Experience of Suffering as A Way to a Deeper Knowledge of God an Analysis of Job 42:1-6

dc.contributor.authorAmore Abangiba, Gregory
dc.date.accessioned2019-03-15T07:52:09Z
dc.date.available2019-03-15T07:52:09Z
dc.date.issued2014
dc.description.abstractSuffering has been a perennial problem for all human beings in all generations. When a person encounters suffering, he or she is forced to ask questions that are fundamental to human existence: Why suffering? Why me? What is the purpose of my existence? Recently I had an encounter with two different people at different times. Both of them had gone through some kind of misfortune in their lives. I met the first one in Ghana when I went for my holidays in July 2012, at a valley of prayer managed by the Conventual Franciscans. He had come for a monthly recollection organized by the friars. He had been involved in an accident in which his two kids passed away, and he had his leg amputated. The surprising thing is that he looked serene and sober, no sign of bitterness at his condition. As we got into a conversation he told me he is not bitter because surprisingly even for himself he has come much closer to God than he was. He said he feels God’s presence in his life more than ever before. The accident has been a blessing in disguise for him. I met the other man in Tanzania the following year, in July 2013. He had cancer and was struggling to find money for his treatment. I could see the pain and bitterness that was on his face. He was filled with anger, and as we talked the first thing that came out of his mouth was what everybody in his situation would ask: why me? Like Job, he refused to understand why such a thing would happen to him. What sin had he committed to undergo such pain and suffering? As I listened to him, I started making a comparison between this man and the other who had lost his two children and was himself amputated after an accident. I began to wonder what could have made the difference between the two of them. How come one was filled with joy and serenity and the other was full of bitterness and anger? Was it that one was suffering more than the other, or one had just learnt to let go and live the life he has? As I pondered these questions in my mind, I thought of the answer Job made to God after the latter had spoken from the whirlwind: “I had heard of thee by the hearing of the ear, but now my eye sees thee” (Job 42:5). I saw some kind of similarity in this answer of Job and the man who had lost his two children and had his leg amputated. I thought it might be a good idea to see why some people go through some misfortunes and come out stronger while others become bitter. Through the lens of Job, I want to explore this phenomenon. I want to see how we can get to a deeper and personal communion with God through our experience of suffering. This is going to be done in an exegetical manner, using Job 42:1-6 as our guiding text. In analyzing this text, we will also see how suffering has been understood in the bible as well as how one comes to a deeper knowledge and understanding of God. This will lead us to our main concern: how suffering brings us into communion with God. It is worth mentioning here that in using the term “knowledge”, I refer not just to intellectual knowing, but knowing that embodies the whole person, leading to a deeper and intimate relationship between people.en_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12342/803
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherTangaza University Collegeen_US
dc.subjectSufferingen_US
dc.subjectKnowledgeen_US
dc.subjectGoden_US
dc.subjectJob 42:1-6en_US
dc.titleExperience of Suffering as A Way to a Deeper Knowledge of God an Analysis of Job 42:1-6en_US
dc.typeThesisen_US
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