Daily Bible Reading Thoughts: Day 2

The following are a couple of thoughts from today’s Bible reading, day 2 of the CCV plan:

 

Genesis 4: 1, 17, 20-22

 

1 Now Adam knew Eve his wife, and she conceived and bore Cain, saying, “I have gotten a man with the help of the Lord.” 2 And again, she bore his brother Abel. Now Abel was a keeper of sheep, and Cain a worker of the ground.

17 Cain knew his wife, and she conceived and bore Enoch. When he built a city, he called the name of the city after the name of his son, Enoch.

20 Adah bore Jabal; he was the father of those who dwell in tents and have livestock. 21 His brother’s name was Jubal; he was the father of all those who play the lyre and pipe. 22 Zillah also bore Tubal-cain; he was the forger of all instruments of bronze and iron. The sister of Tubal-cain was Naamah.

 

Why have the genealogical record of Cain? Why have all this record of baby after baby after baby, especially of people we will not follow? There is a tremendous picture of the kindness of God here. The Lord could have destroyed Cain. The Lord could have kept Cain from fathering any children. But the Lord was kind to him. The Lord allowed him the blessing of life and of descendants.

 

Note as well that Cain’s line is where we see three important people. It is out of this messed up family that we find the inventors of music and tools. God has shown the common grace to his world of allowing men, even those not of the line of promise, to bring things to the world that help to improve the prospects of men. The three inventors are the children of the first polygamous marriage, something God highlights in the life of Lamech, a complete scoundrel. Yet, in all that, Lamek’s children are still people, made in the image of God, who bring good to the world.    

 

Genesis 4:25-26

 

25 And Adam knew his wife again, and she bore a son and called his name Seth, for she said, “God has appointed for me another offspring instead of Abel, for Cain killed him.” 26 To Seth also a son was born, and he called his name Enosh. At that time people began to call upon the name of the Lord.

 

How beautiful that the line of promise continues. We had to wonder if God’s promise had been thwarted by the murder of Abel. Cain was outcast. Abel was dead. How could the woman’s descendant crush the serpant? Thanks be to God, Eve bore another son. Another line exists. It is through that line that people begin to call on the name of the Lord. And we see that, no matter how evil man gets and how messed up the world looks, God’s plan is solid. That will be a running theme in Genesis.

Lord, I thank you for your word. You are faithful to your promises and loving toward your creation. I thank you for the common grace of music and tools. I thank you that you show your mercies, even to those who oppose you, while they live. I thank you for preserving the line of promise. I thank you that, no matter how messed up the world looks, you remind me that you will not fail. Your kingdom will come. Your will shall be done.

All Faith Starts in the Beginning (Genesis 1:1)

Genesis 1:1

 

In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.

 

As I start my Bible reading for 2016, I’m back in the beginning. Verse 1 of Genesis 1 is the ultimate stumbling block. If it is true, everything changes. If it is false, everything changes.

 

Consider the significance. If Genesis 1:1 is true, then you and I are created by a personal God. By personal there I do not mean that he is our own, personal deity as one might refer to their individual car as their personal automobile. What I mean is that God is a person as opposed to a thought, a feeling, a mystical energy field that controls our destiny. God, a person with a will chose to create.

 

If Genesis 1 is true, then we know that God is, that God is a person, that God is infinitely powerful, and that God owns creation. When I make something, let’s say an article I write, I have the right to do with it what I please. I have the right to reread it. I have the right to correct it. I have the right to discard it. And If God holds such rights over what he makes, in fact more since he does not use anybody else’s material when he creates, then God is the ultimate sovereign over the universe.

 

Note that, in contrast with our modern view, it does not matter in reality whether or not someone believes that God created. I mean in the broad sense of reality. My faith in or lack of faith in God has nothing to do with whether or not God actually created. My opinion cannot change the facts.

 

Yet, to me personally, it matters a great deal whether or not I believe in the facts of creation. To disbelieve in God as creator is for me to ultimately disrespect him. He has the right to judge me based on my response to him. He has the right to reshape me and help me believe in him if he wants. He has the right to crush me for rebelling against him. He has the right to do with me anything he wishes, and to base his action on any criteria he wishes. And, since the rest of the Bible indicates that faith, genuine belief in God and his actions, is the difference between spiritual life and death, whether or not I believe matters to me a lot.

