Job 14:12
So man lyeth downe, and riseth not, till the heauens be no more, they shall not awake; nor bee raised out of their sleepe. Job 14:12 (KJV)
The Book of Job wrestles with the problem of human suffering and the nature of God’s justice. Job, a man described as righteous, endures severe trials that lead him to question the purpose of his suffering. In the verse above, he contemplates the mortality of humanity and the apparent finality of death.
Job repeatedly affirms the reality of human mortality. Earlier in the chapter (Job 14:1‑2, KJV) he observes that a person’s days are few and the number of his months is but a handful. The imagery of “lying down” and not rising again, likened to a sleep that will not end until the heavens cease, underscores the brief and certain nature of life. This portrayal emphasizes a universal fate that awaits every human being.
The language also conveys a sense that death is a permanent state. Job suggests that the dead will not awaken or be raised until the heavens are no more, reflecting the limited theological concepts of his era. While he does not claim that resurrection is impossible, his words reveal an understanding of death as an unchangeable condition absent divine intervention.
Nevertheless, Job’s reflections are not wholly devoid of hope. In later verses (Job 19:25‑27) he declares confidence that his Redeemer lives and that he will see God after his flesh is destroyed. Christian readers have interpreted this as an anticipatory hint of resurrection, a theme that is more fully developed in the New Testament.
The verse captures Job’s deep despair as he grapples with suffering that seems disconnected from his righteousness. His struggle illustrates the tension between human experience of hardship and the expectation of divine justice.
In the New Testament, Jesus Christ expands the biblical understanding of life, death, and resurrection. Through His own death and resurrection, He proclaimed victory over death (John 11:25‑26) and offered believers the promise of eternal life (1 Cor 15:20‑22). The teachings of Jesus and the apostles thus provide a fuller revelation of resurrection and the hope of life beyond the grave.

