JOB Study Guide
JOB Study Guide
JOB Study Guide
Discussion Guide by
Ben Reed, editor
Karen McGinnis
Lee Hall
Edition 1.1
Copyright © 2010 Grace Community Church, Clarksville, Tenn. (http://www.gcomchurch.com)
All rights reserved.
Ben Reed
Community Groups Pastor
Grace Community Church
For a copy of the biblical commentary that was put together for small
group leaders at Grace Community Church, please email
[email protected].
Bottom Line:
Struggles are not always the result of personal sin.
1. Job went through some pretty intense temptation. Have you ever
experienced this kind of temptation in your life? Have you ever blamed
God of doing wrong, or wanted to? What were the circumstances? Did
you pass or fail the test?
2. Based on Job 2, why is Job subjected to the torment that comes on him?
Is this a result of his sin?
3. Why has God singled him out to Satan? In light of this, is his torment a
punishment or an honor?
5. Did Job ever know in his lifetime what caused all this to come upon
him? Will we always understand why we suffer?
JOB: LEARNING TO RIDE OUT THE STORM...10
6. In 1st Peter 1:6-7, Peter writes:
In this, you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while
you may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials.
These have come so that your faith—of greater worth than
gold, which perishes even though refined by fire—may be
proved genuine and may result in praise, glory and honor
when Jesus Christ is revealed.
Do you believe that trials prove your faith to be real? How do they do
that? Can faith be proved genuine without trials?
7. How did Paul prove his own faith was genuine? (hint: see 2
Corinthians 11:23-27)
9. What do you need to do about this? What can you be confident will
happen?
Prayer
How can the group partner with you, and help share your burdens? Write
down others requests so you can keep up with them, and be reminded to
pray for them throughout the week.
Are you married? Dating? How long have you been together? What’s
one thing you enjoy doing together as a couple?
If you’re single, what hobbies do you have? Do you desire that your
future spouse enjoy that hobby, too?
Bottom Line:
Pain can be the greatest test for a marriage.
As we saw in Job 1, Job's life has fallen apart. He's lost everything. In
one fell swoop, all that he knows and loves has been taken away, and he's
left with only his wife.
Read Job 2
At the beginning of chapter 2, we again see Satan afflicting Job, but this
time, he’s attacking Job's physical body. Job is left alone to scrape his
wounds with broken pottery.
2. Do you agree that we tend to take out our frustrations on those who are
closest to us? Why do we do that when those are the people we love?
4. Have you ever blamed God for something bad that happened? Is it ever
right to blame God?
5. Instead of choosing to work through the pain, and grow through it, Job's
wife simply wanted the pain to be over. When have you been in such pain
that you just wanted it to be over...immediately...whatever it took?
10. How has individual pain and struggle affected your marriage?
Your closest companion, the one you trust, can lead you astray. If you are
not married, how should this truth affect your search for the right mate?
Prayer
How can the group partner with you, and help share your burdens? Write
down others requests so you can keep up with them, and be reminded to
pray for them throughout the week.
Bottom Line:
Choosing the right friends affects more than your social life.
2. Have you ever felt speechless? Like you didn't know what to say to
someone who was suffering? Did you try to muster up some wisdom
anyway? How did that go?
5. I wonder at what point Job realized that this tragedy wasn't going to be
over very quickly. That he was going to have to settle in for a long period
of suffering. Because it's one thing to experience a sudden, tragic
loss...and another to realize that this suffering will be prolonged.
Do you believe that there’s a way to find joy in suffering? In light of your
past difficulties, have you found that to be true? (reference: Job 5:17)
6. Do you have any friends who will stick with you through thick and
thin? Good and bad? Who's really with you? Maybe not beside you right
now...but with you?
7. If you had friends who truly had your best interest at heart, who
encouraged you, and longed to see you grow closer to God…would that
make life a little easier to navigate? What’s stopping you from seeking
those types of friendships out?
Prayer
How can the group partner with you, and help share your burdens? Write
down others requests so you can keep up with them, and be reminded to
pray for them throughout the week.
