I take a lot of notes that get scattered about in notebooks and on loose paper. I wanted to preserve and organize them here, so they aren't lost. This is my outline of the entire book of Job along with notes and comments. It is a work in progress that I will add to and edit from time to time.
Creating and outline for the Book of Job is a little difficult because the book is so compact. You could look at one sentence and from it unfolds all kinds of interesting meanings and relationships to other parts of the book. So, when outlined, all of the richness and connectedness is absent, but there are some interesting structural patterns that can be recognized. Some sections are easier to outline than others. For example, the prologue and epilogue have a very clear structure which is a lovely thing to see. On the other hand, chapter 41, God's speech about Leviathan, flows and moves in a way that is not easily summarized, which I must believe was the authors intent. Beautifully poetic, but not easily outlined.
In 2022 when I recorded the Book of Job podcast, I made a short, animated video about the main structure of the book of Job.
The prologue is a narration. It introduces Job and the circumstances of his suffering. We are meant to regard him as perfect and complete. It doesn't mean he is without sin at all, but he has turned away from sin and lived a blameless and righteous life. His family and material wealth are God's blessing on him and an outward sign of his righteousness.
It is historical and hierarchical. The style and subjects of the writing in the Prologue is similar to the way Abraham, Issac, and Jacob are talked about in Genesis. It emphasizes the herds of animals, his children, and the ritual feasts and consecration ceremonies. The interactions between The Satan and God are presented as a hierarchical exchange within a royal court. This is in sharp contrast to the style and subject of the upcoming speeches, which delves underneath these into the pre-historic and proto-conscious.
The poetic speeches make up most of the book. Spoken by Job and his three friends Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar followed by the young man Elihu and then a speech by God.
As mentioned earlier, the speeches shift from the historical and hierarchical Prologue, into the pre-historic and proto-conscious poetry of the speeches. The rightly ordered world has been upended. What follows is a descent into the underworld. Unlike underworld myths with monsters, ghosts, and magic, Job's descent is quite realistic. Job encounters hopelessness, confusion, and despair. Many who have suffered tragedy not only relate Job's words but find that Job is able to give words to their suffering in ways that had been left unspoken.
Job's friends struggle too. They first seek to comfort Job but then they are compelled to set the world upright again, relying on wisdom, tradition, and experience. They quickly conclude that Job needs to repent of whatever he did. This becomes the crux of the matter between Job and his friends. This should be familiar for anyone who has tried to help someone who believes they have been delt an unfair hand. Any good friend will consider possible mistakes the sufferer made. In Job's case, he did nothing wrong, and his current condition gives the friends reason to doubt his claim of innocence.
This conflict moves in a series of three cycles. They go around and around, over the same ground again and again, but there is a progression as they circle about. Job takes some of the friend's advice, but not in the way they intend. For example, Eliphaz tells Job to "seek God" (5:8) and accept God's correction, but Job instead seeks God in order to make his complaint. The friends will often say things that are ironically true, meant one way yet true in another, like when Bildad says in chapter 8, "Job, if you are righteous, then your days ahead will be very great!" (8:6-7) Job sometimes speaks in the negative, saying "there is no arbiter between God and I"(9:33) when first expressing his desire for a mediator, like a hungry child says, "there is nothing to eat!"
As we move through the cycles, Job gains strength and his friends weaken, although they bluster and condemn him. The "final blow," so to speak is delt by Job in chapter 27 with his fiery speech on the fate of the wicked. His friends are left speechless. If they found the words, they realize that nothing they could say would convince Job. In a burst of righteous anger, Job wishes the wicked to be punished by suffering his fate. This powerful paradox of a speech ends the cycles, but we are teetering on the edge, where we are rescued by the Wisdom Poem in chapter 28.
Zophar doesn't respond. The cycle is broken.
The wisdom chapter stands out from the rest of the book. Most noticeably is the jarring shift in tone from the previous chapter. From the wrath of Job's anger to the contemplation of wisdom. The subject matter is a meta-reflection on the search for wisdom, which invites us to consider the book from this perspective. It also sits precisely in the center of the book structurally, which points to its importance. The structure looks like this:
Prologue • Three Cycles • Wisdom Poem • Three Speeches • Epilogue
There is a central point and a concluding point. The central point is in verse 13:
"Man does not know [wisdom's] worth, and it is not found in the land of the living."
The concluding point is in verse 28:
"Behold, the fear/awe of the Lord, that is wisdom, and to turn away from evil is understanding."
Job recalibrates. He recovers from his fiery speech in 27, reminded of wisdom in chapter 28. In this last, and longest speech, Job summarizes his life, his suffering, and his argument. In his "negative confession" in chapter 31, Job confesses sins he did not commit, showing how he avoided evil and implying the good he did. This "negative confession" mirrors God's speech where God will ask questions that showcase his creative work in the cosmos and implying the good he did.
"The words of Job are complete"
Even though Job's words are complete, God doesn't speak right away. The young man Elihu acts as a forerunner for God. Elihu's speech, the longest of the book, creates a felt sense of anticipation for God's answer. Elihu brings together many of the ideas brought forward by Job and his friends in an attempt to provide a summarized and authoritative conclusion.
God answers Job from the whirlwind. This is the moment we have been anticipating since the beginning. This is the longest speech from God in the whole Bible, which is significant. (Although not as long as Elihu's. lol)
Notice where God's speech is within the structure of the book. God's speech is the third speech in the second half of the book, following the three cycles of speeches in the first half. These two sections of three create a symmetry that is nice to see. (see the video above) God's speech also mirrors the two encounters God has with The Satan in the Prologue. God speaks twice with The Satan, now God speaks twice with Job. God speech is within the poetic part of the book. Compared to God's interactions with The Satan in the Prologue, which is a very hierarchal exchange between a superior and an obstinate subject, God's interaction with Job is not only beautifully poetic, but also wildly expansive and lacks all of the formalities of the royal court in the Prologue. "Gird up your loins" are fighting words. It brings to mind Jacob wrestling with God, only this time, it's God who wants to wrestle Job.
The experience of God's voice and his power is overwhelming both for Job and many readers. It is God after all. The terror and largeness are part of the effect. But is His speech meant only to subdue and terrify? There are clues that God has other intentions. Here are a few of the more subtle aspects of Gods speech.
Job was sure that God had crushed him, but he was horrified at the thought that God was absent-minded, or neurotic, obsessively preoccupied with his imperfections, or, worse yet, God was sadistic, taking pleasure in his suffering. When Job sees God, he doesn't see a God of wrath, he sees an over-exuberant God. God has so much enthusiasm for creation that it is dangerous. There is no measure to his joy.
The Epilogue marks a return to the historical and the hierarchical. The world is re-established, but it is not the same world as before. Job saw God (in the poetic), but his friends hear God's sovereign, hierarchical rebuke and now Job has become the Mediator between them and God. Before, there was an Accuser in heaven, now there is a Mediator on earth, a fulfillment of Job's own visions. (see 9:33, 16:19 and 19:25)