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Transformative Word

When You Want to Yell at God: The Book of Job

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Think you know Job? Think again. Craig Bartholomew wants to help you read the book of Job from a different perspective. Let go of the Job you think you know—and discover the real man.

Is it true that what goes around comes around? Does right behavior ensure blessing? Is suffering always brought on by wrongdoing? Job’s story refutes these notions, but it proclaims a much greater truth—God is always faithful.

Join Bartholomew in When You Want to Yell at God, and experience the beauty of one man’s struggle with God.

90 pages, Paperback

First published October 22, 2014

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26 people want to read

About the author

Craig G. Bartholomew

77 books53 followers
Craig G. Bartholomew (PhD, University of Bristol) is the H. Evan Runner Professor of Philosophy at Redeemer University College in Ancaster, Ontario, and the principal of the Paideia Centre for Public Theology. He founded the internationally recognized Scripture and Hermeneutics seminar and is coauthor of Living at the Crossroads and Christian Philosophy.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Glenn Crouch.
527 reviews21 followers
August 17, 2017
I found this small book to be an excellent introduction to the Book of Job and to the topic of Suffering. This would be a good place to start if considering a Bible study on Job or on Suffering. Quite reasonable references to other materials allows the reader to dive in deeper.

Given that this is a small book, I did think the amount of material spent on Psychology seemed out of place and probably would've preferred to see a little more development in the other chapters.

The 2 appendices are good to have.
227 reviews9 followers
June 30, 2021
2021 reads: #23
Rating: 4 Stars

A short, but helpful commentary on the book of Job. The length dictates that much of the focus is on the primary themes of Job: the wisdom and sovereignty of God, spiritual formation through trials, and the folly of mechanical wisdom. Two appendices on the 'fear of the Lord' in the OT, and Satan in the OT are also helpful, but very brief. The space devoted to a psychological reading of Job would have been better spent further developing the themes and threads in Job through biblical categories.

Still, this was very readable and in turn will help its reader makes sense of Job and perhaps even cultivate an affection for the beauty of biblical poetry.
Profile Image for Ricardo Cifuentes.
163 reviews
September 25, 2024
Nunca había leído un comentario de Job, ya que este libro no es tan popular, pero este libro de Bartholomew realmente llega a lo profundo, se cuestiona el tema del sufrimiento desde diferentes puntos de vista y me ha mostrado una riqueza, belleza y gracia en el dolor, un texto confrontativo para una iglesia actual muy triunfalista y conquistadora.
Profile Image for Mundy Carroll.
100 reviews
February 3, 2016
We're studying Job in church at the moment, and it's a big book, with a big theme. There is a lot to try and take in. I found "When you want to yell" to be extremely valuable in giving a birds-eye view on the book of Job, and dealing with some of the main themes in a way which has made me feel like I have more of a handle on what happens, and what it could mean.

I valued particularly the chapters on poetry, Job's transformation, and the reader's transformation. There is a lot of material's teaching helpfully summarised in this book.

I'd recommend it to those who want to read through Job, or who are doing it in church (or Bible study). It's a great place to start as you look to gain a deeper understanding on what is a valuable part of Scripture
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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