 

If Genesis 1:1 is false, then all that Christians think and do is irrelevant. If it is true, then believing in the rest of Scripture including the miracles, the Christ narrative, the atonement, and the ultimate consummation is logical.

 

Yes, I believe that God created everything in the beginning. Yes, I believe that all that exists thus belongs to God. I believe that God has told us who he is in the Bible and revealed to us his power through the word. I believe that my only hope is in his grace which comes to me, not through religious action, but through a God-given faith in the finished work of his Son. And every bit of this is founded in the truth that Genesis 1:1 is accurate, literally true.

Job’s Repentance and Ours (Job 42:1-6)

Job 42:1-6 (ESV)

 

1 Then Job answered the Lord and said:

2 “I know that you can do all things,

and that no purpose of yours can be thwarted.

3 ‘Who is this that hides counsel without knowledge?’

Therefore I have uttered what I did not understand,

things too wonderful for me, which I did not know.

4 ‘Hear, and I will speak;

I will question you, and you make it known to me.’

5 I had heard of you by the hearing of the ear,

but now my eye sees you;

6 therefore I despise myself,

and repent in dust and ashes.”

 

Job’s repentance at the end of this book is something special to behold. It is a very real repentance. There is a change of thinking, of feeling, and of acting. And, it is a very good example for us to walk our own minds and hearts through.

 

 

In verse 3, Job quotes what God said about him, “Who is this that hides counsel without knowledge?” Job understood that what the Lord said about him was true. Job was accusing God of doing wrong. Job was thinking that he could sit in judgment over the values and actions of God. And Job was wrong. Job thought he could offer genuine counsel, but Job lacked knowledge. And God proved that to Job over a series of crushing questions in which God reminded Job how different they are. Here is Job changing his mind, growing in his understanding by thinking differently about who God is and who he is in comparison.

 

In verse 6, we see Job’s emotions. He says, “”therefore I despise myself.” Job is frustrated with himself. He is embarrassed by the foolish way that he had spoken and thought. Job rightly feels sorrow over his failure.

 

How about a change of action? Job stops questioning God. He declares that he repents in dust and ashes. He is no longer lifting himself up and demanding his rights. Instead, Job is broken and humbled before the Lord. He changes from arrogant questioning to humble submission. His actions change from wrong to the godly alternative. This is repentance.

 

What is it to repent? It is first to think differently. Second, it is to feel the proper sorrow over the wrong that you have done. Finally, it is to turn from an evil direction to the right alternative. Job did so, and so should we.  

Giving Thanks for the Gospel (Colossians 1:12)

Colossians 1:12-14

 

12 giving thanks to the Father, who has qualified you to share in the inheritance of the saints in light. 13 He has delivered us from the domain of darkness and transferred us to the kingdom of his beloved Son, 14 in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins.

 

            Paul prays that the Colossians will be the kinds of people who have the knowledge of God and strength of God to offer proper gratitude to God for the glorious gospel of Jesus Christ. Paul says that God the Father, “has qualified you to share in the inheritance of the saints in light.” This is a beautiful way to talk about our salvation.

 

            The inheritance of the saints is a reference to being brought into the promise of God as part of the family of God. In the Old Testament, when the people of Israel were rescued out of Egypt and brought to the promised land, they were granted an inheritance, a portion of the land to live in.

 

            But for us, the inheritance is something greater than a mere possession of property in the physical land of Israel. God has actually given us an inheritance as part of his eternal family and spiritual kingdom. He has made believers his children with all the privileges associated with that joyful reality. The possession we have is a home forever in Christ.

 

            And note the word qualified. Have you ever felt personally qualified to stand in the presence of the holy God? Have you ever felt qualified, actually good enough, to look upon the blazing perfection of the only perfect being in the universe or beyond? In the Old Testament, people knew that for them to see the perfection of God would be for them to be destroyed by his holiness. Isaiah, in chapter 6, believed that he was falling apart at a mere glimpse of the Lord’s glory. Do we dare consider ourselves worthy, qualified to see God?

