Random Verse from Job
1,070 verses across 42 chapters.
And said, Naked came I out of my mother’s womb, and naked shall I return thither: the Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord.
Job 1:21KJV
Drawing from 1,070 verses
Job is the Bible's deepest look at suffering. It tells the story of a good man who loses nearly everything, his children, his health, and his livelihood, and then wrestles out loud with God about why.
The author is unknown. Some Jewish traditions attribute the book to Moses, and many scholars consider it among the oldest books in the Bible.
Most of the book is poetry, a long series of conversations between Job and his three friends, whose tidy explanations for his pain fall painfully short. Then God himself speaks out of a storm, asking questions about creation that put everything in a larger frame.
Key themes include suffering without easy answers, honest prayer, the limits of human understanding, trust that survives loss, and God's power and wisdom woven through creation.
Job matters because it gives permission to grieve and question without letting go of faith. Job never receives a full explanation, but he does receive an encounter with God, and the book ends in restoration.
Favorite passages include Job's declaration that his redeemer lives, his worship in the middle of loss, and his hope of coming through trial refined like gold.
People often seek a verse from Job during illness, grief, financial loss, or seasons when God feels distant. The book meets pain with honesty instead of cliches.
A random verse from Job might comfort you, challenge you, or stop you cold with a question about the stars. Few books in the Bible reward slow, thoughtful reading the way this one does.
Frequently asked questions
- Who wrote the book of Job?
- The author is unknown. Some Jewish traditions attribute it to Moses, and many scholars consider Job one of the oldest books in the Bible. Its setting appears to be the era of the patriarchs.
- Why do people turn to Job during suffering?
- Because it takes pain seriously. Job asks the questions grieving people actually ask, refuses shallow answers, and still ends in an encounter with God. Verses like Job 19:25 and Job 23:10 have carried many people through their darkest seasons.