Resurrection and Royalty
The Riches of Job Across Two Traditions
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Publisher Description
There Are Two Books of Job. You've Probably Only Read One.
You know the story. The righteous man who lost everything. The patient sufferer. The voice from the whirlwind. It may be the most beloved book in the Bible for anyone who has ever walked through the valley.
But the book of Job you've read, translated from the Hebrew, is not the only one. The early church read Job in Greek, in the Septuagint. And that version holds surprises most Christians have never encountered.
In the Greek, Satan doesn't predict that Job will "curse" God. He says Job will "bless" Him. And that single word reveals one of the most subtle and dangerous temptations a believer can face.
In the Greek, the book doesn't simply end with "Job died, old and full of days." It continues, revealing that Job was a king, that his three friends were kings, that he was descended from Esau and was the fifth generation from Abraham. And then it makes a promise the Hebrew never makes so clearly: that Job will rise again.
Resurrection and royalty, hidden in a book you thought you knew.
This concise study explores four discoveries that emerge when you read Job through both textual traditions:
The "bless or curse" paradox of the heavenly court, and what it reveals about transactional faith versus authentic worship
The Septuagint's lost ending, with its royal genealogy connecting Job to Genesis 36 and its explicit promise of bodily resurrection
Job's famous cry, "I know that my Redeemer lives," and how the Hebrew and Greek each preserve a vital truth the other leaves unsaid
What the angelic court, the shorter Greek text, and the art of translation teach us about how God preserved His Word
A book of comfort as much as discovery.
If you're in the ash heap yourself, this study offers more than textual curiosity. It shows how the two traditions, read together, give the suffering believer both the future hope of resurrection and the present assurance that God is sustaining you even now. You need both. And God, in His wisdom, preserved both.
No seminary degree required. Hebrew and Greek terms are explained in plain language. The early church fathers (Origen, Chrysostom, Augustine, and others) are your companions along the way. You'll come away seeing one of Scripture's most familiar books with entirely new eyes.
In the "Two Witnesses, One Truth" series, author Kevin B. Potter offers extended biblical studies exploring how the Masoretic Text and Septuagint illuminate Scripture together. Begin with book 1 to just dip your toe in, grab The Septuagint: An Introductory Analysis for the full foundation, or start here and walk through one of the edifying books in the Bible through two traditions that will change how you read Job forever.