 

Psalm 24:3-5

 

3 Who shall ascend the hill of the Lord?

And who shall stand in his holy place?

4 He who has clean hands and a pure heart,

who does not lift up his soul to what is false

and does not swear deceitfully.

5 He will receive blessing from the Lord

and righteousness from the God of his salvation.

 

            Are you qualified? Not on your own. Are your hands clean and is your heart pure? Is your soul clear from any deceit, ever? Not on your own it is not.

 

            But God qualifies us. Verse 5 of that psalm talks about people receiving righteousness from God. It is God’s gift. It is god’s action.

 

John 1:12-13

 

12 But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God, 13 who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God.

 

            The same picture is in John. God gives people who believe in Christ the right to become children of God. But, we find that they believe and receive Christ, not by their own power, not by the will of man, but by the will of God.

 

            So, for God to call us qualified to have an inheritance with the saints is for God to take sinners who are totally unqualified and give to us a righteousness that is completely from him. He does the work, not us. He gives us the faith that we need, not us. And he gets the glory for doing this amazing thing. Do you get how amazing this is? Does it stir gratitude in you?

Putting Us In Our Place (Job 40:8)

Job 40:8 (ESV)

 

Will you even put me in the wrong?

Will you condemn me that you may be in the right?

 

One of the greatest human mistakes is to think that we have the ability or the right to sit in judgment over the actions and ways of the Lord. Consider how often you have heard a person attempt to explain why a certain thing that God has chosen to do is right. Often the rationale behind how we justify an action of the Lord is our best consideration of logic. But, the truth is, the action of the Lord is right because it is the action of the Lord.

 

We want to be very careful here. Of course it is a worthy exercise for us to look at the mysterious ways of the Lord and seek to find out as much about him and his ways as we can. Of course it is good for us to recognize the rightness and the perfection in the decisions he has made. But, and this is vital, we also need to recognize that we have no right, absolutely none, to make a judgment as to whether or not the things God has done or the ways that he has done them is right. To make such a verdict places us on the bench and God on trial. We must not think that we can do such a thing, not even for a moment.

 

As we look at the end of Job, we see that God is clear that it is not OK for a mere human, a finite creature, to judge the actions of the Lord. Let us learn from this that God is great and we are not. Let us remember his ways are not ours. Let us remember that is thoughts are as much higher than ours as the sky is higher than the land. Let us be humble enough to worship the Lord and acknowledge his holiness and righteousness, even in situations where we cannot understand.

A Reminder That the Faith Isn’t As Hard As We Make It (Micah 6:6-8)

Micah 6:6-8 (ESV)

 

6 “With what shall I come before the Lord,

and bow myself before God on high?

Shall I come before him with burnt offerings,

with calves a year old?

7 Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams,

with ten thousands of rivers of oil?

Shall I give my firstborn for my transgression,

the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?”

8 He has told you, O man, what is good;

and what does the Lord require of you

but to do justice, and to love kindness,

and to walk humbly with your God?

 

Have you ever wondered if we make the faith a harder thing than God did? I certainly think it is true. We talk about spiritual disciplines, about evangelistic zeal, and about being radical. We find a particular spiritual cause or practice to be good and helpful for us, and then we demand that it become a major part of every Christian’s life. But how many of us can commit ourselves to memorizing whole books of the Bible, ending abortion, defeating human trafficking, feeding the homeless, winning our neighborhoods and workplaces for Jesus, having a date night every week with our wives, spending individual days with each child in our family, visiting the elderly in nursing homes, mentoring students, reading the Puritans, studying systematic theology, promoting international adoption, studying biblical theology, promoting Christian involvement in politics, studying church history, coaching a sports team to build relationships, having an accountability group, going on prayer retreats, attending the latest conferences, preparing sermons and/or Bible studies, developing strategies for church growth, going on international mission trips, keeping up with old friends, figuring out the millennium, opening our homes too hospitality, and only eating foods that glorify God while exercising to keep our bodies fit as temples of the Holy Spirit?

