22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Profound poetry, picturesque photography, and a CD as well!, October 14, 2002
This review is from: The Misery of Job and the Mercy of God (Hardcover)
After reading the review of this book, I was at first disappointed that this was a poem, not a discussion on Job. However, when I received it, my first reaction was how amazing the photography was. It is an absolutely beautiful book to admire from an artistic perspective.
To my surprise, the book came with a CD featuring the author reading the poem the way he meant it to be read. I have listened to it again and again. This is a very nice addition to the book.
As to the content, the four poems contained within this book build upon each other. From the loss of all that Job had, his conversation with his wife, his dialogues with his "friends," and finally, a retrospective look at all that happened to him (by way of a conversation with his first daughter after the crisis, Jemimah), Piper ends each poem with an exhortation to a Christian in suffering, causing the reader to focus on the grander scheme of God's plan for us.
He does take artistic liberty with the repentance of his wife (not recorded in Job, but implied in the closing chapter) and the conversation with Jemimah, but I see nothing wrong with doing so. The message of Job is not compromised, and it is very conceivable that such conversations took place.
So far, this book has found very practical use in the lives of several of my closest friends, and we have wept while reading the closing poem of this book. The main thrust of the book is that God unkindly permits suffering in order that He might kindly show us more of His glory, and His glory is not an abstract concept but the beauty of His manifold perfections. O Christian, there is much comfort in our sovereign God!
What we have lost, God will restore;
That, and Himself, forevermore.
It won't be long before the rod
Becomes the tender kiss of God.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Even Better Than Expected, September 3, 2002
This review is from: The Misery of Job and the Mercy of God (Hardcover)
Job is a hard biblical book to get a handle on. About the time you "get it" another layer of mystery and majesty comes to light. The accomplishment of this brief book is to do full justice to the complexity of the book of Job and at the same time lead the reader to see and delight in the mystery of God and the majesty of God. My copy came with CD in which the author reads his work aloud. Listening to this thoughtful and passionate delivery made my heart yearn for God--and almost even long for Job's "experience" of God.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
God's Sovereignty, August 14, 2002
This review is from: The Misery of Job and the Mercy of God (Hardcover)
I have deeply enjoyed this poem like all of the books that I have read thus far from John Piper. I have heard many people talk about Job and his misery, but Piper has not only wrote about Job's misery but about the mercy and Sovereignty of God. The Sovereignty aspect is often left out of the picture when people talk about Job. This poem, especially the last pages, demonstrates that God has, is, and always will be in control of every thought and action. I would reccomend this to anyone but especially to the one going through difficulties, not in order to get his mind off of his problems and onto Job's, but rather to get his mind off of his problems and onto to God's Sovereignty.
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