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Job Explained: A Bible Study

Job Explained: A Bible Study

By: Dr. Toby Holt | New Geneva Theological Seminary
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Who wrote Job? What is the Book of Job about? In this podcast, Dr. Toby Holt breaks down the Book of Job—from the trials of a righteous man to God’s sovereign response—in a way that’s clear, compelling, and relevant. You’ll explore the story of Job’s suffering, his debates with friends, and God’s answers—not just as ancient events, but in ways that address your own suffering. Whether you’re a pastor, student, or brand new to the Bible, this podcast (including sermons) details all the major events from Job 1 through Job 42. Speaker: Dr. Toby Holt Dr. Toby Holt (D.Min.) is the President of New Geneva Theological Seminary. Dr. Holt's sermons have reached over 1.9 million listeners on SermonAudio. He focuses on clear, verse-by-verse teaching that makes the Bible easy to understand and hard to ignore. Support New Geneva: To support Dr. Holt's ministry at the seminary, please visit: newgeneva.org/give.2026 T. Holt Christianity Spirituality
Episodes
  • The Lord Gives, Takes Away
    May 28 2025

    How do you praise God when you lose everything?

    In Job 1, a good man loses his wealth, his servants, and all ten of his children in a single day — yet he worships God. In this study, Dr. Toby Holt opens the book of Job and the hardest question in life: how do we trust God when everything collapses?

    Job is introduced as a blameless, upright man, the wealthiest in the East. Behind the scenes, Satan accuses him before God, claiming Job only loves God for his blessings. God allows Satan to strip away Job’s possessions and children, and in one terrible day it all comes crashing down. Yet Job falls down and worships, saying, “The LORD gave, and the LORD has taken away.” Dr. Holt explains that God prizes Job’s character, not his comfort, and that real faith rests on who God is, not on our circumstances.

    Questions this study answers:

    1. Why did God allow Job to suffer? Not because Job had sinned, but because God prized his faith. Satan claimed Job only loved God for his blessings, and God allowed the test to prove otherwise.

    2. How could Job still worship after such loss? Because his faith rested on God Himself, not on his circumstances. He trusted that the God who gives also has the right to take away.

    3. What does Job 1 teach us about suffering? That hardship can come even to the godly, and that God remains in control. Faith stands on who God is, not on how comfortable life is.

    “Naked I came from my mother’s womb, and naked shall I return there. The LORD gave, and the LORD has taken away; blessed be the name of the LORD.” — Job 1:21 (NKJV)

    Speaker: Dr. Toby Holt is the President of New Geneva Theological Seminary, a Reformed seminary in Colorado Springs. He is known for clear, down-to-earth Bible teaching, and his sermons have been downloaded more than 1.9 million times on SermonAudio.

    Listen and go deeper: This sermon is part of the Job Explained study from New Geneva Theological Seminary. Find more verse-by-verse teaching across the Bible at newgeneva.org. To support this teaching ministry, visit newgeneva.org/give.

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    36 mins
  • When You Don't Understand Why
    May 21 2025

    Why do good people suffer?

    In Job 2 and 3, Job loses even his health, and he sinks so low that he curses the day he was born. In this study, Dr. Toby Holt faces an honest question: why do good and godly people suffer?

    Satan strikes Job with painful sores from head to toe, and Job’s wife urges him to “curse God and die.” Yet Job answers, “Shall we indeed accept good from God, and shall we not accept adversity?” Three friends come, weep, and sit silently with him for seven days. Then Job breaks the silence by pouring out his grief. Dr. Holt explains that Job never saw the heavenly backstory — he suffered not because he was bad, but because he was so good. Being faithful does not make us immune to pain.

    Questions this study answers:

    1. Does being a good Christian protect us from suffering? No. Job was the most upright man of his day, yet he suffered deeply. Faithfulness is no guarantee of an easy life.

    2. How did Job respond to his wife’s advice? He refused to curse God, answering that we should accept both good and hardship from His hand. His faith held even in agony.

    3. What did Job’s friends do right at first? They came to him, wept with him, and sat in silence for seven days. Their quiet presence was a comfort — before their words made things worse.

    “Shall we indeed accept good from God, and shall we not accept adversity?” — Job 2:10 (NKJV)

    Speaker: Dr. Toby Holt is the President of New Geneva Theological Seminary, a Reformed seminary in Colorado Springs. He is known for clear, down-to-earth Bible teaching, and his sermons have been downloaded more than 1.9 million times on SermonAudio.

    Listen and go deeper: This sermon is part of the Job Explained study from New Geneva Theological Seminary. Find more verse-by-verse teaching across the Bible at newgeneva.org. To support this teaching ministry, visit newgeneva.org/give.

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    30 mins
  • With Friends Like These
    May 14 2025

    Why were Job’s friends such poor comforters?

    In Job 10-11, Job pours out his confusion to God while his friend Zophar insists Job’s suffering is his own fault. In this study, Dr. Toby Holt shows how even sincere friends can give deeply wrong counsel.

    Job cannot understand why God is contending with him, and he longs for answers. His friend Zophar responds harshly, claiming Job’s pain proves hidden sin and even telling him he deserves worse. Dr. Holt explains the friends’ mistake: they assumed suffering always means punishment for sin. They were right that sin brings judgment, but wrong about the timing — and they did not know that Job suffered because he was good, not bad. For believers, the judgment our sins deserve fell instead on Christ.

    Questions this study answers:

    1. What was wrong with the counsel of Job’s friends? They assumed Job’s suffering had to be punishment for some hidden sin. They misread his situation and added guilt to his grief.

    2. Were the friends entirely wrong? They were right that sin deserves judgment, but wrong about the timing and the cause. Job’s suffering was not punishment, and full judgment comes in God’s time.

    3. How does the gospel answer the friends’ error? For those who trust Christ, the judgment their sins deserve has already fallen on Him. Believers are not under condemnation, even in suffering.

    “Know therefore that God exacts from you less than your iniquity deserves.” — Job 11:6 (NKJV)

    Speaker: Dr. Toby Holt is the President of New Geneva Theological Seminary, a Reformed seminary in Colorado Springs. He is known for clear, down-to-earth Bible teaching, and his sermons have been downloaded more than 1.9 million times on SermonAudio.

    Listen and go deeper: This sermon is part of the Job Explained study from New Geneva Theological Seminary. Find more verse-by-verse teaching across the Bible at newgeneva.org. To support this teaching ministry, visit newgeneva.org/give.

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    32 mins
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