Chapter 3 Job — The Required Intercessor

Written by:
Apostolic Bishop Jerry Pena
God’s Anointed Servant
Spiritual Overseer—Apostolic Impartation of Fire Ministries

© 2025 Bishop Jerry Pena / Apostolic Impartation of Fire Ministries. All Rights Reserved.

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When God Demanded a Human To Pray

The Book of Job contains one of the most overlooked revelations about prayer in all of Scripture. After chapters of suffering, debate, and divine confrontation, God spoke to Eliphaz the Temanite and issued a statement that should shake every believer who underestimates the importance of prayer.

“After the LORD had spoken these words to Job, He said to Eliphaz the Temanite, ‘My anger burns against you and against your two friends, for you have not spoken about Me what is right, as My servant Job has. Now therefore take seven bulls and seven rams and go to My servant Job and offer a burnt offering for yourselves, and My servant Job will pray for you. I will accept his prayer and not deal with you according to your folly, for you have not spoken about Me what is right, as My servant Job has.’” — Job 42:7-8 (BSB)

God Required a Human Intercessor

This is extraordinary. God was angry with Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar. He had every right and every ability to forgive them directly. He did not need Job’s prayer. He is sovereign. He is omnipotent. He could have spoken a word and resolved the matter.

But He did not.

Instead, God required Job—the man who had suffered more than any of them—to pray for the very friends who had accused him, condemned him, and added to his suffering. God built prayer into the resolution. He made it a condition. Without Job’s prayer, the three friends would face the consequences of their folly.

What This Reveals About Heaven’s Design

  1. Prayer Is Structural, Not Supplemental — God did not add prayer as an afterthought. He made it the required mechanism for mercy to be released. This tells us that prayer is woven into the fabric of how heaven operates.
  2. God Honors the Intercessor — God told Eliphaz, “My servant Job will pray for you. I will accept his prayer.” God attached His acceptance to Job’s intercession. The intercessor carries weight in heaven.
  3. Intercession Requires Humility and Forgiveness — Job had to pray for men who wounded him. He had to lay down his offense, his pain, and his right to vindication—and intercede. This is the cost of intercession. It is not comfortable. It is costly.
  4. Restoration Came Through Prayer — The very next verse reveals the result: “After Job had prayed for his friends, the LORD restored his fortunes and gave him twice as much as he had before” (Job 42:10). Job’s own restoration was tied to his willingness to pray for others.

The Intercessor’s Reward

After Job had prayed for his friends, the LORD restored his fortunes and gave him twice as much as he had before.” — Job 42:10 (BSB)

There is a principle buried in this verse that the modern Church desperately needs to recover: your breakthrough may be connected to your intercession for someone else. Job did not receive his double portion until he prayed for the very people who had caused him pain. God’s restoration was released through the channel of intercessory prayer.

How many believers are waiting for their breakthrough while refusing to pray for those who have hurt them? How many pastors are waiting for restoration while harboring unforgiveness toward the very people God is telling them to intercede for? Job’s story is a prophetic pattern: forgive, intercede, and watch God restore. Thank you Jesus!

Reflection Questions

  • Is there someone who has wounded me that God may be asking me to pray for?
  • Am I willing to lay down my right to vindication and intercede for those who have spoken wrongly about me?
  • Could my delayed breakthrough be connected to an intercession I have been avoiding?
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