divine justice

  • Job Meets Jesus – Applying NT Typology to the Man of Uz

    Job’s trials, mediator cry, vindication, and restoration typologically foreshadow Christ’s sinless suffering, intercession, resurrection, and exaltation. Key NT fulfillments highlight the cross as theodicy’s resolution. Discontinuities (Job’s rebuke vs. Christ’s perfection) underscore Christ’s superiority. Job becomes a hopeful story of trust leading to glory.

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  • The OT Through Jesus’ Eyes – New Testament Proof for a Christ-Centered Bible

    Jesus and the apostles teach that the entire Old Testament points to Christ (Luke 24:27; John 5:39; 1 Peter 1:10–12). This unified narrative—types, shadows, promises—culminates in Jesus, providing the foundation for reading Job as a Christocentric book of suffering and redemption.

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  • Strengthening the Shadows – Addressing Job’s Christocentric Typology

    Critiques of Job-as-Christ typology include dating issues, inferred links, wisdom-genre focus, and individual vs. communal emphasis. Scriptural refinements (progressive revelation, patterns, NT motifs) strengthen it while respecting discontinuities. Job is chastised; Christ never is—typology illuminates but does not equate.

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  • Exile and Restoration – A Later Dating Strengthens Job’s Universal Message

    A post-exilic context reframes Job as encouragement amid national judgment, contrasting Israel’s deserved exile with innocent suffering. Job as everyman expands to universal scope, foreshadowing Christ’s humiliation-to-exaltation arc. Parallels are strong yet limited: earthly/temporary restoration vs. Christ’s eternal, cosmic victory.

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  • Before Abraham? Job, Melchizedek, and Early Messianic Shadows

    Job’s patriarchal feel and outsider status parallel Melchizedek, suggesting pre-Abrahamic Messianic depth. His atypical innocent suffering ordained by God prefigures Christ’s cross, yet Job’s humble rebuke differs from Christ’s perfect submission. This “early” lens highlights universal redemption pointing beyond Israel to Jesus.

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