Daily Bread for Jun 13, Job 40-42
Today’s readings are Job 40-42.
We hear the reason Job is being
refined in Job 40:1-2.
Even though God calls him
blameless, Job is a faultfinder. He has found fault with his
friends and in God as well. This revelation silences Job. He knows it is true.
He stops accusing and starts listening intently (Job 40:3-4), saying, "I
lay my hand on my mouth." This is something he had seen other people do in
his presence (Job 21:25; 29:9). Job indignantly defended his righteousness
against the blatant accusations of his friends. He has no defense against the
truth of God. Job is humbled and ready to hear all God has to say.
God questions Job for evaluating
the meaning of his suffering in relation to God's sovereign rule over His
creation (Job 40:6-9). While Job is blameless, his demands for justice are
misplaced and show that he is involved in something that is over his head and
beyond his control and understanding (Job 40:10-14).
To illustrate His point, God turns back to His dominance over
all creation and Job's inability to influence or control it. Not only is Job
intimidated and outmatched by the giant beasts God has created, but he is
also powerless to establish his righteousness before the Lord.
In Job 42, Job wholly and contritely repents. He now sees his struggle and his problem and bows down to worship his Creator.
It is significant that God says, in
Job 42:7-9, that Job has spoken rightly about God while the three friends have
not. Job has spoken out of his frustration and pain, but the friends spoke out
of anger and judgment. There was truth to some of what was said by all four,
but the partial truths of Job's counselors were tainted by their judgment and
eventual anger at Job. God then tells Job to pray for his friends. The truly
amazing thing about how all these exchanges end is that God's grace abounds for
all of them, even though each of them has missed the mark.
Note the flow between Genesis and
Job here. We saw Noah, a blameless man who stumbled badly after the flood. Then
we heard of Job, another blameless and upright man. They are two of the most
righteous men ever created. Two men who loved God and obeyed His commandments.
But they are two men who still needed refinement, two godly but imperfect men.
Yet, despite their imperfections, God blesses both mightily.
From Noah, we learn of our own
imperfections. We can easily get comfortable with our blessing and slip into
sin. From Job, we learn that our suffering can reveal things in us God wants to
refine. But, we learn another lesson more powerful than the first, we need an
arbiter, an advocate to plead our case in heaven. Job recognizes he doesn’t
have one (Job 9:33). By His grace and in His timing, God will provide one, a
blameless man that will need no refining, Jesus Christ.
No comments:
Post a Comment