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A 6 page paper. How would a cognitive behavioral therapist approach Job if Job became a client who cursed the day he was born? This paper discusses that question. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: ME12_PG691202.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
married and had ten children, seven sons and three daughters. The Prologue tells us that he owned 7,000 sheep, 3,000 camels, 500 oxen, and 500 donkeys and he had many
servants. Job was considered to be the greatest man of everyone in the East (Job 1:1-3). He was considered to be a Hebrew sage in the region. As Hebrew, Job
was monotheistic. He acted as priest for his family. He lived for at least 100 years. He was God-fearing and led a righteous life. Although he was not without sin
but he was still innocent. He was in favor with God and God thought so highly of Job that when Satan challenges the faithfulness of Gods followers, God suggests Satan
tests Job (Job 1:6-8). God says that Job is blameless, fears God and shuns evil (Job 1:8). This begins Jobs tests. The Book of Job makes profound statements on the
issue of theodicy. Theodicy defends the goodness and justice of God in face of human suffering and evil. Job consistently defends Gods goodness in spite of the immense suffering that
has been brought upon him. The Biblical Job is consistently used as an example of how a truly righteous person continues to believe and continues to praise God for His
goodness no matter what. While Job never gives up that faith, he does have moments when he might like to give up. Job tells his wife that man cannot just
accept the good God gives them, man must accept the trouble (Job 2:10). Three of his friends go to Job to comfort him but they see his suffering is so
great, they are left speechless. They say nothing for seven days and finally Job speaks and curses the day he was born (Job 2:10-3:1). What could todays modern counselor say
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