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"Have you considered Job? Job reveals suffering’s purpose through messianic hints: a heavenly witness, an arbiter, and the declaration of a living Redeemer. These themes point to Christ as mediator and kinsman-redeemer, offering hope beyond guilt, accusations, and pain."
Job is usually treated like a book you survive, not a book you savor. We come at it from a different angle: Job as a Christ-centered story packed with messianic prophecy, mediation language, and resurrection hope that shows up long before the Gospels. If you’ve ever wondered why suffering can feel so personal and God can feel so distant, Job’s words are strangely direct, and they push us toward a solution that’s bigger than willpower or good advice.
We walk through four distinct passages where Job’s pain breaks open and a clear theological signal shines through. Job longs for an “arbiter” who can stand between him and a holy God, then he insists he has a witness in heaven who will testify for him. From there we hit the line that has carried generations through grief: “I know that my Redeemer lives.” We connect those statements to core Christian doctrine about Jesus Christ as the Divine Mediator, Advocate, and Intercessor, and we talk honestly about why that matters when guilt, shame, and accusations start to feel louder than grace.
Then we dig into the Hebrew word Goel, the kinsman-redeemer, and trace the redemption pattern from Job into Ruth and ultimately to Christ’s incarnation. We also zoom out to the full narrative: Job’s friends offer confident but wrong counsel, God answers from the whirlwind, and the twist is that Job becomes an intercessor for the very friends who misjudged him, a powerful type of Christ. If you want deeper Bible study, biblical theology, and a fresh way to read the Book of Job, press play, then subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the conversation.
This program was made possible by the Plays One Word family of supporters. To find out more, check out our website at playsonword.org
Plays On Word Newsletter Sign Up • Support Plays On Word Radio & Plays On Word Theater • The Plays on Word Theater team is always setting up new performance dates! If you want us to visit your church/venue/community, please reach out with your inquiries here: https://playsonword.dm.networkforgood.com/forms/event-submission-form
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By Pastor/ Artist Fred Kenney Jr.Send a text
"Have you considered Job? Job reveals suffering’s purpose through messianic hints: a heavenly witness, an arbiter, and the declaration of a living Redeemer. These themes point to Christ as mediator and kinsman-redeemer, offering hope beyond guilt, accusations, and pain."
Job is usually treated like a book you survive, not a book you savor. We come at it from a different angle: Job as a Christ-centered story packed with messianic prophecy, mediation language, and resurrection hope that shows up long before the Gospels. If you’ve ever wondered why suffering can feel so personal and God can feel so distant, Job’s words are strangely direct, and they push us toward a solution that’s bigger than willpower or good advice.
We walk through four distinct passages where Job’s pain breaks open and a clear theological signal shines through. Job longs for an “arbiter” who can stand between him and a holy God, then he insists he has a witness in heaven who will testify for him. From there we hit the line that has carried generations through grief: “I know that my Redeemer lives.” We connect those statements to core Christian doctrine about Jesus Christ as the Divine Mediator, Advocate, and Intercessor, and we talk honestly about why that matters when guilt, shame, and accusations start to feel louder than grace.
Then we dig into the Hebrew word Goel, the kinsman-redeemer, and trace the redemption pattern from Job into Ruth and ultimately to Christ’s incarnation. We also zoom out to the full narrative: Job’s friends offer confident but wrong counsel, God answers from the whirlwind, and the twist is that Job becomes an intercessor for the very friends who misjudged him, a powerful type of Christ. If you want deeper Bible study, biblical theology, and a fresh way to read the Book of Job, press play, then subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the conversation.
This program was made possible by the Plays One Word family of supporters. To find out more, check out our website at playsonword.org
Plays On Word Newsletter Sign Up • Support Plays On Word Radio & Plays On Word Theater • The Plays on Word Theater team is always setting up new performance dates! If you want us to visit your church/venue/community, please reach out with your inquiries here: https://playsonword.dm.networkforgood.com/forms/event-submission-form
Plays On Word website
Plays On Word YouTube
Plays On Word Facebook
Plays On Word Instagram
Email us: [email protected]