CORE ANCHOR SCRIPTURES “The LORD said unto my Lord, Sit thou at my right hand, until I make thine enemies thy footstool.” — Psalm 110:1, KJV “For he must reign, till he hath put all enemies under his feet.” — 1 Corinthians 15:25, KJV This series establishes a non-negotiable truth: Believers do not fight for victory; they enforce a victory already won. The enemy is not debating outcomes—he is being positioned under God’s authority and Christ’s finished work. Book of Job — Sovereignty on Trial, Not Job The Book of Job is often misunderstood as a story about suffering. In reality, it is a courtroom narrative about authority, accusation, and divine limits. Job opens with Satan already appearing before God, not as an equal adversary, but as a restricted accuser. Satan does not initiate action; he requests permission. This immediately dismantles the myth that Satan operates independently. God sets the boundaries: Satan cannot act without permission Satan cannot exceed what God allows Satan cannot override God’s purpose Job’s suffering does not prove Satan’s power. It exposes Satan’s limitations. SESSION 1 — THE ACCUSER PUT ON TRIAL What the Enemy Intended Satan accuses Job’s motives, suggesting righteousness is conditional and transactional. His goal is not Job’s pain—it is to discredit God’s justice and authority. What God Allows God permits testing, not because Job is weak, but because Job’s integrity will silence the accuser. Every boundary God sets ensures Satan can never claim ownership of the outcome. What Is Actually on Trial Job is not the defendant—Satan is. The question is not “Will Job break?” The question is “Does Satan’s accusation hold weight?” It does not. FOOTSTOOL REVELATION IN JOB What Satan meant to destroy Job, God used to: Expose false authority Establish true sovereignty Enthrone truth publicly By the end of the book: Satan disappears from the narrative Job’s understanding of God is elevated Restoration exceeds original loss The accuser leaves empty-handed.
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