 

All of what I just wrote in that last paragraph are good things to do. But, are all the things I just wrote required for every believer to be equally committed to in order to please God? I do not think so.

 

In Micah’s passage above, we see a set of people asking what they should do in order the please God. They want to know how far they have to go in order to make God happy with them. Micah’s answer blows our activity-driven Christianity out of the water.

 

Micah tells the people, on God’s behalf, that what God requires is that we do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with him. Doing justice, in the context of the passage, means that we avoid cruelty and cheating of others. It means that we avoid taking advantage of those in need. We do not crush people, sneaking around them to do them harm while we gain power and position for ourselves.

 

To love kindness is sort of the other side of the justice coin. We do not do others harm to get ahead. Instead, we show kindness to others. We help people in need when we can. We extend love to those who are hurting. We treat people, well, like we want to be treated.

 

The end of the passage wraps up with the call to walk humbly with our God. Here is where spiritual living in obedience to the commands of God is found. We obey God’s commands, otherwise we could not walk with him. But nothing about that phrase indicates a massive to-do list that stresses us to the max as we try to figure out how to squeeze every possible good thing that could be done into every possible second of our day for every possible day of our lives.

 

Interestingly, this passage is as if Micah has already seen something of the mind of Jesus. Our Lord told us that the greatest commandments in Scripture are that we love God with everything we have and that we love our neighbors as ourselves (cf. Mat. 22:37-40). Or, it seems like Micah has a grasp of the writings of the apostles in the epistles as they repeatedly tell Christians to love God, to love each other, and to live differently than a cruel and immoral world around them.

 

Don’t get me wrong. Of course I believe in living a productive, spiritually disciplined, evangelistic, non-lazy life. But I would say that a passage like this one reminds us that we are not ever going to earn the favor of God. Nor has God required that we try. Instead, the Lord tells us exactly what he intends to tell us. Do justice, love kindness, and walk with God humbly. That will probably mean that you cannot wrap your entire life around every good thing. That is OK. You are not made a child of God by doing good deeds anyway. Children of God who are forgiven and brought into his family come by God’s grace through faith in Jesus Christ. So, trust Jesus, love Jesus, connect with a local church so you can love others in the family of God, obey God’s commands in a way that makes you look different than the lost world around you, and rest in the grace of the Lord who does not require complication in our faith.

 

So, Christian, as this season overwhelms us, let’s stop, breath, and give God thanks. He wants us love him and love others. Let’s do that well as we rest in his grace for his glory.

A Provocative and Humbling Passage (Job 35)

From time to time, we read a passage that does a wonderful job of putting us in our place. This morning, I feel that humbling acutely as I read through Job 35. The whole chapter is a flowing argument, so I will not reproduce it at the beginning of this post as I often do when commenting on only a verse or two.

 

First, context is important. Job suffered, but not as a punishment from God. God intended the life of Job to demonstrate his glory, and Job proved to the devil that he was faithful to God no matter how severely the devil attacked him.

 

Then, beginning in chapter 3, Job was met by four friends. The three older ones argued with Job, directing him to repent of whatever sin he had committed to bring these hardships on himself. Job, for his part, began to feel put upon and unfairly treated by God. By the end of this round of conversation, Job was ready to accuse God of wronging him and refusing to answer him.

 

Enter Elihu ,the fourth friend. This youngest participant in the conversation waited until the men frustrated him to no end. Elihu was frustrated by Job’s self-justification. He was frustrated by the foolish prosperity preaching and arrogance of the other 3 friends. And when Elihu finally speaks, he lets everybody have it.

 

Today’s reading, in chapter 35, is short but powerful. Elihu begins by telling Job that he is about to let Job know why it is better for Job not to have sinned against God even if Job has had a hard life (1-4).

 

Job 35:5-7

 

5 Look at the heavens, and see;

and behold the clouds, which are higher than you.

6 If you have sinned, what do you accomplish against him?

And if your transgressions are multiplied, what do you do to him?

7 If you are righteous, what do you give to him?

Or what does he receive from your hand?

