Job 1: Job, a righteous man, loses his wealth, children, and health but remains faithful to God.

Job 2: Satan attacks Job’s health, and his wife urges him to curse God, but Job refuses.

Job 3: Job’s three friends,Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar, come to comfort him in his suffering.

Job 4: Job curses the day of his birth and wishes for death.

Job 5: Eliphaz speaks, suggesting that Job’s suffering is the result of sin.

Job 6: Job replies, expressing his anguish and defending his integrity.

Job 7: Bildad speaks, asserting that God punishes the wicked and that Job should repent.

Job 8: Job responds, maintaining his innocence and questioning why God allows him to suffer.

Job 9: Zophar speaks, accusing Job of hidden sin and urging him to repent.

Job 10: Job answers, declaring that he is innocent and that the wicked often prosper.

Job 11: Job continues his defense, describing the power and wisdom of God.

Job 12: Zophar responds, asserting that Job’s words are empty, and the wicked will face judgment.

Job 13: Job continues to defend his integrity and laments the apparent prosperity of the wicked.

Job 14: Eliphaz accuses Job of specific sins and urges him to turn back to God.

Job 15: Job expresses his desire to plead his case before God and laments his suffering.

Job 16: Bildad speaks again, asserting that no one can be righteous before God.

Job 17: Job responds, reflecting on God’s power and his own righteousness.

Job 18: Zophar speaks a second time, reiterating that the wicked will be punished.

Job 19: Job refutes his friends’ arguments and laments that God seems distant in his suffering.

Job 20: Job expresses his desire for a mediator between himself and God.

Job 21: Eliphaz speaks again, suggesting that Job’s suffering is a result of his arrogance and sin.

Job 22: Job responds, declaring his trust in God’s justice despite his suffering.

Job 23: Bildad asserts that God does not pervert justice, and the wicked will perish.

Job 24: Job expresses frustration with his friends’ counsel and appeals directly to God.

Job 25: Zophar speaks again, accusing Job of being self-righteous and deserving of his suffering.

Job 26: Job declares that he will maintain his integrity and calls for God to vindicate him.

Job 27: Job reflects on the brevity of life and the fate of the wicked.

Job 28: Job describes the wisdom of God and laments his own suffering.

Job 29: Job defends his righteousness and expresses his desire for justice from God.

Job 30: Job continues to declare his integrity and desire for God to answer him.

Job 31: Elihu, a younger man, speaks for the first time, rebuking Job and his friends.

Job 32: Elihu continues, asserting that God uses suffering to correct and teach.

Job 33: Elihu speaks of God’s justice and power, urging Job to trust in God’s wisdom.

Job 34: Elihu concludes by praising God’s greatness and urging Job to submit to God’s will.

Job 35: God speaks to Job out of the whirlwind, questioning Job’s understanding of creation.

Job 36: God continues to speak, challenging Job’s knowledge of the natural world.

Job 37: Job humbly responds, acknowledging his limited understanding and repenting.

Job 38: God rebukes Job’s friends for their false counsel and restores Job’s fortunes.

Job 39: Job’s friends offer sacrifices for their wrongdoing, and Job prays for them.

Job 40: God blesses Job with even greater prosperity than before, and Job lives a long life.

Job 41: Job’s daughters are named, and they receive an inheritance along with their brothers.

Job 42: Job dies after living 140 years, having seen four generations of his family.