How does it make you feel when you “lose control” of a situation?
Bottom Line:
God is in control.
1. Read James 1:2-4 and 1:13. What’s the difference between a trial and
a temptation? How can a trial reveal what we have ignored in the past?
3. Besides trials and temptations what are some other sources of problems
or pain in people’s lives?
4. We all (maybe) agree God is the source of our blessings; but is God in
control even when something bad happens?
5. If God is in control, where does free will come into play? And why
does God let evil people have free will? Why doesn’t he stop hunger,
child abuse, and other injustices?
7. How can God use the evil that happens in the world for his purpose?
Prayer
How can the group partner with you, and help share your burdens? Write
down others requests so you can keep up with them, and be reminded to
pray for them throughout the week.
Bottom Line:
It’s okay to question God.
1. When Job looked at his life in Chapter 29:1-6, he wished things were
like they were in the past, when he felt God’s presence and when things
were easy (his steps were “bathed in butter,” v.6). When you are in a
storm, how does looking back both help and hurt?
6. Right before Peter denied Jesus, in Matthew 26:31 Jesus predicted that
all of the disciples would be offended by him that night. It had to be
unimaginable to them that their Savior would be dying on a cross at the
hands of a corrupt government. This was definitely not turning out as they
expected. They would need an eternal perspective to see the good in this.
When did they get this eternal perspective? Did they stay offended?
7. The disciples returned to God and didn’t stay offended, but sometimes
Christians don’t realize this is part of spiritual battle and they can be angry
at God for years! Questioning God is not the problem, but stumbling,
falling away, and staying away are. What happens to our faith when we
remain offended at God? (Read Matthew 13:54-58 and John 6:60-66 and
discuss these people who remained offended.
Prayer
How can the group partner with you, and help share your burdens? Write
down others requests so you can keep up with them, and be reminded to
pray for them throughout the week.
Bottom Line:
God’s answer to the struggles of the world is…God.
1. After Job is afflicted with boils, he speaks about his grief in despair in
Chapter 3. In verse 25 he says, "What I feared has come upon me. What I
dreaded has happened to me." What is the thing that you dread most?
How would the struggles and perseverance of Job help you if this thing
were to actually happen to you?
2. Nowhere does God rebuke Job for being angry with Him or saying the
truth about his anger, confusion, and bitterness towards God. The Lord
instructed him and taught him his error in thinking that God was being
unjust. But He does not rebuke him for his highly emotional response
towards Him.
Have you ever been angry at God, but concealed it from everyone around
you, including God? Are you encouraged that God does not condemn Job
for speaking honestly about how he feels?
Why is it important to be frank and honest with God when you go through
periods of doubt or anger?
4. In Job 38:41, God speaks to Job about His care for the ravens. “Who
provides food for the raven when its young cry out to God and wander
about for lack of food?” Jesus also speaks about this in Luke 12:24:
“Consider the ravens: They do not sow or reap, they have no storeroom or
barn; yet God feeds them. And how much more valuable you are than
birds!”
How does Jesus' message here compare to God's message to Job? Are you
encouraged by these verses, or do you have trouble believing them? Do
you find it difficult to trust that God actually cares for you?
7. In Chapter 42:7, the Lord speaks to Eliphaz and says, “I am angry with
you and your two friends, because you have not spoken of me what is
right, as my servant Job has.”
What did Eliphaz and his friends say about God that was wrong? What
did Job say that was right?
8. In Chapter 42:8, the Lord tells Eliphaz and his friends to sacrifice a
burnt offering for themselves. He goes on to say, "My servant Job will
pray for you, and I will accept his prayer and not deal with you according
to your folly."
Do you think Job had a hard time offering this prayer? Do you have
someone who has hurt you so badly that you are having trouble forgiving
them?
Do you think it is significant that the Lord made Job prosperous again
after he prayed for his friends? (see Job 42:10)
10. In what way has your study of the Book of Job made your faith
stronger?
Prayer
How can the group partner with you, and help share your burdens? Write
down others requests so you can keep up with them, and be reminded to
pray for them throughout the week.