 

Elihu then puts us all in our place by directing our eyes to the sky. How high is the sky? How far above us are the clouds? God is further above us still. If we do right, we do not impress God. If we sin, we do not do God harm. No action of ours can strengthen or weaken God. Our actions,, rather, impact how God will respond to us.

 

After going a little further in pointing out how little mankind gives God credit for his great works, Elihu responds to the complaint raised by Job and by many on earth who are frustrated that God does not respond to their demands for explanation.

 

Job 35:12-16

 

12 There they cry out, but he does not answer,

because of the pride of evil men.

13 Surely God does not hear an empty cry,

nor does the Almighty regard it.

14 How much less when you say that you do not see him,

that the case is before him, and you are waiting for him!

15 And now, because his anger does not punish,

and he does not take much note of transgression,

16 Job opens his mouth in empty talk;

he multiplies words without knowledge.

 

O that we would recognize that God is not required to explain himself or his ways to us. We do not have the right to call him to account. We have no authority over him. There is no rule beyond both God and us that can call God into line. God, by definition, is the ultimate source of authority and morality. What God does is, by definition right. What God demands is by definition moral and just and perfect. And it is only selfish pride that moves us to believe that God must be justified in our sight or explain to us why he has acted in a certain way or determined that certain things are moral.

 

How, then, might we respond to this humbling passage? There are probably more ways than I can write this morning. Think of an issue like the modern debates over gender and sexuality. Many people argue that the Bible has no authority over what they wish to do with their bodies. They had better hope that they are right. They had better hope, for their sake, that the Bible is merely a book put together by men with no actual spiritual authority or reflection on the heart of God. Even though that will lead them to a world without ultimate hope and without a source of morality, that hopelessness and meaninglessness of life is the best that those who would oppose the words of God would have to wish for. Because, if they are not right, and if God’s word has told us what God has said about creation, about gender, about sexuality, about marriage, and about his commands, those who have demanded proof will find it when they face the Lord who has given his commands.

 

Or what about those who would argue that God must accept any sincere person’s religion, even if that religion is not that of the Bible? Would this passage not remind us that God is not required to make his rules according to secular logic? God is God. He has the right to save or not to save by whatever means he has chosen. If God has indeed chosen to rescue a particular people for himself through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, if God has chosen to rescue such people by his grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone, we dare not argue about whether such a system is fair, right, or best. God is God. He is above us. He is holy. Our arguments against him are words without knowledge and empty talk.

 

Here, of course, many Christians would voice a hearty “Amen!” But let us not forget that we are given to the same sorts of logical failings if we are not careful. Many times we believers will act just like Job’s three friends. We will look at a situation, and we will boldly declare that we know why it has happened. I have heard far too many Christians say exactly why a particular natural disaster occurred—usually as a punishment from God—or why a particular person was facing difficulty–usually as the work of the devil. But we need to be far more humble and far more trusting of the Lord. Yes, God might indeed punish an unbelieving world as he sees fit. Yes, God might allow the devil to cause us hardships for the greater good of his glory. Yes, some of our sufferings might be our own fault simply because of bad decisions. Yet, we should be very careful declaring that we have the inside track on the motivations of a God who is as much higher than us as the heavens are above the earth. God is good. God’s ways are not ours. We need the humility to bow before him and declare to him that he indeed is the one who knows why he has chosen to act or not to act in a certain way. We need the humility to declare, “Not my will but yours be done.”

 

As a last illustration, how about that feeling that many of us get that God owes us his favor and blessing because of our commitment and sacrifice on his behalf? We are crazy when we think like that. We saw that God is not improved by our obedience or harmed by our sin. This is not to say that God does not care. It is, however, to remind us that we do not improve God’s circumstance through our faithfulness. We do not help his kingdom come except for in whatever way he has sovereignly allowed us to be a part of the work that he is doing. As such, we have no right to feel that God owes us any sort of reward for any sacrifice we have made. By his grace, God has promised us an ultimate reward in Christ as he demonstrates for all to see his riches of love and grace in kindness to us in eternity. This is not something we earn. It is grace, pure and simple. Thus, we have no right to believe that our lives should be easier or harder in the here and now. We need the humility to rest in God’s care, know that he is good, know that his ways are best, and, as Mary said to the angel, declare ourselves to be God’s servants ready to allow him to do whatever he pleases with us.

