(yes, I know, it’s hard).
Job’s friends who were so saintily silent, commisserating with Job in his misery and sorrow, now speak. (They shouldn’t have!!)
Job had indulged in a hopeless monologue, wishing he hadn’t been born. (Have you and I ever felt like that in a really tough situation of loss or extreme pain?)
When Eliphaz (friend #1) finally speaks, it’s not with compassion, but with a bossy tone, saying Job MUST have done something really bad, because, you know, God BLESSES the “innocent”……
Um, not always so, Eliphaz. The righteous DO suffer.
And Job actually points to something else. “Behold, BLESSED is the one whom God reproves; therefore despise not the discipline of the Almighty.” (Reminds you of Psalm 94:13-14 and Hebrews 12:5-6, doesn’t it?)
Job also says something seriously that reminds me of some of MY nights, “But the night is long, and I am full of tossing till the dawn.” He, however, is suffering immensely, whereas I am NOT.
Yes, he is depressed. Wouldn’t YOU be? And yet his “friends” keep at it. Bildad (friend #2), tells Job that his days will be good again, he just needs to REPENT of his sin. (Huh? godly & blameless Job?)
I know NONE of us are sinless, but these horrors did not happen to Job BECAUSE he sinned. They are ultimately for God’s glory. (Kind of like the story of the man born blind that Jesus healed in John 9:3)
In chapter 9, Job first praises God Amighty, then yells at Him, and then in horror, backtracks.
Poor guy! Remember, HE doesn’t know what WE know. We saw that diabolical deal the devil made in Heaven’s courtroom with the holy, righteous God; that deal to ruin Job, and dishonor his God.
Don’t give up, keep reading tomorrow!
