LIVE:"The Check of My Reproach" (Job 19:27-20:3), Part 1/4
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A cry from the world’s oldest book still shakes the ground: “I know that my Redeemer lives.” We open Job 19 and follow that confession to its striking claims—embodied resurrection, a living Redeemer who will stand on the earth, and a latter day that gathers justice, judgment, and joy into one unmistakable moment. Along the way, we probe what “Redeemer” means in its ancient legal frame—kinship, rescue, and vindication—and why Job insists he will see God with his own eyes, not as a metaphor but as a human being raised to life.
We also take on a debated timeline. If some charts propose a pre‑tribulation rapture where Christ descends but never touches down, how does that square with Job’s horizon? Job’s hope seems fixed on the day the Redeemer stands here, not on an interim visit. We test texts, weigh assumptions, and ask whether multiplying comings blurs the clear edge of Christian expectation: one appearing that raises the dead and rights the scales. The goal is not point‑scoring but clarity, honesty, and a sturdier hope.
Finally, we listen to Job’s warning to his friends: be wary of persecution disguised as counsel, because judgment belongs to God. That ethical note grounds the theology—real people, real bodies, real accountability. If you care about biblical theology, resurrection hope, and how end‑times views shape everyday faith, this conversation is for you. Share your perspective, send us your best arguments, and help sharpen the dialogue. If this episode challenged or encouraged you, follow the show, leave a review, and pass it to a friend who loves hard questions.
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