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Chronological

Read the Bible in the chronological order in which its stories and events occurred.
Duration: 365 days
New Catholic Bible (NCB)
Version
Job 24-28

Chapter 24

The Injustice Crying Out in the World[a]

“The actual day of judgment is known by the Almighty;
    why does he not reveal it to his faithful?[b]
Those who are wicked move boundary stones;
    they seize flocks and pasture them.
They drive off the donkey belonging to the orphan;
    they take away the widow’s ox as security.
They push aside the needy off the road;
    those who are destitute are forced into hiding.
“Like wild donkeys of the wilderness
    the poor go forth at dawn
searching the wasteland for food
    with which to feed their children.
In the fields they reap what is not theirs
    and steal from the vineyards of the wicked.
Without clothing, they spend the night naked,
    lacking anything to shelter them from the cold.
They are soaked by the mountain rain
    and cling to the rocks as a source of shelter.
“The fatherless child is snatched from the breast
    and carried off as a pledge of security.
10 They go about their work naked, without clothing;
    despite their hunger they carry the sheaves.
11 Along the pathways they press out the oil;
    they tread the winepresses but themselves suffer thirst.
12 From the town the groans of the dying are heard,
    and those who are wounded cry out for help,
    yet God remains deaf to their prayer.
13 “There also are those who rebel against the light;
    they are ignorant of its ways
    and refuse to frequent its paths.
14 When nightfall descends, the murderer arises
    to slay the poor and the needy;
    during the night he steals forth like a thief.
15 “The eye of the adulterer also waits eagerly for twilight,
    thinking, ‘No eye will see me.’
16 In the darkness men break into houses,
    but during the day they shut themselves in,
    for they are strangers to daylight.
17 Deep darkness is morning to them;
    they only feel comfortable amid the terrors of the night.

God Carefully Monitors the Conduct of the Mighty[c]

18 “Such men are debris on the surface of the water;
    their portion in the land is accursed,
    and no laborer will toil in their vineyards.
19 As drought and heat melt the snow,
    so does the netherworld cause sinners to disappear.
20 The womb that shaped them remembers them no more,
    and the worm sucks them dry.
21 “They maltreat the barren and childless woman
    and show no kindness to the widow.
22 God may sustain the mighty through his strength,
    but he carefully monitors their conduct.
23 He grants them a sense of security,
    but his eyes are fixed on their ways.
24 They are exalted for a while,
    and then they are gone;
they wither and fade like a flower,
    shriveling up like ears of grain.
25 “If all this is not true, who will prove me wrong
    and show that my words are sheer nonsense?”

Bildad’s Third Speech[d]

Chapter 25

God’s Dominance Inspires Terror. Then Bildad the Shuhite responded:

“Sovereignty and awe belong to God
    who has established peace in his realm on high.
How can anyone number his forces?[e]
    Upon whom does his light not arise?
“How then can any man be righteous in God’s eyes?
    How can one born of woman be regarded as virtuous?
If in his eyes the moon is not bright
    and the stars are not pure,
how much less is man, who is a maggot,
    a son of man, who is a worm?”

Job’s Eighth Response

Chapter 26

How Profuse Is the Advice You Suggest![f] Job then answered with these words:

“What a help you are to the helpless,
    and what strength you are to the weak!
What good counsel you give to the ignorant!
    How abundantly you have manifested wisdom!
Who has helped you utter those words?
    And whose spirit issued forth from your mouth?

God’s Mighty Works

“The dead below tremble with fright,
    as do the waters and all their inhabitants.
The netherworld[g] is laid bare before him,
    and Abaddon lies uncovered.
“He stretches out the North[h] above the void
    and suspends the earth on nothingness.
He encloses the waters in dense clouds,
    yet the clouds are not torn asunder under their weight.
He veils the face of the full moon,
    spreading his clouds beneath it.
10 “He has established the horizon on the surface of the waters
    as the boundary between light and darkness.
11 The pillars of the heavens shake,
    stunned by the thunder of his voice.
12 By his power he churns up the sea,
    and by his skill he smites Rahab.[i]
13 By his breath the skies are cleared,
    and by his hand he has pierced the fleeing serpent.[j]
14 “These deeds are only a sample of what he has done,
    and how faint is the whisper that we hear of him,
    but who can possibly comprehend the thunder of his power?”

