Before God Was Good: A Descent Into the Book of Job asks one of the oldest and sharpest questions of faith: If God is all-powerful and good, why do bad things happen to good people?
This problem, so familiar it has its own name-theodicy-has undone believers and haunted the Western imagination. For some, the paradox itself is proof that God does not exist. For others, the fallback is to treat suffering as a divine test, with this earth as nothing more than an exercise. Yet history, tragedy, and conscience press the question harder: Is God unable to prevent evil-or, more disturbingly, unwilling?
In this work, Derek T. Jones turns to the Book of Job, the Bible's own wrestling match with divine justice. Alongside Job, his friends, and God Himself, Jones follows the argument wherever it leads, toward the unsettling possibility that God is not perfect in the way we imagine. What emerges is a vision both bracing and hopeful: a God who struggles, who needs partners, who invites us to be co-creators and co-witnesses of Creation. Jones shows how Job teaches us to hold onto the tension between what is and what could be-a creative tension that fuels responsibility, compassion, and hope.
For the faithful, this book will challenge easy consolations. For skeptics, it reveals why Job's riddle still matters even outside the church. And for anyone who has suffered and asked "Why?", it offers not an escape but a descent into the mystery-a descent that may change how we think about God, goodness, and ourselves.