Welcome to Week 2 of
Relationship Tuesdays, where we’re looking at how God defines the relationship
we have with Him.
When I started my Christian
walk, the first book of the Bible I read was Job. What a place to start right? But let’s look at his story in the context of
knowing about God vs. knowing God.
When praising Job before
Satan, God says this about Job, “Have you considered My servant Job? For there
is no one like him on the earth, a blameless and upright man, fearing God and
turning away from evil."
Job is the most righteous man
alive at the time; there is no one like him on the Earth. I think most of us know the story from this
point forward. Satan says that if God
lowered His protection of Job, Job would curse God and die. God basically says, “take your best shot, but
don’t kill him.” And for the rest of the
book we read about Job’s unparalleled misery.
We don’t know how long Job suffered, but we know his friends came and
stayed with him for a week before they even talked, which must have been
uncomfortable, especially since they broke the silence with all kinds of
accusations about how Job must have sinned.
And through it all, Job
remains faithful though he does question God a lot. And at the end God shows up and speaks to
Job. You’d think it would be words of
comfort or encouragement, but God basically says, “Who are you to question
me? I’m God.”
Job’s response is what really
struck me as a new Christian, and even now it reminds me what this Christian walk
is all about:
“I know that You can do all
things, And that no purpose of Yours can be thwarted. 'Who is this that hides
counsel without knowledge?' "Therefore I have declared that which I did
not understand, Things too wonderful for me, which I did not know." 'Hear,
now, and I will speak; I will ask You, and You instruct me.'
I have heard of You by the
hearing of the ear; But now my eye sees You; Therefore I retract, And I repent
in dust and ashes."
Job, the most righteous man
on earth, says, “until now I have only heard of You. I’ve only known about You.” And if you read the things Job says about
God, his knowledge is on par with any seminarian or pastor you’ll ever meet. “But now I’ve seen you, and I take it all
back. I was talking about things I
didn’t understand, and I repent in dust in ashes.”
Before I found Jesus, I had
taught a class on the Bible as literature, wrote a thesis on St. Augustine and
some of the early church fathers, and read the Bible cover to cover several
times. I used to debate with Christians
all the time and much like Satan in the wilderness with Jesus, I’d use
scripture against them. But when I met
Christ, I realized I didn’t know anything, and even now in the presence of His
holiness, I’m an ignorant fool.
There is no knowledge you’ll
ever accumulate on earth that will compare to seeing God.
In 1 Corinthians 8:1-3 Paul
says, “Now concerning things sacrificed to idols, we know that we all have
knowledge. Knowledge makes arrogant, but love edifies. If anyone supposes that
he knows anything, he has not yet known as he ought to know; but if anyone
loves God, he is known by Him.”
Next Week: Does God Know You?
3 comments:
Job is one of my favorite books of the Old Testament. I just finished the second part of a series of articles on Job for my website that I'll post soon.
The book is primarily about the character and nature of God, and only secondarily about Job and suffering. I see the key verse as 42:7. It got me thinking "In what way did Job speak right of God and his friends speak wrong?". This forced a re-study of the book, which created more questions than answers at first. But by sticking with it, I found the study quite beneficial.
Looking forward to reading it Andrew. Love your studies.
The study is posted at http://dtjsoft.com/disp/job2
Post a Comment