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For he performs that which is appointed for me. Many such things are with him.
Verse Takeaways
1
God's Plan, Not Chance
Commentators like Barnes and Spurgeon emphasize that Job finds a strange comfort in this verse. He recognizes his suffering is not random but is "appointed" by God. Believing that trials are part of a deliberate, divine plan is more comforting than feeling like a victim of blind chance. This perspective provides a "granite foundation" for faith during hardship, knowing that a wise God is in control, even when His reasons are unclear.
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Book Overview
Job
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8
18th Century
Presbyterian
For he performs the thing that is appointed for me - “I am now meeting only what has been determined by his eternal plan. I do not …
19th Century
Anglican
He performeth the thing that is appointed for me. — “He will accomplish my appointed lot; He will complete that which…
Baptist
For he performeth the thing that is appointed for me: and many such things are with him.
"More arrows to pierce me, more sorrows to …
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17th Century
Reformed Baptist
For he performs [the thing that] is appointed for me The same word is used as at the end of (Job 23:12) …
Since Job never questions that his trials are from God's hand and that there is no such thing as chance, how does he account for them? The principl…
13th Century
Catholic
In his discourse, Eliphaz proposed two charges against Job (Job 27:5, 12): first, that he had been punished because of his very great e…
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