Lesson
109: Job 38–42
Introduction
The
Lord responded to Job’s pleas and reminded him that He is all-knowing and
all-powerful. Job replied humbly and was instructed further about the Lord’s
power. The Lord chastised Job’s friends, accepted Job’s repentance, and made
the remaining part of Job’s life more prosperous than it was at the beginning.
Suggestions
for Teaching
---Everyone
roll up a sheet of paper and look through it with one eye while closing your
other eye.
---What difficulties might you experience
if you went about your daily activities with your vision limited in this way?
---Listen
for some things that might cause us to have a limited perspective.
“From
the limited perspective of those who do not have knowledge, understanding, or
faith in the Father’s plan—who look at the world only through the lens of
mortality with its wars, violence, disease, and evil—this life can seem
depressing, chaotic, unfair, and meaningless” (“The Songs They Could Not Sing,” Ensign or
Liahona, Nov. 2011, 104).
---According to Elder Cook, what can cause
us to have a limited perspective?
(Viewing
earth life and its challenges w/o knowledge or understanding of Heavenly
Father’s plan of happiness or faith in that plan.)
---What are some examples of challenges
or trials that may be especially difficult to experience without understanding
or having faith in Heavenly Father’s plan?
---How are these challenges
similar to some of the trials Job experienced?
---Look
for truths that can help you strengthen your faith in Heavenly Father and
expand your vision of His plan in order to better meet the challenges you may
experience.
---After
Job and his friends discussed possible reasons for Job’s suffering, the Lord
spoke directly to Job.
---According to the end of verse 3, what did the
Lord say He wanted Job to do? (Answer the Lord’s questions.)
---In your own words, how would
you summarize the questions the Lord asked Job? (The Lord asked Job to consider
where he was when the earth was created and who created the earth, implying
that God has all power.)
“We
lived before our birth into mortality. In our premortal state, we were doubtless
among the sons and daughters of God who shouted for joy because of the
opportunity to come to this challenging yet necessary mortal existence. We knew
that our purpose was to gain a physical body, to overcome trials, and to prove
that we would keep the commandments of God”
Before we were born
on earth, we lived with Heavenly Father and rejoiced in His plan of happiness.
---When we face challenges, why might it
be helpful to remember that we rejoiced at the opportunity to experience life
on earth?
---Summarize
the remainder of Job 38 as well as Job
39–41
: The Lord illustrated His knowledge and power by asking Job many questions
about how He created and still directs the earth, emphasizing the limited
knowledge and power of humans.
---What did Job say he knew
about the Lord? (After students respond, you may want to write the following
doctrine on the board: The Lord has all power and knows
all things.)
---Why do you think it would be
important to have a testimony of this truth—particularly during times when we
face challenges?
---What do you think Job meant
when he said, “I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes”? (Job
42:6).
(Job
did not hate himself. Rather, he humbly acknowledged his weaknesses, sins, and
limitations before the Lord.)
---After
Job acknowledged his limitations and repented of his sins, the Lord spoke to
Job’s friends who had misjudged Job and tried to convince him that he did not
deserve the Lord’s mercy.
---Consider
a time in your lives when, like Job, you may have been misjudged by a friend
(or friends).
---Why can it be hurtful if we
are misjudged by friends? How might we be tempted to react toward our friends
when they misjudge us?
---The
Lord instruct Job to pray for his friends who had misjudged him
---What principle can we learn
from this instruction?
The Lord wants us to pray for those
who misjudge us.
---Why do you think the Lord
wants us to pray for those who misjudge us?
---Take
turns reading aloud from Job
42:10–17
and look for what Job experienced in the remainder of his life.
---What gave Job strength to
remain faithful to the Lord in his trials? What specific trials that Job faced
(loss of friends, loss of family members, loss of
goods and possessions) might be difficult for you to endure faithfully?
---How did the Lord bless Job
after he remained faithful and endured such great trials?
---What principles can we learn
from Job’s experience? (As students share the principles they have identified,
emphasize the following: If we remain faithful to the Lord
in our trials, then He will bless us abundantly according to His will.)
Job 42:12.
“The Lord blessed the latter end of Job more than his beginning”
President
Spencer W. Kimball explained that the trials we experience can be a source
of personal growth:
“Is
there not wisdom in [God’s] giving us trials that we might rise above them,
responsibilities that we might achieve, work to harden our muscles, sorrows to
try our souls? Are we not exposed to temptations to test our strength, sickness
that we might learn patience, death that we might be immortalized and
glorified?
“If
all the sick for whom we pray were healed, if all the righteous were protected
and the wicked destroyed, the whole program of the Father would be annulled and
the basic principle of the gospel, free agency, would be ended. No man would
have to live by faith.
“If
joy and peace and rewards were instantaneously given the doer of good, there
could be no evil—all would do good but not because of the rightness of doing
good. There would be no test of strength, no development of character, no
growth of powers, no free agency, only satanic controls” (Faith Precedes the
Miracle [1972], 97).
