I’m sorry Yahweh
Jehovah tells Job to answer Him in chapter forty. Job replies by apologizing. He decides that he has said enough. “Would you discredit my justice?” is another question that Jehovah asks of us. Sometimes we do want to argue that He is not always just, but that is because we think He is being unfair to us or someone we care about. Like Job, God may not be the one that is responsible for the actions that we blame on Him.
What is a Behemoth or a Leviathan? They are described here. They do not sound like anything I have seen in a zoo, but they resemble the reconstructed dinosaurs that are in some museums. This is a reason why this book is dated just after the flood. The creatures are now extinct but did exist at one time. The words about Leviathan take up all of chapter forty-one. Look at these two descriptions and decide if you know what they could be.
Job acknowledges again in chapter forty-two that God can do all things and that he did not know what he was talking about when he questioned His motives and actions. This story has a happy ending when Job’s friends are put in their place and Job prays for them. Job’s fortune is restored, and he and his wife are blessed with more children, seven sons, and three daughters. He lived another one hundred and forty years. His life was not cut short.






