Job 38:1-11
After
37 chapters of complaining and fending off "un-friend" Fb advice Job finally gets
his day in the celestial court although after God’s opening argument Job surrenders
and cops a guilty plea; “Surely I’ve spoken of things too great for me to
understand.” (Job 42:3) God’s “where were you when…” might mean the question “why
did this happen to me?” is not even ours to ask. It certainly means God doesn’t
have to answer our “why?” We, like Job, his wife and his friends, would prefer
a more predictable process where we can explain and in that sense control what
happens to us. At the very least being the cause of what happens to us means we
have someone to blame and in a weird way there is some comfort in that. But
when life refuses to play by any rules we can identify or codify we are tempted
to complain bitterly like Job does while protesting his innocence, or hold onto
our theologies more tightly like his friends do, or take Job’s wife’s advice
and “curse God” (Job 2:9) and let faith die. But I think living “I have
spoken of things too great for me to understand” allows us to face
circumstances beyond our control with a faith that depends fully on the One who
was there when the foundations of the earth were laid. And the reason we can
live without question or answer is because the God revealed in the cross asked
the question for us “My God! My God! Why have forsaken me?” and answered it in
“It is finished.” That does not mean we live through sorrow and pain as a
prelude to the hymn of heaven but rather that we sing the forever future song even if our “light and momentary troubles” (2 Corinthians 6:17 are heavy and drawn because we.believe God is present in both the suffering and the song.
By faith ...
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