Day 4 — Job 4 – 7

Ancient Near East poetry. What can I say? Most of us do not enjoy it. Understanding it a little better can help us appreciate it, though.

Think about what we like about poetry. Most of us don’t enjoy poetry in our own language and culture, but we do enjoy good rhythm and rhyme. But Ancient Near Easterners didn’t go for rhythm and rhyme. What made their poetry great in their eyes was mostly parallelism of thought. Which means a really good poet would find several different ways to state his idea. Say it, then say it again, and again, and perhaps again. Unfortunately, that isn’t appreciated in our culture; we are strictly the opposite: say it in the smallest possible sound byte. Reading Hebrew poetry is an opportunity for us to grow in appreciation for other cultures and to be exposed to other ways of doing things than our own. It’s good for us. When you’re frustrated with a speaker’s beating his idea to death, instead of thinking, “We get the idea; now move on!” we can think about how the writer’s original audience would have been really impressed with his poetry writing skills.

That can make Job a rather dangerous book. In the midst of our minds wandering as we slog through the speakers’ beating their subject to death, our attention is caught by a startlingly inconsistent statement. “The Bible says THAT?” we think. Many people take statements from Job out of context in this manner. Your challenge with Job is to follow the arguments and understand what is being said. Sometimes the forthrightness of the speakers is scandalous to our politically correct ways of thinking, especially as the exchange progresses. See if you can find these slams. Make sure you understand who is saying the startling statements that people take out of context, and understand their context. Hopefully these things will not only keep you awake and engaged as you read Job, but even give you some enjoyment.

So Eliphaz is the first one to speak. He’s a prime example of how not to comfort your grieving, suffering friend.

Have you ever experienced even just one of the losses Job suffered in chapters one and two? The loss of a child? The loss of your wealth? The loss of your source of earning a living? Any one of these is a devastating loss; all three together are unimaginable. The loss of the latter two transformed Job’s way of life: he went from being a prominent citizen of his community, managing his many resources, to facing subsistence living at cost of great toil. It’s a painful transition.

What do you want from others in the face of the profound pain of such awful losses? A dismissal of your losses in comparing them to something much less costly than your own loss? (I once had an acquaintance say he understood my grief over the death of my baby daughter, because he had just lost his dog.) Offering platitudes? Stating the obvious – over and over again? A judgment of your undeniable sinful state because this has happened to you? If you think these can give you comfort in loss, then Eliphaz is the friend for you.

It’s not that what he says is untrue. But his opening statement implies that Job’s grief makes him a hypocrite for all the words of comfort and strength he has offered hurting people in the past. Wouldn’t Job be expected to hurt deeply over these losses he has suffered, wishing he had never been born? Seasons of sorrow come upon all of us throughout our lives, and we will hurt, but that doesn’t make us hypocrites for offering comfort to others who hurt.

Eliphaz left Job no response but to admit his sinful state (which would not be true, because Job knew he was blameless, and God had verified it to Satan), because Eliphaz had had the privilege of a great revelation from God: that all men are sinners before God. In the midst of Job’s great loss, Eliphaz tells him, “Behold, how happy is the man whom God reproves,/So do not despise the discipline of the Almighty.” He assumes Job is suffering because God is disciplining him for his sin, which of course is not true, and Job knows it isn’t true or else either God is not all-knowing or He is not just. The crisis of faith in God adds to Job’s suffering! Further, how can Job be happy in light of his current losses? He needs time to grieve his loss, and his friend should have given him time to go through that process, including its anger phase. Who can possibly be happy that he has lost every one of his children in one fell swoop, and his wealth and earning power to boot?!

He assumed that God only brings suffering to a righteous man to discipline him. How fortunate we are that God’s ways are above our ways, and His thoughts are above man’s thoughts!

Job was left to find his own comfort, and he did, small as it may seem. Can you find what it was? Hint: it came from his own character.

