Within the ancient book of Job there are keys to inner healing.
The enemy often uses seasons of suffering as opportunities to speak lies about God, yourself, and your situations. If not confronted, these lies can create life-long wounds.
Traditionally, the book of Job is read as an account of suffering. But Teresa Liebscher, co-founder of Sozo, invites you to see this ancient Biblical text as an invitation to powerful inner healing through defeating the enemy’s lies and maintaining strong connection with God.
As you encounter Job through this revelatory lens, you will experience healing from past hurts and become positioned to face any trial with God’s supernatural power and divine perspective!
Learn to…
Identify and reject strategic lies the enemy uses during difficult times.Recognize the difference between godly counsel and ungodly opinions in people who give advice during hard times.Strengthen your connection with God instead of running away from Him during challenges.Receive freedom from religious deceptions such as “God sends pain to fix us” and “suffering is directly linked to our sins.”Discover the path through suffering, and embrace wholeness on the other side! Unlock your healing within the book of Job!
I’m read this book in preparation for my Shabhar appointment with Teresa. It was a good book but the whole story of Job is always very confusing to me, even with the breakdown seen throughout this book. I understand the process that Job went through and what came out of it, but whenever the story of Job is talked about in church, pastors/teachers always talk about the beginning and the end of the story, but the actual nitty-gritty part of the book is always glossed over. Regardless, the idea of asking Father God/Jesus/The Holy Spirit what He thinks/feel about us in the situations we face is a good technique to trusting God with what you’re dealing with and helps you on your journey of doing everything you can to please/honor God.
I really, really loved this book. It was recommended by my therapist to get through the grief and the craziness of my life the last several months. And I have to say, I am extremely grateful that she recommended this to me.
It was beautiful and really ministered to my soul in a challenging time.
While I didn’t particularly connect to the use of the Trey storyline, I definitely connected to the book as a whole. It was both a confirmation and an inspiration as it encouraged a more intimate connection to our Heavenly Father.
A fascinating take on a book that I rarely read (we aren’t disciples of Job, but of Jesus). However, the author points of how Job’s friends are doing what most modern Christians would do…and the Lord rebuked them. Also, God doesn’t give and answer to everything Job asked.
This was a quick book to read but it felt fictional rather than a study guide which is what I was expecting. I have not spent much time studying the book of Job so this was a good overview.