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Job 15:14 Change

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Dave in Tenn:

--- Quote from: Rocco on March 26, 2019, 01:50:51 AM ---Job 14:13 I wish you would hide me in the grave
and forget me there until your anger has passed.
But mark your calendar to think of me again!

--- End quote ---

That verse and translation makes me happy.

HoneyLamb56:
Thanks for the responses.  I'm still a little slow in my thinking process and maybe just going in circles lol

So did if the book of Job is older than the books of Moses, did Job live between the time of Abraham and Moses?  The prophet Ezekiel's prophecy would be after Job's time.  So John, I see what you're saying: "Abraham received certain promises of receiving land that he did not receive before his death.  He died without receiving the promises.
Thus there must be a resurrection for him to receive the promises.
Also in Abraham's Seed (One Seed) would all the nations be Blessed (universal salvation).  Again implies a Resurrection.  As Jesus said, God is the God of the living because all will live unto Him."

In Abraham's time was this implied resurrection passed on by word of mouth, scrolls? as this was told to Abraham by God's messengers; so how would Job know if he lived before the prophets?

When the people came out of Egypt and went through the wilderness the emphasis was on belief, faith, obedience, laws etc. but no mention of a life through resurrection, so were they aware of the promises to Abraham?

Heidi:
The clearest Old Testament passage about a future bodily resurrection is Daniel 12:2: “And many of those who sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt.” Both Jesus and Paul affirm its teaching in the New Testament (John 5:29; Acts 24:15).

Daniel is not the only prophet to speak this hope, however. Isaiah also prophesies physical resurrection:

Your dead shall live; their bodies shall rise. You who dwell in the dust, awake and sing for joy! For your dew is a dew of light, and the earth will give birth to the dead. (Isa. 26:19)

 In Genesis 22, Isaac was as good as dead. Abraham had bound him for sacrifice, but just before the knife struck skin, God intervened with an innocent substitute (Gen. 22:4–13). Indeed, the author of Hebrews observes that Isaac was figuratively raised from the dead (Heb. 11:19). 

Using this template, the Old Testament pictures resurrection all over the place. Noah and his family are delivered from the flood, Joseph from the pit, the Israelites from Egypt, the three friends from the furnace, Daniel from the Lion's den, the Jews from Haman's plot, and Jonah from the great fish. Such stories of deliverance from peril stimulate and feed trust in God's power to defeat death.

Abraham believed God:
reckoning that even out of the dead God is able to raise  up, whence also in a figure he did receive [him].
Hebrews:11:19

For not through law [is] the promise to Abraham, or to his  seed, of his being heir of the world, but through the  righteousness of faith;
Romans:4:13

Heidi

indianabob:
Great report Heidi,
Thanks for your research, very helpful.
Bob

Heidi:
Thanks Bob, it felt nice to "seek and you shall find"

Heidi

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