The Necessary Being (Job 34:14-15)

Job 34:14-15 (ESV)

 

14 If he should set his heart to it

and gather to himself his spirit and his breath,

15 all flesh would perish together,

and man would return to dust.

 

Philosophy sometimes uses the term “necessary” to describe God. The concept of a necessary being is a being upon whose existence the rest of existence is based. Were the universe not to exist, that would not change the existence of God. Were God not to exist, the universe could not exist. God is necessary to the existence of the universe.

 

It is not only certain parts of philosophy that would describe God as necessary. Looking at Job 34, we can see that, around four thousand years ago, people understood that God holds the universe together and gives all living creatures their lives. Without him, we are nothing.

 

Notice the claim in verses 14-15 above. If God wanted to, he could gather back to himself his breath. If God did that, everyone and everything in existence is dead. There is no fighting back. There is no warring against this move. If God decides, he pulls the plug and the power goes off. There is no reserve that we, as creatures, hold against him.

 

Verses like the ones above put us in our proper place. God is God. We are not. God is in control. We are not. God holds us together. We do not hold ourselves or him together. We have no right and no ability to battle against him. We have no right and no ability to question him. God is the ultimate. God is supreme. He is worthy of our worship.

 

How do we respond? May we respond in worship. God is king. Let us bow down and declare this fact. Doing so will in no way add to God, but it will give us the joy of doing what we exist to do.

Lessons from Judgment (Revelation 9:20-21)

Revelation 9:20-21 (ESV)

 

20 The rest of mankind, who were not killed by these plagues, did not repent of the works of their hands nor give up worshiping demons and idols of gold and silver and bronze and stone and wood, which cannot see or hear or walk, 21 nor did they repent of their murders or their sorceries or their sexual immorality or their thefts.

 

Chapter 9 of Revelation is one of those terrifying pieces of apocalyptic literature. We see demons, death, and destruction. Not all of it is easily understood, though I certainly believe that there is a principle that God wants us to get from the passage.

 

I say that this is not all easy to understand because figurative creatures and apocalyptic language is tough. Some would argue that, at some point in the future, God will actually unleash the horrifying monsters of the chapter on the world and allow them to torment those who have rebelled against him. Others would say that these afflictions are figurative. However, we need to recognize that, should these things be figurative, they will still be terrible. Biblical language does not use figurative language to paint pictures that are bigger than reality. If the monsters of Revelation 9 are images of judgment, the judgment itself will be at least as bad as if the monsters were literally real.

 

Discussions of demonic attackers aside, as I said, there is a big lesson to learn. After major calamity comes upon the earth as the trumpets are blown, we read what is written in verses 20-21. No matter how big was the judgment of Revelation chapter 9, no matter how bad were the events depicted in the horrifying six trumpets, rebellious mankind refuses to turn away from the sins that they had been committing that brought upon them the judgment of God.

 

See, then, that we are a stubborn people. Though we think that, if God took an active role and really showed us that he is there and that we need to cut out our foolishness, we would respond, the truth is, mankind is notorious for refusing to listen to the Lord, no matter how clearly he speaks. We are not good at letting our hurts and hardships remind us that God is there, that God is holy, and that we need to be under his mercy. In fact, often, when we face any sort of pain, we act as though God has wronged us by not preserving us from hardship.

 

What shall we learn then? First, see the tendency that we have to double-down on our sin when we hurt. God has designed us to live in his presence and for his glory. When our sin throws our lives into pain and chaos, often we will try one of two alternatives. We may try to do really hard work to fix our own lives—a process that never actually works because we are too weak. Often, however, we double-down on our sin, which is what the people do in Revelation 9. We find our lives messed up in rebellion and brokenness, and we just do more of the same, wallowing in our fight against God until he finally judges us. We need hope. We need help. The only path out of a life of brokenness is through the finished work of Jesus.

