Job 14

Job 14

Job shifts his focus to the sad brevity and frailty of human life. He compares mankind to a flower that quickly blooms and withers. Job asks if it is possible for a dead man to live again, expressing a deep desire for a hiding place in the grave until God's anger passes. He contrasts the cyclical renewal of a cut-down tree with the permanence of human death, concluding that man simply wastes away and is gone forever. Job laments that God watches every sin and keeps a strict account of all human failings.

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Isaiah 36

Assyrian King Sennacherib's general, the Rabshakeh, lays siege to Jerusalem, mocking God and King Hezekiah in the Hebrew language to demoralize the city's defenders.

Isaiah 37

King Hezekiah prays fervently in the Temple. The prophet Isaiah assures him that God has heard his prayer. That night, an angel of the Lord kills 185,000 Assyrian soldiers.

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