Why do bad things happen to good people? That's the basic question in Job. Theodicy is a defense of God's justice in spite of life's onslaught of overwhelming evil. This question has plagued mankind since... well, since the time of Job.
Retribution theology can be summed up in the phrase: What goes around comes around. We read this thinking in the book of Deuteronomy: Love the Lord your God . . . then you will live and increase . . . But if your heart turns away . . . you will certainly be destroyed (30:16-18). We get the same kind of thinking in the book of Proverbs: Whoever listens to me will live in safety and be at ease, without fear of harm (1:32).
When Job lost everything he had, he must have thought: Wait! This isn't supposed to happen to me - I read Proverbs. I signed up for the extended warranty!
But we all know bad things do happen to good people, don't we?
That's why, even though Job can get tedious at times, there's something about these writings that keep bringing us back, as if we can identify with Job, unlike some of those Bible characters who are a little too good to be true.
So you had a bad day...
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