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Pain, Perplexity & Promotion: A Prophetic Interpretation of the Book of Job

Pain, Perplexity & Promotion: A Prophetic Interpretation of the Book of Job
By Bob Sorge

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Product Description

The essential theme of the book of Job is to reveal how God takes a man who is blameless and upright, with a passion for God and a willing spirit, and promotes him to a higher spiritual plane than he


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #247744 in Books
  • Published on: 1999-06
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 179 pages

Customer Reviews

Pain, Perplexity, and Promotion5
Pain is always painful, but there is a great deal of redemptive value in it when we can cooperate with the hand of God. The author does a good job of encouraging a proper response to His hand. In the turmoil of fear and doubt that accompany spiritual pain, pain that is not related to the consequence of sin, there is a need to maintain a proper attitude toward God. In the proper heart, our heavenly Father is able to recreate our human nature into the heart of Jesus.

We all have to walk a similar road, but only a few embrace the pain long enough to be recreated in His image. There are always an adequate supply of nearby outspoken 'voices' that desire to find a solution. Out of misunderstanding, these voices often assume that the discipline we experience is of punishment rather than the discipline that shapes our lives.

If it appears that God's blessing is far from you and others around you are attributing your 'failure' to some sin in your life, it may be that God is testing your soul in the crucible of pain and perplexity to prepare you for promotion.

This book is a must read volume on the subject of righteous suffering. Read it. It is like an ointment that soothes your soul. It brings focus to the purpose of difficulty and pain in our lives. It helps Jesus bring forth a newness of life from the depths of your pain. Like a mother who brings forth a child, this pain is soon forgotten once its work is done.

Enjoy,

DRM

A book of healing in a very personal way5
I believe Bob touched something very deep into the heart of the Father. The beautiful plan that God has by having this book of Job into the bible is to prepare the end-time bride generation, by first raising up a Job-generation! Job's name may mean "Father-less", but Job himself learned to dwell in His presence through all the trials and accusation of his so-called "friends" (I pray I won't have friends like these when I am in trouble), and when Job can finally claimed that "now my eyes have seen you!", he is ready to raise a generation of youths that are "the most beautiful in all the land" and they are ready to really inherit all the abundance from God.

Bob's book heals me, and raiss me up, from my own pits and slimes. I know I can be a better father now, and know that to raise my children up as Godly children, I need to encounter Him in a very personal way first.

mostly disappointing1
Based on a dispensationalist theology and so-called prophetic interpretation, this book was rather disappointing. This book was written to sound more like a general discussion, rather than a well thought out, soul searching commentary, which was surprising considering the 'suffering' the author is said to have endured. Where is the questioning? Where is the pain? Where is the substance that those who have suffered and endured for so long are searching for? Having said that, there is some merit to the book, in that it gives a general commentary on Job - nothing you couldn't find in a meatier book though. I'd recommend books like: 'God and Human Suffering' (Hall); 'Where is God when it hurts' (Yancey); and 'Prayer' (Yancey) as an alternative to exploring pain and suffering in general. These guys provide far more insight and depth in one chapter than Sorge does in his whole book.