---Invite
students to come to the board and list some things we can do to show we are
faithful to the Lord during our trials.
---After
students have written a list on the board, you may also want to ask them to
give examples of ways the Lord can bless us when we do the things listed on the
board.
---Listen
for ways the Lord may bless those who are faithful to Him during their trials.
“The
Lord compensates the faithful for every loss. That which is taken away from
those who love the Lord will be added unto them in His own way. While it may
not come at the time we desire, the faithful will know that every tear today
will eventually be returned a hundredfold with tears of rejoicing and gratitude.
“One
of the blessings of the gospel is the knowledge that when the curtain of death
signals the end of our mortal lives, life will continue on the other side of
the veil. There we will be given new opportunities. Not even death can take
from us the eternal blessings promised by a loving Heavenly Father” (“Come
What May, and Love It,” Ensign or Liahona, Nov. 2008, 28).
---According to Elder Wirthlin,
how can the Lord bless us if we are faithful during our trials?
The
Lord’s blessings can come to us in this life and also after we die.
---How have you been blessed as
you have remained faithful to the Lord during your trials?
---testify
---Invite
students to select from the list on the board one thing they can work on to
help them remain faithful during their trials.
---Encourage
them to work on the item they have selected
As
a simple review to help students remember the location of the 10 scripture
mastery passages that have been introduced thus far in the course, ask each
student to draw a four-by-four grid on a piece of paper.
Invite
students to write each of the 10 scripture mastery references randomly in the
squares on the grid. Ask them to repeat 6 of the references in the remaining
squares.
Read
a portion of one of the 10 scripture mastery passages aloud, and ask students
to place a finger on the reference on their grids that they think corresponds
with the passage. Say the reference aloud, and have students check their
answers. If they are pointing to the correct reference, ask them to mark the
square with an X.
Instruct
students to call out “Scripture mastery!” when they mark four squares in a row
(vertically, horizontally, or diagonally). You could continue until everyone
has four in a row or until students have marked all of their squares.
Commentary and
Background Information
Job
38–39. The Lord answers Job’s prayers
The
Lord finally answered Job’s prayers. He did not seem, however, to answer the
questions Job and his friends raised about why Job was suffering. Instead, the
Lord gave answers in the form of more questions. The Lord’s questions give us
perspectives about His greatness and about life that are very important to
people facing trials in their lives. Job 38–39 explains how Job
could have more confidence in the Lord so that he could more fully trust that
his trials would be for his benefit.
Job 42.
When we remain faithful to the Lord, He will bless us
Elder
Paul V. Johnson of the Seventy taught how individuals have been blessed as
a result of remaining faithful to the Lord during trials:
“A
pattern in the scriptures and in life shows that many times the darkest, most
dangerous tests immediately precede remarkable events and tremendous growth.
‘After much tribulation come the blessings’ [D&C
58:4].
The children of Israel were trapped against the Red Sea before it was parted
[see Exodus
14:5–30].
Nephi faced danger, anger from his brothers, and multiple failures before he
was able to procure the brass plates [see 1 Nephi 3–4]. Joseph Smith was overcome by an evil power so strong
that it seemed he was doomed to utter destruction. When he was almost ready to
sink into despair, he exerted himself to call upon God, and at that very moment
he was visited by the Father and the Son [see Joseph
Smith—History 1:15–17].
Often investigators face opposition and tribulation as they near baptism. Mothers know that the challenges of
labor precede the miracle of birth. Time after time we see marvelous blessings
on the heels of great trials”
Supplemental
Teaching Idea
Instead
of asking a student to read the statement by Elder Wirthlin, you could show the
video “Come
What May, and Love It” (3:31). Before you show the video, ask students to
listen for ways the Lord may bless those who are faithful to Him during their
trials.
Right
margin extras:
PowerPoint:
Old Testament lesson 109—Job 38–42
Job,
by Gary L. Kapp
Mountains
to Climb (5:05)
Finding faith in the Lord Jesus Christ will help us have the power to endure and overcome even the hardest trials in life. You might choose to show this video to help students understand that the Lord will bless us as we remain faithful in our trials.
Finding faith in the Lord Jesus Christ will help us have the power to endure and overcome even the hardest trials in life. You might choose to show this video to help students understand that the Lord will bless us as we remain faithful in our trials.
Come
What May, and Love It (3:31)
The way we react to adversity can be a major factor in how happy we can be in life.
The way we react to adversity can be a major factor in how happy we can be in life.
Students
are edified when they are led through a learning process that is similar to
what the teacher experienced during lesson preparation. Help them search the
scriptures for understanding and discover the truths of the gospel for
themselves. By giving them opportunities to explain the gospel in their own
words and to share and testify of what they know and feel, you can help them
strengthen their testimonies of the gospel.
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