My Redeemer Lives
Day 24 · Job 19:25–27
📖 TODAY’S SCRIPTURE
Job 19:25–27 (NIV)
“I know that my redeemer lives, and that in the end he will stand on the earth. And after my skin has been destroyed, yet in my flesh I will see God; I myself will see him with my own eyes — I, and not another. How my heart yearns within me!”
📅 Reading order note: Abide in Him Daily follows a chronological reading of Scripture — the order events happened, not the order the books appear in the Bible. Most scholars place Job in the patriarchal era, around the time of Abraham. So we continue through Job before moving on to Exodus and beyond.
Today’s John 15 thread: The branch that clings to the Vine does so even when the fruit is gone, the leaves are stripped, and the season feels like death. Job clung. Not to an idea, not to a theology — to a Person. That is what remaining looks like in the dark.
✍️ REFLECTION
Yesterday, Job’s friends sat with him in silence for seven days. No words. Just presence. It was the best thing they ever did for him.
Then they opened their mouths — and everything unravelled. Chapter after chapter of theological argument, accusation, and advice. They told him he must have sinned. They told him God was punishing him. They told him the answer was to repent.
And in the middle of all that noise, Job says something that silences everything.
“I know that my redeemer lives.”
Not I hope. Not I think. Not someone told me. I know.
This is extraordinary for a man who had lost his children, his wealth, his health, and now his reputation. A man whose friends had turned into prosecutors. A man whose body was covered in sores and whose prayers felt like they were bouncing off the ceiling. And from that place — that place of total wreckage — Job makes the most confident declaration in the book.
Q1: Think about your own dark seasons. When it’s hardest — when the losses stack up and the silence feels deafening — what are you actually clinging to? A hope that things will improve, or a Person who you know is alive?
What makes this even more remarkable is what Job didn’t have. He didn’t have the New Testament. He didn’t have the Gospels. He couldn’t look up John 11:25 on his phone — “I am the resurrection and the life.” He had no name for this Redeemer, no empty tomb to point to, no disciples’ testimony to lean on. Yet somehow, through suffering and darkness and silence, his soul had glimpsed the only One who could hold him.
We have infinitely more than Job had. We have the name. We have the story. We have the cross and the empty tomb and two thousand years of testimony. We have the Spirit living inside us.
And yet — how quickly we lose the certainty.
Q2: Where have you found yourself slipping from “I know” to “I hope”? What has caused that drift — and what would it take to anchor yourself back in what is actually true?
Job’s confession is not wishful thinking dressed up as faith. It is a man who has been stripped of every earthly comfort arriving at the bedrock. When everything that can be shaken has been shaken, this is what remains: My Redeemer lives.
That is the foundation. Everything else is temporary.
🌿 REMAIN IN HIM
Take a moment before you move on. This isn’t a to-do. It’s an invitation to stay.
Reflect honestly: Is your confidence in Jesus built on your circumstances or on who He actually is? When the season is hard, do you still know — or has your certainty quietly shifted to something shakier?
Bring it to Jesus: Say it simply, out loud or in your heart: “I know that my Redeemer lives.” Let it be more than a phrase. Sit with it. Let it be the tether. Then bring Him your hardest thing right now — the place where certainty has been hardest to hold.
Trust the Gardener: Job’s story didn’t end in ruins. Neither will yours. The Gardener who allows the winter is the same One who ordains the spring. You don’t need to manufacture certainty — you need to remain in the One who is certain. Trust the Gardener.
🙏 PRAYER
Father, thank You for speaking through Your Word today. I’m humbled by Job — stripped of everything and still holding on. I want that kind of faith. Not the kind that only believes when life is comfortable, but the kind that knows even in the dark. My Redeemer lives. Let that be the anchor that holds me today, whatever comes. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
💡 MEMORY VERSE
Job 19:25 (NIV) — “I know that my redeemer lives, and that in the end he will stand on the earth.”
This post is part of the Abide in Him Daily devotional series — reading Scripture through the lens of John 15:1–17. The branch doesn’t manufacture the fruit. It bears it because it stays connected to the Vine.
