Job, exhortation (GVG)
    
        "I have uttered that I understood not; things too wonderful for me, which I knew
        not... Wherefore I abhor myse!f, and repent in dust and ashes" (Job
        42:3-6).
    We are once again reading together the marvelous book of Job.
    It is the only non-Jewish book of the Bible, and it is in all probability the
    oldest book of the Bible. Many eminent men -- both religious and non-religious
    -- have called it the supreme literary production in all the world's history. It
    is, from any point of view, a most remarkable piece of writing.
    
    The place and time
    
    From the names of the characters and their ancestors, and the
    place names, the location of the story is the area between the Dead Sea and the
    desert, or somewhat to the north or south of that: the area of the descendants
    of Abraham other than through Jacob -- generally speaking, the Arabs. Job was
    one of the "Men of the East," a term applied to the Arabs: Ishmaelites,
    Edomites, etc. And the time seems most likely to be during the two hundred or so
    years Israel was in Egypt. All the background and customs and genealogy point to
    this place and time.
    
    As to how the book of Job got into an otherwise wholly Jewish
    Bible, there is a strong and ancient Jewish tradition that Moses wrote it, or at
    least made it part of the Scriptures -- by the guidance of the Spirit of course.
    Moses would have been the logical one to do so. He may well have known Job
    himself, or Job's early descendants, during the forty years he was in Midian.
    Job was the greatest (and therefore best known) of the "Men of the East" (Job
    1:3), and Midian would be included in that area. The history of Job would be
    well-known there.
    
    It is remarkable that the great typical and exemplary patient
    sufferer of the Old Testament is not a Jew, but rather is of a race which --
    though closely related -- was always, and still is, in deep antagonism to the
    Jews. He was a Gentile -- a non-Jew, that is -- of the seed of Abraham, adding
    to the beauty and fitness of the typical picture.
    
    A non-Jewish model of excellence
    
    Here, in the midst of an otherwise Jewish book, is a perfect
    model of excellence for all time: a man who is not a Jew, not under the Law, who
    had nothing to do with the Law, nothing to do with Israel. He is referred to by
    Ezekiel (Eze 14:14), with Noah and Daniel, as three outstanding examples of
    righteousness. He is referred to by James (Jam 5:11) as the ultimate example of
    patient, faithful suffering.
    
    The story opens with the... picture of [sons] of God coming
    together before Him, and among them [an]... adversary... Orthodoxy represents
    its Devil as having free access to God's heaven, and being God's agent and
    accomplice. One respectable modern commentary, the "New Bible Commentary," says
    concerning this scene that the Devil is a "divine agent," and is the supreme
    cynic of the heavenly court." What a debased, pagan conception of God's holy
    dwelling-place! -- in perfect harmony with the crude gods and heavens of Greece
    and Rome, but certainly not with the Scriptures of Truth.
    
    "Doth Job fear God for nought?" He DID: and so must we. Our
    motive must be love alone, and not self-benefit, though self-benefit will
    inevitably follow, for goodness can lead only at last to goodness, in a world
    ruled by the goodness of God. But our motivation must be pure love of God and of
    goodness.
    
    Why do the righteous suffer?
    
    The great question of the book of Job is: Why do the righteous
    suffer? And the great lesson is: We must totally and unquestioningly trust God,
    and have implicit faith in His love, mercy and justice, regardless of any
    appearances or circumstances. He has a reason and a purpose in the suffering of
    His people: different reasons at different times, but all working toward their
    ultimate glorification -- often a reason (as here) that would be impossible for
    man ever to guess without knowing what was in God's mind.
    
    The sufferings of Christ point to the same problem: Why? We
    can dimly perceive how he was "made perfect through suffering," and how his
    perfect submission to that suffering laid the eternal foundation for the world's
    redemption from all suffering.
    
    But, above all, we must unhesitatingly accept the ways of God
    because He is God; because He manifestly has made all things, and knows the
    reason for all. He has manifested His infinite power and wisdom in all the
    beauties and glories of Creation. He proclaims His love and justice in His Word.
    He overwhelmingly manifests His divinity in that Word.
    
    We must accept the whole picture, or reject the whole picture.
    To reject it in the light of its overpowering evidence is stupidity. To question
    God's ways in the light of His overpowering greatness is obviously equal
    stupidity. This is the lesson of Job. The final outcome manifested God's wisdom
    and love and compassion. We must have implicit trust that it always will if we
    do our part faithfully.
    
    It was a high honor and privilege for Job to be used by God to
    demonstrate for all ages what true righteousness and faith really is, and to
    give an example of patient integrity in the face of what appeared to everyone,
    including Job himself, a deliberate divine effort to afflict and torment him to
    the uttermost.
    
    Job and Christ: striking parallels 
    
    We see throughout, a very striking, broad parallel between Job
    and Christ, although there are necessarily differences and contrasts.
    
