in which he works. They&rsquo;re not just mysterious, they&rsquo;re vast and incomprehensible. This makes the most sense in a panentheistic view. If He is outside time, then, from our point of view, those ways stretch both forwards and back. If they envelop and pervade all things tangible and intangible, then they are beyond even our causal domain.</p>
<p>Even in a grounded, Jahwist, immediate and physical view of God (He is, after all, there in the form of a whirlwind), his entrance comes off as bizarre and unnerving. He passes through the physical plane as the Sphere does through the Square&rsquo;s planar existence. Even in so physical a form, He proves His very incomprehensibility.</p>
<p>And if He does not exist? The folktale and the book as a whole do not depend on the existence of God in their interpretation. They still work to repudiate the idea that, if bad things happen to you, it is because you&rsquo;re a bad person.</p>
<p>These interpretations are doing a lot of work, however. They accept at face value Job&rsquo;s capitulation in chapter 40, where, after being thoroughly excoriated by no less than God Himself, he says, &ldquo;Look, I am worthless. What can I say back to You?&rdquo; (Job 40:4, Alter) and &ldquo;I have spoken once, and I will not answer; twice, but will proceed no further.&rdquo; (Job 40:5, NRSV)<sup id="fnref:1versions"><a class="footnote-ref" href="#fn:1versions">8</a></sup></p>
<p>These interpretations are doing a lot of heavy lifting, however. They accept at face value Job&rsquo;s capitulation in chapter 40, where, after being thoroughly excoriated by no less than God Himself, he says, &ldquo;Look, I am worthless. What can I say back to You?&rdquo; (Job 40:4, Alter) and &ldquo;I have spoken once, and I will not answer; twice, but will proceed no further.&rdquo; (Job 40:5, NRSV)<sup id="fnref:1versions"><a class="footnote-ref" href="#fn:1versions">8</a></sup></p>
<p>Who can blame Job? God is quite frankly terrifying. No matter how strongly I might call God to account, I strongly suspect that I, too, would fall flat on my face and do what I could to have so terrible a gaze move away from me.</p>
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