Job - Iob

Iob

42 chapters • 1070 verses
Capitulum I

22 verses

Job's virtue and riches. Satan by permission from God strippeth him of all his substance. His patience.
Capitulum II

13 verses

Satan, by God's permission, striketh Job with ulcers from head to foot: his patience is still invincible.
Capitulum III

26 verses

Job expresses his sense of the miseries of man's life, by cursing the day of his birth.
Capitulum IV

21 verses

Eliphaz charges Job with impatience, and pretends that God never afflicts the innocent.
Capitulum V

27 verses

Eliphaz proceeds in his charge, and exhorts Job to acknowledge his sins.
Capitulum VI

30 verses

Job maintains his innocence, and complains of his friends.
Capitulum VII

21 verses

Job declares the miseries of man's life: and addresses himself to God.
Capitulum VIII

22 verses

Baldad, under pretence of defending the justice of God, accuses Job, and exhorts him to return to God.
Capitulum IX

35 verses

Job acknowledges God's justice: although He often afflicts the innocent.
Capitulum X

22 verses

Job laments his afflictions and begs to be delivered.
Capitulum XI

20 verses

Sophar reproves Job, for justifying himself, and invites him to repentance.
Capitulum XII

25 verses

Job's reply to Sophar. He extols God's power and wisdom.
Capitulum XIII

28 verses

Job persists in maintaining his innocence: and reproves his friends.
Capitulum XIV

22 verses

Job declares the shortness of man's days: and professes his belief of a resurrection.
Capitulum XV

35 verses

Eliphaz returns to the charge against Job, and describes the wretched state of the wicked.
Capitulum XVI

23 verses

Job expostulates with his friends: and appeals to the judgment of God.
Capitulum XVII

16 verses

Job's hope in God: he expects rest in death.
Capitulum XVIII

21 verses

Baldad again reproves Job and describes the miseries of the wicked.
Capitulum XIX

29 verses

Job complains of the cruelty of his friends; he describes his own sufferings: and his belief of a future resurrection.
Capitulum XX

29 verses

Sophar declares the shortness of the prosperity of the wicked: and their sudden downfall.
Capitulum XXI

34 verses

Job shews that the wicked often prosper in this world, even to the end of their life: but that their judgment is in another world.
Capitulum XXII

30 verses

Eliphaz falsely imputes many crimes to Job, but promises him prosperity if he will repent.
Capitulum XXIII

17 verses

Job wishes to be tried at God's tribunal.
Capitulum XXIV

25 verses

God's providence often suffers the wicked to go on a long time in their sins: but punisheth them in another life.
Capitulum XXV

6 verses

God's providence often suffers the wicked to go on a long time in their sins: but punisheth them in another life.
Capitulum XXVI

14 verses

Job declares his sentiments of the wisdom and power of God.
Capitulum XXVII

23 verses

Job persists in asserting his own innocence, and that hypocrites will be punished in the end.
Capitulum XXVIII

28 verses

Man's industry searcheth out many things: true wisdom is taught by God alone.
Capitulum XXIX

25 verses

Job relates his former happiness, and the respect that all men shewed him.
Capitulum XXX

31 verses

Job shews the wonderful change of his temporal estate, from welfare to great calamity.
Capitulum XXXI

40 verses

Job, to defend himself from the unjust judgments of his friends, gives a sincere account of his own virtues.
Capitulum XXXII

22 verses

Eliu is angry with Job and his friends. He boasts of himself.
Capitulum XXXIII

33 verses

Eliu blames Job for asserting his own innocence.
Capitulum XXXIV

37 verses

Eliu charges Job with blasphemy: and sets forth the power and justice of God.
Capitulum XXXV

16 verses

Eliu declares that the good or evil done by man cannot reach God.
Capitulum XXXVI

33 verses

Eliu proceeds in setting forth the justice and power of God.
Capitulum XXXVII

24 verses

Eliu goes on in his discourse, shewing God's wisdom and power, by his wonderful works.
Capitulum XXXVIII

41 verses

God interposes and shews from the things he hath made, that man cannot comprehend his power and wisdom.
Capitulum XXXIX

35 verses

The wonders of the power and providence of God in many of his creatures.
Capitulum XL

28 verses

Of the power of God in the behemoth and the leviathan.
Capitulum XLI

25 verses

A further description of the leviathan.
Capitulum XLII

16 verses

Job submits himself. God pronounces in his favour. Job offers sacrifice for his friends. He is blessed with riches and children, and dies happily,

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