    Both were the outstandingly righteous men of their
    age.
    
    Both suffered more intensely and grievously than is recorded
    of any other man. Christ suffered more greatly, and more extendedly, for he
    lived his whole life in the shadow of the inevitable cross, under the constant
    burden of required perfection, or all Creation would have been betrayed. And in
    his deep and superhuman empathy, he suffered all the sufferings of his people of
    all ages. Infinitely more even than Paul he could say: "Who is weak, and I am
    not weak? Who is offended, and I burn not?" He was pre-eminently a Man of
    Sorrows (Isa 53:3), though at the same time a Man of incomparable Joy (Joh
    15:11; 17:13).
    
    With both, God knew from the beginning that they would hold
    fast to the end, regardless of the intensity of the trial: and God built His
    purpose upon that assurance. What a glorious role for men to play! If Job had
    failed... God would have been put to shame; His whole dispensation of love
    exposed as mere self-serving.
    
    Both were reduced in shame from the highest position to the
    lowest, though in different ways. Christ, as the only begotten Son of God, was
    the potential heir of the universe. As Paul explains to the Philippians (Phi
    2:6-8), Jesus -- though finding himself the one special man above all men, even
    the "Fellow" of God (Zec 13:7), entitled to the homage of the angels (Heb 1) --
    nevertheless humbled himself, and accepted the position of a slave, even to the
    most ignominious of deaths.
    
    Both were utterly despised and rejected. Both were assumed by
    their own people and generation to be under the special curse of God, at the
    very time they were suffering for the sake of others. For we must recognize that
    Job's sufferings went far beyond himself, and were for universal instruction and
    comfort and guidance. It was not an aimless wager, when God staked all on Job's
    integrity, but an essential manifestation of the noble, vital, spiritual
    principle of faithful integrity for its own sake alone, under the most extreme
    of testings: the key to salvation. We must do good simply because we love the
    good and hate the evil.
    
    Made perfect by suffering
    
    Both were "made perfect by suffering." This is a deep and
    important aspect in both cases. Christ, though of unblemished righteousness, was
    not "perfect" until he had, in loving and all-trusting obedience, passed through
    the required suffering and sacrificial death.
    
    Job was the most righteous man of his day: a giant of faith
    and endurance -- "perfect and upright," "none like him in all the earth,"
    according to the testimony of God Himself (Job 1:8). Still, Job has something to
    learn, something in which to be developed and brought to beautiful fruition, as
    he at last freely and humbly confesses (Job 40:4; 42:6).
    
    Unquestionably, Job was a better, wiser, greater, more
    understanding man, much closer to God, after his terrible trial than before. And
    he had attained to a far higher position in the Divine Purpose and
    Manifestation. As a prosperous and honored sheik, he never would have fully
    known God. He never would have become an inspiration and example for all ages.
    He never would have been granted the unique and inestimable privilege of the
    direct Divine revelation he received.
    
    God's unique self-manifestation to Job
    
    Was ever a man the subject of so full and personal and
    searching a Divine address to himself? God did not deign to explain, for that
    would have been utterly inappropriate, and would not have accomplished the
    desired result. We must first accept God and all His ways fully and
    unquestioningly, before we can hope for any explanation of their
    mysteries.
    
    But God condescended to take the time and trouble to fully and
    in detail manifest Himself and His majesty to Job, as He did to none other we
    know of but Christ himself. God's address to Job is unique in all
    Scripture.
    
    Job at last received that which he had so passionately pleaded
    for: a direct divine manifestation. It would be well worth all the scorn and
    abuse and terrible suffering he had endured. Indeed, its value and power would
    be greatly heightened by that dark background. What a joyful, glorious,
    inspiring, comforting memory for the last one hundred and forty years of his
    life! -- a life which he thought was already over. How much closer he would now
    be to God for that long period of recompense for his trials! How much more at
    peace -- for there are hints that for all his religious efforts and prosperity,
    he was not before truly at peace. In the anguish of his suffering, he makes such
    revelations as this:
    
    
        "That which I GREATLY FEARED is come upon me" (Job
        3:25).
    But never again would he fear anything. Now his peace was deep
    and strong. The ordeal was dreadful, but we see its wholesome
    benefits.
    
    Job's crushing avalanche of affliction
    
    Job's afflictions were many and cumulative. They would quickly
    have destroyed a lesser man. In evaluating Job and what he at times says, we
    must strive to comprehend the almost incomprehensible extent to which he was
    tortured and tried in so many ways at once.
    
    First, he lost all his possessions and livelihood. In swift
    succession, calamity upon calamity fell crushingly upon him. And with it, he
    lost his whole family of ten beloved children in what was obviously a direct
    divine blow, unexplained and unprovoked: his cherished family for which he had
    constantly prayed and offered sacrifice.
    
