Glossary entry

English term or phrase:

arguing God’s character back to him

English answer:

pleading with God that He must honour His own character

Added to glossary by Ana Juliá
Aug 24, 2015 08:59
8 yrs ago
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English term

arguing God’s character back to him

English Art/Literary Religion About the book of Job
The narration of the prologue is integrally important for the interpretation of the book as a whole because it describes for the hearer/reader something that the three friends will continually address: To what extent do the circumstances of Job’s life on earth reveal what is true about him before God? The three friends (as well as Elihu, in his own way) assume that Job’s circumstances reveal some hidden sin or wayward path in Job’s character that has provoked God’s displeasure, correction, or judgment. Job’s friends will continually argue that his circumstances necessarily represent a choice that he has to make: either repent and agree with God, or continue as you are and receive the full punishment signified in your suffering. In responding to his friends, Job insists both that he is right before God and that it is ultimately God who has brought about his circumstances. Throughout the dialogue, Job tries to maintain that he is in the right while also ***arguing God’s character back to him*** in lament about why his righteousness and justice do not appear to be borne out in events on earth. In the end, God will reprove Job for the extent of his conclusions about what circumstances on earth might mean for God’s governance and justice (38:1–41:34). However, God will also vindicate Job before his friends, judge them with respect to their words, and call Job to intercede on their behalf (42:7–17).

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pleading to God that He must honour His own character

While "to argue X back to someone" is not a common usage in English, in this theological context (and in light of what the passage and the Book of Job itself make plain) it is evidently a legal usage: making the argument to God that His own character obliges Him to establish righteousness (as in Genesis 18:25 in the case of Abraham in a similar dramatic tableau between a righteous servant and the Lord: "Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?").
Peer comment(s):

agree Yvonne Gallagher : pleading WITH?
7 mins
True, thanks, that's the right collocation.
agree JohnMcDove
1 day 7 hrs
agree acetran
2 days 41 mins
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Thank you"
2 mins

argues with God

about God's character
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