Text: Job 3; James 1:2-3; Hebrews
12:7
Key Verse: "After this, Job opened
his mouth and cursed the day of his birth" (Job 3:1).
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Although Job comes very close to
cursing God, he never does. He does curse the day of his birth, and he curses
what God has allowed to happen. You can see how the pressure is increasing, and
Job is beginning to break and crumble under it, as this unceasing, unexplained
anguish goes on.
I do not think anything is harder
for us to bear than unexplained trouble. If we could see some reason for what
we have to go through, we could endure it much more easily. But when trouble
seems to be pointless, it is a terrible strain on the soul. This is what Job is
experiencing, so he cries out, Why was I ever born?
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Job's third question is, Why
can't I die now? Job's argument is, What's the purpose of my life? Of what use
is a life that is so filled with misery that you can do nothing but suffer and
feel anguish? My life produces only fear and trouble, so it would be better to
end it now. Many people feel that way. I do not think Job is thinking of
suicide – he is asking God to take him home. There is no purpose to life, he
says, when it is not enjoyable. That is a very common argument, and one of the
reasons we have been given this book is to help us understand that life can
still have a great deal of meaning, even when it looks absolutely useless.
*** Written by Ray Stedman
Ministries | www.raystedman.org ***
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