    His reaction was perfect, unhesitating, total acceptance and
    worship --
    
    
        "The Lord gave, the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the
        Lord."
    Then, in seeming heartless response by God to this loving and
    godly reaction, he was smitten from head to foot -- again obviously by the hand
    of God -- with the most painful, loathsome and abhorred disease known to man,
    inevitably fatal in terrible suffering in the natural course of events: a
    particularly repulsive form of consuming, deforming leprosy, universally
    regarded as a manifestation of God's especial wrath.
    
    Then his wife turned against him -- and all his friends and
    acquaintances. And he found himself a universally abandoned pariah, cast out of
    the city, consigned to the refuse heap to die a lingering death: the butt of
    ridicule and abuse by the vilest class of the people, who tormented him for
    their depraved amusement.
    
    Job was totally rejected, and driven "without the gate" by
    those who considered themselves the "Holy City."
    
    In the raw meanness of ordinary human nature, everyone was
    gratified to see this mighty man, this presumed paragon of righteousness,
    crushed and humbled in the mire, and eager to add their own miserable quota to
    his overflowing misery. They spit in his face, he says. Exactly the same thing
    is said of Christ (Mat 26:67): the deepest degradation and insult. "Crucify him!
    Crucify him! He pretended to be so good!" It was his very God-attested goodness
    that so enraged the blind evil fury of the flesh against him.
    
    The friends come
    
    And so time dragged on wearily, with Job lying in misery in
    the ashes (Job 2:8) (the Septuagint says "dung-heap," which is probably the
    meaning), until his three special friends heard of his calamities, and assembled
    to comfort him. They were so struck with his misery and dreadful appearance that
    they sat around him in silence for seven days. Then, when he repeatedly implored
    their comfort and sympathy, they more and more heatedly condemned him and
    accused him of the vilest crimes and hypocrisies.
    
    This is the background against which we must consider him.
    Truly, like Moses, under tremendous stress he "spake unadvisedly with his
    lips."
    
    Job is throughout wrestling tremendously with this problem.
    Upon the shame and misery of his condition is heaped the smug and self-righteous
    condemnation of his closest friends. His friends' rejection aroused an
    over-reaction in what he said, but threw him more and more on God. He had sought
    their support and sympathy against the hand of God. They railed on him, thinking
    they were thereby earning God's favor. This added to his bitterness, but it
    showed him there was nowhere to turn for comfort and understanding but to God
    Himself.
    
    The friends' condemnation was an essential part of the trial,
    and of the final result. Though it added immeasurably to his grief, it was
    probably more helpful to him (in a way opposite what they intended) than their
    sympathy would have been.
    
    Job's greatest agony: God's seeming rejection
    
    All forsook him in his extremity. But his greatest agony was
    not in his sufferings, nor in his rejection by all mankind, but God's apparent
    rejection and forsaking and enmity. Again and again he implores God for but one
    word of hope or comfort or recognition, but is met with total silence, and
    increased oppression. Even when he seeks brief, exhausted surcease in sleep, he
    is terrified with awful dreams (Job 7:14).
    
    To judge what he says, we must consider all he said, and the
    order in which he said it; just as we must consider the whole of Psa 22, and not
    just the first few words from it that Christ quoted on the cross. It is all too
    easy to get his cries of anguish out of proportion, as if they were the studied
    and final conclusions reached coolly and theoretically in ease and
    comfort.
    
    The fundamental fact is that Job held fast his trust in God,
    and would not deviate from his dedication to righteousness (which has no meaning
    outside of faith in God); and he was confident throughout of final resurrection,
    and of God's open manifestation to him at last.
    
    There is no more triumphant victory of faith than is expressed
    in his memorable words, wrung from him In the depth of present despair
    --
    
    
        "Though he slay me, yet will I trust him... He also shall be my salvation!"
        
        "If a man die, shall he live again? All the days of my appointed time will I
        wait, till my change come. Thou shalt call, and I will answer Thee. Thou wilt
        have a desire (kasaph: longing) to the work of Thine hands."
        
        "I KNOW that my redeemer liveth, and that He shall stand at the latter day UPON
        THE EARTH... Whom I shall see for myself, and mine eyes shall behold" (Job
        13:15-16; 14:14-15; 19:25-27).
    
    Why such dreadful affliction?
    
    His complaints are not against God's overall justice, but
    against His seeming injustice in the affairs of this life -- especially that one
    who tried so hard to obey should be picked out for the most terrible of
    afflictions, while all men gloated, and the wicked were at ease. Job knew that
    at last all would be righted, but why this special, dreadful, unprovoked
    affliction of a righteous and faithful man?
    
