Text: Job 6-7
Key Verse: "Let me alone; my days have no meaning" (Job 7:16b)
Job turns to God and complains
about the difficulty of his present experience. He has given up. He thinks he
will never see any relief and that he will go on like this to the end. And out
of that meaningless suffering and hopeless darkness, he cries out in honest
despair.
Have you ever felt that way?
Lord, leave me alone. I've had enough! Why are You so intent on making life
miserable for me? Why don't You just let me go? Job cries out in baffled
bewilderment. Now, even at this point in the book of Job, there are some things
that we must constantly remember.
One is that we know something
about this scene that Job does not know. We see some purpose in this that he
has not yet seen that is also true about the sufferings we go through. In every
time of trial there are two purposes in view: Satan has his purpose, and God
has His.
Satan's purpose here was to use the pain of Job's illness to afflict his body; to use the priggish, well-intentioned comfort of his friends to irritate his soul; and to use the silence of God to assault his spirit and break his faith. But God's purpose is to teach Job some truths that he never knew before, to deepen his theology and help him understand God much better.
Satan's purpose here was to use the pain of Job's illness to afflict his body; to use the priggish, well-intentioned comfort of his friends to irritate his soul; and to use the silence of God to assault his spirit and break his faith. But God's purpose is to teach Job some truths that he never knew before, to deepen his theology and help him understand God much better.
God's truth was to answer Satan
in the eyes of all the principalities and powers of the whole universe and to
prove him wrong in his philosophy of life. God's purpose was also to provide a
demonstration for all sufferers in all the ages that would follow that He knows
what He is doing.
What an encouragement to those of
us who must go through some times of suffering to understand that it is not
always because we are sinful. Sometimes suffering is the result of our sin, and
we will know it when it is. But if, like Job, you know of nothing you have done
that you have not dealt with and still the suffering goes on, look behind the
curtain of God's purposes, and you will see that great and eternal events are
hanging upon the outcome of the struggle.
*** Written by Ray Stedman | www.raystedman.org ***
THE TRUTH MEDIA
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