Chapter 27

I Maintain the Rightness of My Cause.[k] Job then continued his discourse:

“I swear by the living God who has denied me justice,
    and by the Almighty who has filled my soul with bitterness,
that as long as I have a shred of life remaining in me
    and the breath of God is in my nostrils,
never will my lips utter falsehood,
    nor will my tongue be guilty of deceit.
“Never will I concede that you[l] are right;
    until death I will not renounce my innocence.
I maintain the rightness of my cause;
    my conscience does not reproach me for the life I have led.
“Let my enemy meet the fate of the wicked
    and my adversary face the doom of the unjust.
For what hope does a godless man have when he is cut off,
    when God takes away his life?
Will God pay heed to his cry
    when disaster comes upon him?
10 Will he then take delight in the Almighty
    and call upon him at all times?
11 “I will teach you about the power of God;
    I will not conceal the designs of the Almighty.
12 Yet all of you have seen it yourselves;
    how then can you waste your time with idle words?”

Zophar’s Third Speech[m]

The Law of the Violent

13 “This is the fate that God allots for the wicked man,
    the inheritance that the violent receive from the Almighty.
14 Though numerous, his children are destined for the sword,
    and his descendants will never have enough to eat.
15 His survivors will perish as a result of pestilence,
    and their widows will not mourn for them.
16 “Even though he amasses silver like dust
    and piles up clothes like clay,
17 it is the righteous who will wear those clothes
    and the innocent who will divide the silver.
18 The house he builds is as flimsy as a cobweb
    or like a shack that shelters the watchman.
19 He goes to bed a man of wealth for the final time;
    he opens his eyes to find that it is all gone.
20 “By day terror overtakes him,
    and at night a whirlwind carries him away.
21 An east wind seizes him and he is gone;
    it sweeps him far away from his home.[n]
22 It assails him without pity,
    and he flees from its force that menaces him.
23 His downfall is acclaimed with joy,
    and he is derided wherever he may be.

The Praise of Wisdom[o]

Chapter 28

Where Can Wisdom Be Found?[p]

“There are mines for silver
    and places where gold is refined.
Iron is extracted from the earth,
    and copper is smelted from ore.
Miners penetrate the darkness;
    they search to the farthest recesses
    to discover the ore hidden in gloom and shadow.
They open shafts in uninhabited places,
    swinging suspended, far away from anyone.
“While grain is coming forth from the earth above,
    what lies beneath is ravaged by fire.
Its rocks are the enclosure for sapphires,
    and there is gold contained in its dust.
No bird of prey knows the path there;
    the eye of a falcon has not seen it.
Proud beasts have not trodden it;
    no lion has ever passed over it.
“Man begins to assail the granite rock
    and overturns the mountains at their foundations.
10 He cuts channels into the rocks,
    and his eyes behold precious gems.
11 He explores the sources of the streams
    and brings hidden riches to light.
12 But where can wisdom be found?
    And where is the place of understanding?

Wisdom Cannot Be Purchased[q]

13 “No one knows the way to it,
    nor is it to be found in the land of the living.
14 The abyss declares, ‘It is not in me.’
    The sea says, ‘I do not have it.’
15 It cannot be purchased with gold,
    nor can its price be weighed out in silver.
16 “It cannot be acquired with the gold of Ophir,
    nor with precious onyx or sapphire.
17 Gold or crystal[r] cannot be compared to it,
    nor can it be exchanged for vessels of gold.
18 Neither coral nor alabaster deserve to be mentioned;
    the price of wisdom is beyond pearls.
19 Topaz from Ethiopia is worthless in comparison to it,
    nor can it be valued in terms of pure gold.
20 “Where then is the source of wisdom?
    Where is intelligence to be found?

God Alone Knows Where Wisdom Can Be Found[s]

21 “It cannot be seen by the eye of any living creature;
    it is even concealed from the birds of the air.
22 Abaddon and the netherworld[t] admit,
    ‘We have only heard rumors of it.’
23 “God alone understands the path to wisdom;
    he alone knows where it can be found.
24 For he can observe the farthest ends of the earth,
    and he sees everything under the heavens.
25 “When God regulated the force of the wind
    and measured out the waters,
26 when he imposed a limit for the rain
    and cleared a path for the thunderbolt,
27 then he saw wisdom and evaluated it,
    established it and assessed it completely.
28 And then he declared to man:
    ‘The fear of the Lord is wisdom,
    and to turn from evil is understanding.’ ”

New Catholic Bible (NCB)

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