    The friends fall silent. Job restates his case at length (Job
    26-31) with great power and beauty: conceding that the wicked are finally
    punished; conceding God's infinite might and understanding; conceding that man's
    whole wisdom is to fear God and depart from evil -- but again long and stoutly
    declaring his own righteousness, and crying for the opportunity of debating his
    case with God, confident of victory.
    
    Then a new figure enters, the young Elihu, who prepares Job
    for the final revelation from God. He introduces the idea that suffering is not
    only for punishment, as the friends contended, but has many uses in the love and
    wisdom of God: constructive loving discipline, directional chastisement of a
    Father, strengthening by training and rigor, manifestation and deepening of
    faith, purification -- especially purification, making perfect. Suffering can
    and must lead to fuller understanding, and thus be a blessing. Job makes no
    attempt to answer Elihu.
    
    God speaks
    
    Then God speaks. It is notable that Job was given just what he
    asked: an opportunity to stand up to God and argue with Him, to show Him how He
    must be mistaken. But how swiftly Job's bold self-assurance fled before the
    mighty manifestation of God's infinite wisdom and power!
    
    That God should deign to speak to man at all -- especially to
    one calling His ways in question -- is a tremendous condescension in itself, a
    tremendous and unique honor, and manifestation of love for Job.
    
    As God spoke of the endless marvels of His Creation, Job
    shrank to nothing. Crushed in shame, he learned to rest totally and unreservedly
    in God, devastated by the sudden realization of the stupidity and presumption of
    daring to challenge God and question His ways.
    
    When God brought Job to the comfort and peace of unquestioning
    love and trust, He thereby solved all Job's problems, even before He removed
    Job's afflictions. Their removal came later, after Job had waived all his
    complaints, and prostrated himself in loving worship.
    
    God banished Job's questions, not by answering them, but by
    totally removing them from his concern. Job was wholly satisfied that whatever
    God did must be right, and must be rooted in love and wisdom.
    
    God's answer was to give no answer, but to manifest a God so
    great that no answer was needed. To need an explanation and justification of
    anything God does is to have a degraded and unacceptable conception of God. He
    is infinitely above all question and accountability.
    
    Man dare not question God
    
    Job was faithful and righteous above all his contemporaries,
    and completely, actively dedicated to good works, and to service to God and man.
    He demonstrated his firm and unshakable endurance, and that he unselfishly loved
    goodness for goodness' sake alone. But he did not have the necessary total
    self-abasing humility and recognition of self-nothingness until he was crushed
    by the divine revelation. The learning of this was the supreme blessing of his
    entire experience.
    
    The whole lesson of God's self-manifestation to Job is the
    limitless greatness of God, and the utter littleness of man. If God had stooped
    to explain Himself to Job before totally humbling him in the recognition of his
    nothingness, then God would have been conceding man's right to judge God and
    demand an answer for His ways. And man must be made to realize that he just does
    not have this right. It is absurd and unthinkable that puny little ignorant
    created man should for one moment question God, Who effortlessly maintains the
    numberless stars and galaxies in their myriad courses throughout the universe.
    What is weak, brief-lived, earth-crawling man to question his Creator?
    
    But when Job humbled himself, and cast away all
    self-importance, God graciously went much further to set Job's mind at perfect
    rest, and doubly compensated him for all his faithfully-borne suffering and
    shame. He totally vindicated and honored him before his self-righteous friends,
    and gave Job the joyful, forgiving privilege of being their mediator.
    
    Restoration
    
    And then He justified Job before his whole community, and made
    him twice as rich as he had been before. After what Job had bitterly learned of
    the fickle respect and fellowship of men (who fled when he needed them, and came
    back shamelessly seeking his favor when he was restored), and had gloriously
    learned of the companionship of God, the riches and honor would mean little to
    him, except as an even greater opportunity to resume his former course of
    goodness and guidance and charity to others, succoring the needy and defending
    the oppressed.
    
    Some have felt that the restoration of the temporal riches and
    honor detracts from the spiritual force of the story, which is otherwise played
    out on a wholly spiritual plane. Such think incorrectly, again unwisely judging
    God's ways. It was fitting and necessary -- for the instruction of all Job's
    associates, and all since -- to complete the picture by the double restoration
    of all he had lost.
    
    And it brings the closing picture fully into harmony with the
    antitype. Job, in well-deserved riches and honor -- after passing triumphantly
    through all his trials for the inspirational and instructional benefit of the
    race -- rejoiced to see his sons and his sons' sons, in peace and
    prosperity.
    
    So Christ, in eternal riches and honor, shall see his redeemed
    Seed: a holy, perfected "generation of the race" --
    
    
        "HE SHALL SEE OF THE TRAVAIL OF HIS SOUL, AND BE SATISFIED."
        
        "How unsearchable are God's judgments and His ways past finding
        out!"
    
    (GVG)