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Job in his distress stated that he believed that he would be redeemed by a redeemer who would in the latter day.

Job 19:25 KJV

For I know that my redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth:.

Since this was said by Job while he was in contention with God, I have wondered if he was predicting the birth of a savior much in the same way that Isaiah did in Isaiah chapter 53 (not quoted here for the sake of brevity).

Are there any theologians, or doctrines from any denominations concerning this?

2 Answers 2

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In the NIV, there is a note associated with word ‘Redeemer’ which indicates ‘Vindicator’ could be used. In the on-line NET Bible, the note for ‘Redeemer’ (#59) contains: “The word is well-known in the OT because of its identification as the kinsman-redeemer (see the Book of Ruth). This is the near kinsman who will pay off one’s debts, defend the family, avenge a killing, marry the widow of the deceased. The word “redeemer” evokes the wrong connotation for people familiar with the NT alone; a translation of “Vindicator” would capture the idea more.”

To help get the context, we read Job 19:23-24 where Job wants his words etched into something so permanent that they would last forever. In Job 19:25, the verse in question, Job is not questioning who that vindicator will be or if there is one yet to come. Job already knows his Redeemer and that his Redeemer lives but his distress is that his Redeemer is presently hiding His face from him. In the NIV, this verse reads: “I know that my redeemer lives, and that in the end he will stand on the earth.”

Job wants his words written down and saved throughout history until his Redeemer comes and stands on the earth and can read them and vindicate Job for what has happened to him. Job thought God had turned His face from him and no longer knew what was going on. Job thought if God knew what was going on, He would have stepped in and done something about it as He had in the past. With what happened to him ‘etched in stone’, Job could even die but would still be vindicated. He had a problem believing God would not be doing something if He already knew.

This is not a messianic prophecy but the cry of a servant trying to understand why everything was happening to him and wanting vindication for it. I left a link below to an article that shows how this suffering brought Job to the point of humility where such an attitude of vindication was no longer necessary. As Job learned, “I had heard of You by the hearing of the ear but now my eyes have seen You” (Job 42:5) and “I know you can do all things; no purpose of yours can be thwarted” (Job 42:2). In humility Job came to realize his suffering was but momentary intended to do what it accomplished, drive him closer to God. He no longer needed vindication, he had God.

References:
Job 19:23-29 (NIV - www.biblegateway.com)  
Job 19 (on-line NET Bible - net.bible.org)  
Go to www.bible.org and search for: "The Ideal of Submission (Job)"

Updated!

Messianic Prophecy is scripture recording future events related to Messiah.

Messianic prophecy is recorded evidence produced by many people disconnected across time or distance that finds complete fulfillment in the life of Jesus Christ. It is never an interpretation or idea just thought up by an individual or group or somehow passed down through tradition. It is not possible for all the different people to record different prophecies with such coherency and accuracy without guidance in what they were recording. Messianic prophecy is revelation from a single source, the Holy Spirit.

2 Peter 1:20-21 - "Knowing this first, that no prophecy of scripture is of any private interpretation, for prophecy never came by the will of man, but holy men of God spoke as they were moved by the Holy Spirit." (NKJV)

Throughout the Bible there is other prophecy recording future events that are not necessarily related with Messiah. Yet this too carries the distinction that it is not thought up by an individual or group but was revealed by the Holy Spirit.

As we analyze the book of Job, we do not see the guiding hand of the Holy Spirit like we do in Isaiah 53. There the suffering servant is described in such detail and in a number of ways that the only one who can fit is Jesus Christ. For example: as one who will be marred so badly he didn’t look human (speaking of the beating Jesus Christ received); as one who people would question if God’s power really was revealed through him (speaking of the leaders who did not want to believe his miracles were of God); or as one who would be elevated, lifted high, and greatly exalted (speaking of the resurrection of Jesus Christ to the right hand of God). In all of this, Isaiah could have written all of these only if the Holy Spirit was revealing them to him.

Job 19:25 reads: I know that my redeemer lives, and that in the end he will stand on the earth.

But if we add the context around the verse we find an indication that Job wanted to be vindicated by God but thought he was going to die before that happened. As a result, he desired a permanent record of the events so they could be on hand when God would stand on this earth. As I ponder this, what I think it is referring to is the final judgement before God that all people will go through in the future. Hebrews 9:27 refers to judgment after one dies. But what I think connects better is Revelation 20:11 thru 22:5. This is where the Great White Throne Judgement takes place followed by the New Jerusalem descending to the earth and lit up with the glory of the Almighty God and his Lamb, Jesus Christ.