 

Second, if you are not under the grace of God, if you have not yet come to Jesus and sought his forgiveness and turned from your sin, today would be a great day to do so. God is real. God’s judgments are real. I do not know about what the judgments of God will really look like, but I know that, for those who do not have his grace, the judgment of God will be horrible. Turn from any sort of rebellion against God, stop thinking you get to run your own life, repent, and trust in Jesus as your only hope. The beautiful truth is, no matter how broken your life has become, whether it is your own doing or the results of what others have done to you, God has mercy, grace, and healing for you in Jesus.

 

Finally, if you know Christ, realize that the judgment of God will come on this world. Yet, also realize that such judgment will not change the hearts of those who are intent on rebelling against God. Mankind does not respond to God out of their own hearts. We are dead in sins and transgressions. Thus, if you have responded to God, it is only the grace of God that has brought you there. You would not have learned on your own. So, thank God for his amazing grace on you. Thank God for making your heart able to see what the people here in Revelation 9 did not see. Worship God, and take his message of grace to a world desperately in need of salvation.   

Two Angers and Two Lessons from Elihu (Job 32:2-3)

Job 32:2-3 (ESV)

 

2 Then Elihu the son of Barachel the Buzite, of the family of Ram, burned with anger. He burned with anger at Job because he justified himself rather than God. 3 He burned with anger also at Job’s three friends because they had found no answer, although they had declared Job to be in the wrong.

 

There are two big mistakes that Job and his friends make in the book of Job, and God intends for us to see them. Sadly, when we think of this book, we often get extra-fascinated with the spiritual battles in chapters 1 and 2 or with the righteous responses that Job had early in the book without seeing the wrong ways that Job responded to God later. We also fail to see ourselves in the 3 friends who converse with Job from chapters 3 through 31.

 

We need, however, to see that there are two big errors that God has wanted us to grasp from chapters 3-31, and we are easily tempted to fall into them. Job attempted to self-justify before God. Job’s friends accused, assuming they knew more than they did. Neither group rested in God’s sovereignty.

 

First, let’s see Job. We know that Job was righteous, not sinning with his lips, in the early chapters. When his wife tried to get him to curse God and die, Job responded as he should have. He is to be commended.

 

But, if you watch Job’s speeches, it appears that Job becomes progressively more convinced of his own personal righteousness. He walks dangerously close to and even crosses the line into accusing God of treating him wrongly and owing him an explanation. Had Job not failed in his attitude, he would have had no need to twice declare that he repents at the end of the book. As Scripture shows us, God is just, not us. God is wise, not us. God is always right, not us.

 

What we need to learn from Job comes in what stirred the anger of Elihu. Job attempted to justify himself. We just can’t do that. God is holy. His ways are not ours. We have no right to tell God how good we have been. Our greatest goodness is nothing apart from the grace of God. We certainly cannot argue that we deserve any sort of good treatment from our Creator. Neither does he owe us any sort of explanation.

 

Christians, realize that you are not good on your own. You are gifted with grace that is entirely not of yourself. Non-Christians, realize that you do not have the right to stand before God and declare that you have been a good person. If Job could not justify himself, you and I certainly cannot. And let us all realize that God is holy and perfect. We answer to him, not the other way round.

 

Second, look at the response Elihu had for Job’s 3 friends. These men accused Job, but had no idea how to make a case. They sat there before Job and constantly assumed that they knew why God was doing what he was doing. They assumed that Job must be being punished by God for something they could not see. They assumed that, would Job only admit what he had done wrong, God would clearly restore him to health, wealth, and prosperity.

 

How often do we sit in judgment of others? How often do we assume that we know why God has done all that he has done? How easily do we assume that others deserve the judgment of God while we should have grace? How foolish are we?

 

Let us learn from Job’s friends that God is perfect and beyond us. We do not have the right to assume that we know why anybody is going through anything. All are sinners, us included. All deserve far more judgment than any of the living have ever received, us included. God’s choices for us are often mysterious, and none of us will have the wisdom on our own to explain all of God’s thoughts and plans. All we can do is to rely on what is revealed in Scripture and to trust that God knows far better than we do.