Scholars estimate that the book of Job, probably the work of multiple authors, was composed some time between the seventh and fifth centuries B.C.E. When comparing didactic poetry, does the fact that the book of Job is so old have anything to do with the reverence or specialness which some modern readers attach to it? Furthermore, is Job really a fitting example of Sacred Truth rather than, say, “sacred perplexity”? Is advanced age in a wisdom narrative a necessary condition of Sacredness? Is there something special about “touching the old,” harkening back to an Overcoming Bias post by that name?
Scholars estimate that the book of Job, probably the work of multiple authors, was composed some time between the seventh and fifth centuries B.C.E. When comparing didactic poetry, does the fact that the book of Job is so old have anything to do with the reverence or specialness which some modern readers attach to it? Furthermore, is Job really a fitting example of Sacred Truth rather than, say, “sacred perplexity”? Is advanced age in a wisdom narrative a necessary condition of Sacredness? Is there something special about “touching the old,” harkening back to an Overcoming Bias post by that name?