A great lesson for us all in Job’s response is, “For the despairing man there should be kindness from his friend; Lest he forsake the fear of the Almighty.” (v. 6:14) God’s enemy only bothers with us because he knows our commitment to God is often based on the blessings He gives us, and when they are withdrawn, we will turn away from Him. We need to understand the nature of our own commitment to God in preparation for such testing. We need to understand the danger to our suffering friends’ souls in such times. If our platitudes or presumptions to know God’s mind and ways cause them to turn away from God, we are no true friends.

Day 3 -– Genesis 10:1 – 11:9; Job 1-3

We are not jumping around randomly with our diversion to the book of Job. The best scholarship has determined that Job lived before Abram, so that’s where we’re going to read about him.

The book of Job is not placed in its chronological spot in the Bible, because it is not a history book as Genesis through Esther are. That doesn’t mean that its history is not historically accurate. The Bible’s history has been proven accurate by cross references with man’s historical accounts and by archaeology time and again. The accuracy of the Bible’s history accounts began to be questioned by man in the nineteenth century, as scholars of literature began studying the Bible as a piece of literature. That was occurring at the same time that the science of archaeology was beginning, and had yet to dig up much that would shed light on the questions of historicity of the Bible. These scholars questioned the accuracy of the Bible’s history because it told of people and places for which no other historical references existed. These so-called scholars then concluded that this history which was not corroborated by man’s accounts was false. Then archeologists began uncovering historical records that verified time and again the history recorded in the Bible. Archaeologists found cities that had been buried so long that they were forgotten, except by the Bible. We need to accept the truth of the Bible apart from man’s corroboration, but isn’t it rewarding to be given answers to the skeptics’ doubts? We need to be careful that we aren’t persuaded by man’s so-called wisdom to doubt the truth of God’s word. Man’s wisdom is as limited as his knowledge of history was, as the evidence lay buried and long-forgotten. There is still much that lies buried; the absence of the evidence should not diminish our faith. God rewards us when we come to Him in faith.

Job’s story has offered much comfort to suffering people throughout history. How good God is to give us this story, and the glimpse into events behind it that we could never witness otherwise. Although the book is primarily poetry, we don’t need to doubt the historical existence of Job and the fact of his suffering. Has anyone suffered like Job? If he can endure faithfully in suffering, so can we. Some things to note about Job:

He was, in God’s words, “a blameless and upright man, fearing God and turning away from evil” (v. 1:8). God even reiterates that assessment of Job’s character in v. 2:3. It is important to remember throughout the book that Job is blameless in God’s sight. He remains blameless through the end of the book, which is also important to remember.

His first response was to bow to God’s sovereignty. Wow. What a model for us to follow when we are struck by catastrophe. His response to loss wasn’t due to his lack of care for what he lost. Rather, the background the book gives us tells us that Job cared for his children deeply. In the midst of that kind of pain, he submitted to God. He did not raise a fist to God’s face in rebellion. Lord, prepare each of us to respond to our own tragedies as did this lovely model You have given us.

He grieved. He was suffering cruelly, and he didn’t bottle it in!

He was suffering cruelly. Satan had no trouble with Job’s suffering; he simply wanted to use Job any way he could against God. Satan cares about you and me the same way. Understand what kind of enemy he is. He really doesn’t care about us; no, his passionate hatred is for God. We are merely the tools he uses to try to thwart God, and he picks us up and uses us any hurtful way he can, to hurt God. He wants to devour us, ruin us, hurt us – all in service to his hatred for God.

Satan could do nothing without God’s permission. Does that make God equally cruel, to allow Satan to harm Job? Hannah Whitall Smith used the picture of those hurtful trials coming from Satan through God’s hand: He stops some things, allows others. Why? Ultimately, only God knows, but we can submit to Him because His ways are higher than our ways (Is. 55:9) and because He is good. Anything He allows to come to us, He wants to use for our good (Romans 8:28). What good came to Job? Read the book, and see. One good thing that has come from Job’s story is that my soul has been fortified in the midst of my own suffering, by his example, as have countless other souls through the ages. The understanding and model this book gives us has proven to be a great help to God’s people.

Chapter 3 introduces us to ancient Hebrew poetry, of which few of us are fans. More about ancient poetry tomorrow.