Becoming wise: a psycho-gerontological interpretation of the Book of Job.
Achenbaum WA, Orwoll L. Int J Aging Hum Dev. 1991;32(1):21-39.
The Book of Job, a prototypical "wisdom" text from the fifth or sixth
century B.C.E., powerfully articulates a good man's struggle to
understand unexpected misfortune. In coming to terms with his suffering
and gaining understanding of his place in the universe, Job
demonstrates the complex, dynamic yet integrative nature of growing
wise. Drawing on our synthetic model of wisdom, we claim wisdom occurs
in personality, cognition, and conation that transforms intrapersonal,
interpersonal, and transpersonal experience. We discuss gender-specific
obstacles that Job overcomes in attaining wisdom by analyzing modern
interpretations of the text, which underscore its perdurance in a
post-modern