Things I Learned from Job
Most people look for simple/quick answers to just about
every life event. In the Book of Job, God presents the basic argument that life
is too complicated for the simple answers we all seek. When we try to analyze
our situations by looking to God for simple answers, we are most often asking
Him for information, that if He gave it to us, we would never be able to
understand. God is telling Job, and us, that He (God) is the only one who can
deal with the trials that often come into our lives. Our role, at this point in
any situation, is to trust God and continue to bring Him glory by our responses
to the good and the bad. Although Job's life was filled with tragedy, he
continued to "worship" God in those times. The Book of Job gives us a
great picture of God's response to Job's faithfulness, "and Job died, and
old man, and full of days" (Job 42:17, RSV).
Human suffering continues to be a result of Satan's original
challenge to the hierarchy God established in the beginning. Job, as far as we
know while alive, was never given an answer for his suffering. Likewise, we will
more than likely never have exhaustive answers to suffering we face in life. The
lesson from Job is that there will be times of suffering and hardship in life
and we will never have the total picture. Most of the time God will not reveal the
"reason(s)" for the struggle, but our role is to trust His plan and
to bring Him glory through our actions in those times of struggle. Our witness
before a lost world often depends more on how we behave (actions) than what we
say.
Bottom Line:
We need to trust God's plan, because life is too complicated to handle alone.
We need to trust God's plan, because life is too complicated to handle alone.
Verba docent, exempla trahunt
"Words instruct, illustrations lead"
"Words instruct, illustrations lead"
TJ
No comments:
Post a Comment