*COMING SOON* What Is the Book of Job?

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paperback, 10 chapters, 110 pages

The book of Job is the Bible's rawest conversation about suffering. But how do you teach it to your kids?

Buried in the middle of the Old Testament, Job is the book many families avoid—too long, too philosophical, too full of speeches that seem to go in circles. A good man loses everything. His friends blame him. God stays silent for thirty-five chapters. And when God finally speaks, he doesn't answer a single one of Job's questions.

But this strange, unsettling book turns out to be one of the most important in all of Scripture. It's the story of what happens when life stops making sense and the easy answers stop working. It's a fearless exploration of the hardest question anyone can ask: Does God care when good people suffer? And it's the Bible's clearest portrait of a faith that refuses to let go—even when it has every reason to.

What Is the Book of Job? makes this challenging book accessible for today's young readers. Written in a warm, conversational style that doesn't dodge the hard parts or talk down to kids, this guide walks through all forty-two chapters of Job with:

  • Engaging illustrations from pop culture—from Inside Out 2 to Bambi to Anne of Green Gables — that connect biblical themes to stories kids already know and love

  • Honest engagement with difficult content—handling innocent suffering, unanswered prayer, and the silence of God in age-appropriate ways that spark real conversations

  • Real-life application—helping kids think through what it means to trust God when life is unfair, to be a true friend to someone who is hurting, and to hold onto faith when the answers don't come

Whether your child is walking through a hard season, wrestling with questions about why God allows pain, or ready to explore one of the Bible's deepest and most rewarding books, What Is the Book of Job? will show them that the God who speaks from the whirlwind is big enough to handle their hardest questions—and worthy of their trust even when he doesn't explain.

Perfect for family reading, church classes, or independent study.

paperback, 10 chapters, 110 pages

The book of Job is the Bible's rawest conversation about suffering. But how do you teach it to your kids?

Buried in the middle of the Old Testament, Job is the book many families avoid—too long, too philosophical, too full of speeches that seem to go in circles. A good man loses everything. His friends blame him. God stays silent for thirty-five chapters. And when God finally speaks, he doesn't answer a single one of Job's questions.

But this strange, unsettling book turns out to be one of the most important in all of Scripture. It's the story of what happens when life stops making sense and the easy answers stop working. It's a fearless exploration of the hardest question anyone can ask: Does God care when good people suffer? And it's the Bible's clearest portrait of a faith that refuses to let go—even when it has every reason to.

What Is the Book of Job? makes this challenging book accessible for today's young readers. Written in a warm, conversational style that doesn't dodge the hard parts or talk down to kids, this guide walks through all forty-two chapters of Job with:

  • Engaging illustrations from pop culture—from Inside Out 2 to Bambi to Anne of Green Gables — that connect biblical themes to stories kids already know and love

  • Honest engagement with difficult content—handling innocent suffering, unanswered prayer, and the silence of God in age-appropriate ways that spark real conversations

  • Real-life application—helping kids think through what it means to trust God when life is unfair, to be a true friend to someone who is hurting, and to hold onto faith when the answers don't come

Whether your child is walking through a hard season, wrestling with questions about why God allows pain, or ready to explore one of the Bible's deepest and most rewarding books, What Is the Book of Job? will show them that the God who speaks from the whirlwind is big enough to handle their hardest questions—and worthy of their trust even when he doesn't explain.

Perfect for family reading, church classes, or independent study.