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Consider My Servant Job

Consider My Servant Job

List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $14.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Warning: This book is satanic
Review: People who buy this book are beyond me. Like, I goty it an no sense. But I think it is revealing to others how Mr. Hunter's odd mind works. Or should I say brother?

I prefer the Da vinci Code, becasue Mr. hunter deserves it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Incredible!
Review: This book is amazing! It was like Hunter had crawled inside my skin and saw my soul. All of the pain I had felt for the past years has suddenly vanished.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Finally! The First Full-Length LDS book on Job!
Review: This book is quite a gem, and in fact, is three books in one.

The first part of the books is "Comment," or a meta analysis of the book of Job. Admittedly, it is written from the Latter-day Saint point of view. But the really surprise is that as far as I can tell, Mr. Hunter's book is the first ever written from the LDs point of view.

Chapters in this section revolve around Job, and the nature of perfection, the relationship between Jesus, Job and Joseph Smith. He has included a question and answer section that deals with the thornier issues of the book of Job: the nature of Satan, Higher Criticism, and feminism, with the issue of Job's wife.

The thickest chapter is "The Logic Of Longsuffering." It is, in essence, a primer on logic and logical thinking. It reads almost like a C. S. Lewis book, rather than a devotional tome. But it is essential in understanding the windy roundabout discussion of the Job's friends.

Part two is the crown jewel. It is a "chapter by chapter" commentary on Job, and includes the Joseph Smith Translations for clarification. Brother Hunter makes this mysterious book understandable.

The third book is the book of Job itself. Hunter has wisely included the text of the Biblical book within his book. This facilitates study and pondering, because you are not flipping back and forth between his book and Bible. You an study on the beach with no inconvenience.

This book makes Job a real person, and the suffering servant has a face.


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