If Job knew something of what is recorded in Revelation, then that would be when he would be able to plead his case and that would be when God would stand on the earth. But nowhere else in the book of Job do I see an indication that the Holy Spirit was leading Job to record a revelation. If we care to assign a revelation to Job 19:25, I think it must be a revelation of the Great White Throne Judgement and New Jerusalem being setup rather than Messianic.

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  • Hi, and welcome to Christianity SE! This could be a great answer, but can you provide a summary of your references here (if bible.org goes down or moves pages, your answer will be lost; if you can quote some of the relevant portions then this will still be a good answer, even if the links go bad)? When you get a moment, you may want to check out what makes a good supported answer for more tips.
    – Ryan Frame
    Commented Oct 22, 2013 at 23:46
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    @ Warren your answer is good as far as it goes, however I cannot see from what you said, or from your references how they answer his assertion that his redeemer (Vindicator) Lives which is in the present sense and that he will stand on the Earth which is in the future tense. Please explain.
    – BYE
    Commented Oct 23, 2013 at 19:21
  • @CecilBeckum Job 19:26-27 shows Job fully expected he was going to die before being vindicated. The reason Job came up with to explain why all his tragedy had happened was that God was hiding his face from him. If God wasn’t watching, He wouldn’t know what had gone on. Job believed the same God in his present time would stand on the earth and Job would again be flesh and blood. At that time he could present his case and be vindicated.<br> Google “Messianic Prophecy in the Book of Job Edward Lewis Curtis” - select “JSTOR” link.<br> Google “messianic prophecies bible.org” - select Bible.org link
    – Warren
    Commented Oct 25, 2013 at 4:20
  • @ Warren I am still researching this question, and find that several other Bible Scholars do believe that it was somewhat of a precognition of Jesus (Christ) but not necessarily a prophesy.
    – BYE
    Commented Oct 26, 2013 at 18:49
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    @CecilBeckum - Be sure to also check out preceptaustin.org/job_commentaries.htm.
    – Warren
    Commented Oct 26, 2013 at 20:14
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To expound maybe upon Warrens answer

But if we add the context around the verse we find an indication that Job wanted to be vindicated by God but thought he was going to die before that happened. As a result, he desired a permanent record of the events so they could be on hand when God would stand on this earth. As I ponder this, what I think it is referring to is the final judgement before God that all people will go through in the future. Hebrews 9:27 refers to judgment after one dies. But what I think connects better is Revelation 20:11 thru 22:5. This is where the Great White Throne Judgement takes place followed by the New Jerusalem descending to the earth and lit up with the glory of the Almighty God and his Lamb, Jesus Christ.

Job was just recognizing that god could resurrect him in 19:25. It was known in Job's time that a person could be resurrected from previous scripture Hebrews 11:19(scroll down. highlighted in red) Actually the book of Job was written by Moses who would have known of it also.

We see from that scripture in Hebrews that Abraham knew about the resurrection and trusted in gods promise. In footnotes you will see that redeemer was originally repurchaser. To build on that a little to see what Job meant here is a good definition with uses Repurchaser taken from the book Insight from the Scriptures, volume 2 page 781.

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  • @ Jeremy Where did you find that the book of Job was written by Moses. I have been taught that it is the oldest book of the Bible and predates Moses.
    – BYE
    Commented Nov 27, 2013 at 16:28
  • In my table of bible contents. The author is not 100% confirmed to be Moses, but the way it is written and the time frame suggest Moses. Here is more information about it in paragraph 5 in this article Bible Book Number 18
    – Jeremy
    Commented Nov 27, 2013 at 17:58
  • Also Moses lived in or around the land of Uz, so he could have heard the story of Job and decided it would be a beneficial story for the bible.
    – Jeremy
    Commented Nov 27, 2013 at 18:16
  • @ Jeremy That is possible, but the authorship of the book of Job is pure speculation. I researched it when someone said that the author of Job was unknown and that was my reason for asking where you got your information.
    – BYE
    Commented Nov 27, 2013 at 18:56
  • You are correct. I did some research after you asked and indeed it is speculation. Moses was picked because of factors that favored him, but we can't know for sure :)
    – Jeremy
    Commented Nov 27, 2013 at 20:08

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