Scott Bielinski’s Reviews > In a Vision of the Night: Job, Cormac McCarthy, and the Challenge of Chaos > Status Update

Scott Bielinski
Scott Bielinski is on page 18 of 247
"Job is not a 'book about suffering,' but a 'book about living.' Similarly, McCarthy's novels are not about human depravity and human life gone bad, but about how to live in a world in which such depravity roams about." (18)
Jan 30, 2022 02:20PM
In a Vision of the Night: Job, Cormac McCarthy, and the Challenge of Chaos

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Scott’s Previous Updates

Scott Bielinski
Scott Bielinski is on page 135 of 247
"The divine speeches in Job should be read as a signal demonstration of God's good grace that moves Job to disavow the dust and ashes to which he had felt himself reduced and reenter life in the awareness that the chaotic element that exists within the world--[Behemoth and Leviathan]--remains indisputably there but is no longer something to be feared, for grace remains" (129)
Feb 01, 2022 08:55PM
In a Vision of the Night: Job, Cormac McCarthy, and the Challenge of Chaos


Scott Bielinski
Scott Bielinski is on page 97 of 247
Jan 31, 2022 09:25PM
In a Vision of the Night: Job, Cormac McCarthy, and the Challenge of Chaos


Scott Bielinski
Scott Bielinski is on page 53 of 247
"McCarthy also shows up for what it is the easy and trite theologizing and facile posturing that so often characterize our attempts to engage with those who are suffering. When we read Job, none of us like to think that we are Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar . . . But McCarthy helps us to see how easily we take on the mantle of comforter, scandalized by the sheer rawness of the emotions on display." (48-9)
Jan 31, 2022 09:57AM
In a Vision of the Night: Job, Cormac McCarthy, and the Challenge of Chaos


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