000 01526nam a2200301 a 4500
005 20260119071236.0
008 2024-01-16 13:56:00
020 _a0804714045
041 _aeng
082 _a223.106
082 _bR399-G52
100 _aRené Girard
100 _d(1923-2015)
100 _eAuthor
245 _aJob, the Victim of his People
245 _cRené Girard , Yvonne Freccero
260 _aU.S.A.
260 _bStanford University Press
260 _c1987
300 _a173tr.
300 _bHardcover, illustrations
300 _c23 cm
520 _aWhat do we know about the Book of Job? Not very much. The hero complains endlessly. He has just lost his children all his livestock. He scratches his ulcers. The misfortunes of which he complains are all duly enumerated in the prologue. They are misfortunes brought on him by Satan with God's permission. We think we know, but are we sure? Not once in the Dialogues does Job mention either Satan or anything about his misdeeds. Could it be that they are too much on his mind for him to mention them? Possibly, yet Job mentions everything else, and does much more than mention. He dwells heavily on the cause of his misfortune, which is none of those mentioned in the prologue. The cause is not divine, satanic nor physical, but merely human.
650 _aBible -- Job -- Criticism, interpretation, etc
856 4 _uhttps://data.thuviencodoc.org/books/13344/j.jpg
_yCover Image
911 _aNguyễn Thị Kim Phượng
957 _a231010TKH
999 _c13195
_d13195