Day 8. Reading in Job 17 – 20.
I invite you to read the scripture for the day and write what was meaningful to YOU “in the comments.” We can encourage each other.
Job 17.
Job seems at his very lowest point in this chapter. ‘My spirit is broken.“
Even though Job is surrounded by “friends” (mockers, vs. 2) (unwise, vs. 10), he must feel terribly alone. When a person is in deep pain or sorrow, it’s hard for them to imagine how anyone can know what they feel.
- How can we help them? I think, the way these men surrounded Job in silence at the beginning is best. For women, maybe a good hug too. (But would anyone have wanted to hug a man covered with oozing boils?)
- Oh, God! Give me a heart of mercy, like Yours. Even in Your suffering on the cross, you asked for your persecutors to be forgiven. You took care of your grieving mother. You gave grace to the repentant thief.
Job 18.
Bildad speaks again. He chafes at Job’s unkind (but true) words about them. “Why are we stupid in your sight? YOU who tear yourself in your anger, shall the earth be forsaken for YOU??” He insinuates that Job is WICKED and then explains in gory detail what happens to wicked men who do not repent. After describing the horrors of the wicked, Bildad ends his speech with the whiplash accusation of a scorpion, no doubt glaring, or even pointing at Job. “…SUCH is the place of him who KNOWS NOT GOD.”
Job 19.
(Remember chapter one? God describes Job as “blameless and upright, one who feared God and turned away from evil.” SURELY Job is a man who KNOWS God.)
And yet under the “torment” of his friends, Job slides deeper into doubt. He tells the men around him that their opinions of him don’t matter, but, yes, now he begins to feel that God has forsaken him. ‘He has kindled his wrath against me and counts me as His adversary.”
Job even cries out to these miserable men, “Have mercy on me, have mercy on me, O you my friends, for the hand of God has touched me.” Then, faith seems to well up in him. “I know that my Redeemer lives, and at the last he will stand upon the earth. And after my skin has been this destroyed, yet IN MY FLESH…..I shall see God.” (This is prophecy.) What faith!
WOW!
- Did you notice how Job’s prayer in verse 23 has been answered, even as you read the words? He prays, “Oh that my words were written! Oh that they were inscribed in a book. Oh that with an iron pen and lead (a printer?) they were engraved in the rock forever!”
- WE ARE READING the answer to that prayer. WE KNOW that Job has not sinned according to the magnitude of his suffering. WE KNOW what was happening in heaven concerning Job.
- WE KNOW that when suffering comes to US, that God is in sovereign control and has us always in his hand and power. Satan can go THUS FAR and no more, to harm God’s children. Help this to be not only “head” knowledge, but “heart” assurance.
Job 20.
Then, the third and youngest, Zophar, rises for the second time to place his hand across his chest and “wax eloquent” before the others. (You want to laugh, or gag as you read this, especially as he aims his deadly word-arrows towards Job.)
Zophar is aghast at Job’s wonderful claim of faith about seeing His Redeemer one day. HOW DARE HE SAY HE WILL SEE GOD!? He tells Job, “Don’t you know this from old, since man was placed on earth, that the exulting of the wicked is short, and the joy of the godless but for a moment? Though his height mount up to the heavens and his head reach to the clouds, he will perish forever like his own dung?”
And Zophar goes on, yada, yada, yada, ending with, “This is the wicked man’s portion from God, the heritage decreed for him by God.” (And NOT seeing Him face to face, Zophar implies.)
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Eliphaz and Bildad get at Job a third time tomorrow. After that, a newcomer will try his hand. Eventually GOD HIMSELF will answer Job. Stay tuned.
