Expositor's Bible: The Book of Job by Robert A. Watson

(7 User reviews)   4108
By Rebecca King Posted on Dec 22, 2025
In Category - World Religions
Watson, Robert A. (Robert Alexander), 1845-1921 Watson, Robert A. (Robert Alexander), 1845-1921
English
Hey, have you ever had one of those moments where everything goes wrong and you just want to shout at the sky, 'Why me?' That's the Book of Job in a nutshell. It's an ancient, powerful story about a good man who loses everything—his family, his health, his wealth—for no clear reason. It's not a simple Sunday school lesson; it's a raw, messy argument with God about suffering, justice, and faith. Robert Watson's guide doesn't just explain the old words; he helps you feel the heat of Job's anger and the confusion of his friends. If you've ever wrestled with life's unfairness, this book feels like it was written just for you. It's challenging, uncomfortable, and surprisingly modern.
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never-ending drama renewed in every generation and every genuine life. It breaks upon us out of the old world and dim muffled centuries with all the vigour of the modern soul and that religious impetuosity which none but Hebrews seem fully to have known. Looking for precursors of Job we find a seeming spiritual burden and intensity in the Accadian psalms, their confessions and prayers; but if they prepared the way for Hebrew psalmists and for the author of Job, it was not by awaking the cardinal thoughts that make this book what it is, nor by supplying an example of the dramatic order, the fine sincerity and abounding art we find here welling up out of the desert. The Accadian psalms are fragments of a polytheistic and ceremonial world; they spring from the soil which Abraham abandoned that he might found a race of strong men and strike out a new clear way of life. Exhibiting the fear, superstition, and ignorance of our race, they fall away from comparison with the marvellous later work and leave it unique among the legacies of man's genius to man's need. Before it a few notes of the awakening heart, athirst for God, were struck in those Chaldæan entreaties, and more finely in Hebrew psalm and oracle: but after it have come in rich multiplying succession the Lamentations of Jeremiah, Ecclesiastes, the Apocalypse, the Confessions of Augustine, the Divina Commedia, Hamlet, Paradise Regained, the Grace Abounding of Bunyan, the Faust of Goethe and its progeny, Shelley's poems of revolt and freedom, Sartor Resartus, Browning's Easter Day and Rabbi Ben Ezra, Amiel's Journal, with many other writings, down to "Mark Rutherford" and the "Story of an African Farm." The old tree has sent forth a hundred shoots, and is still full of sap to our most modern sense. It is a chief source of the world's penetrating and poignant literature. But there is another view of the book. It may well be the despair of those who desire above all things to separate letters from theology. The surpassing genius of the writer is seen not in his fine calm of assurance and self-possession, nor in the deft gathering and arranging of beautiful images, but in his sense of elemental realities and the daring with which he launches on a painful conflict. He is convinced of Divine sovereignty, and yet has to seek room for faith in a world shadowed and confused. He is a prophet in quest of an oracle, a poet, a maker, striving to find where and how the man for whom he is concerned shall sustain himself. And yet, with this paradox wrought into its very substance, his work is richly fashioned, a type of the highest literature, drawing upon every region natural and supernatural, descending into the depths of human woe, rising to the heights of the glory of God, never for one moment insensible to the beauty and sublimity of the universe. It is literature with which theology is so blended that none can say, Here is one, there the other. The passion of that race which gave the world the idea of the soul, which clung with growing zeal to the faith of the One Eternal God as the fountain of life and equally of justice, this passion in one of its rarest modes pours through the Book of Job like a torrent, forcing its way towards the freedom of faith, the harmony of intuition with the truth of things. The book is all theology, one may say, and all humanity no less. Singularly liberal in spirit and...

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So, you've probably heard of Job—the guy who had everything and then lost it all. But the actual story is way more intense than the simple summary.

The Story

Job is a wealthy, righteous man. Out of the blue, a cosmic challenge leads to disaster striking his life. He loses his children, his livestock, his health, and is left sitting in ashes, covered in sores. Three friends show up, supposedly to comfort him. Instead, they launch into long speeches insisting Job must have done something terrible to deserve this punishment. Job fiercely defends his innocence. He doesn't accept their easy answers. He demands an explanation from God Himself, crying out against the seeming injustice of his suffering.

Why You Should Read It

Watson's writing makes this ancient text feel immediate. He doesn't treat Job as a passive saint but as a real person in profound pain, who argues and doubts. The friends aren't just villains; they represent every well-meaning but ultimately hollow platitude we've all heard (or said) in hard times. The core of the book isn't about getting answers; it's about the courage to question while still holding on. It's about faith that isn't afraid to get angry.

Final Verdict

This is for anyone who's tired of shallow answers to deep pain. It's perfect for spiritual seekers, readers of classic literature, or anyone going through a tough time who needs a story that doesn't sugarcoat reality. It's not a quick, feel-good read—it's a companion for wrestling with the hard stuff. If you want a book that respects your intelligence and your struggles, give this one a try.



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Deborah Martin
1 year ago

Loved it.

Richard Young
9 months ago

Very interesting perspective.

Betty Thompson
1 year ago

I had low expectations initially, however it challenges the reader's perspective in an intellectual way. I couldn't put it down.

Carol Jackson
2 months ago

I didn't expect much, but the character development leaves a lasting impact. Don't hesitate to start reading.

Mark Walker
8 months ago

Great reference material for my coursework.

5
5 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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