The
Agonizing Problem
The time comes, however, when the suffering is so unbearable that
death seems preferable. In agony and bewilderment he asks, in effect:
Why should a man live if it is only to suffer? Can God, who has
made man, destroy him like a discarded plaything?
Job's
friends argue that there is a direct connection between a man's
sin and his suffering and they therefore contend that to suffer
so greatly Job must have greatly sinned. Job is convinced of his
own integrity: he is human, but he knows that he is not guilty of
the sins they try to fasten upon him. Yet he has enough of his friends'
philosophy to feel now that he suffers unjustly. Has God chosen
him to be set up as a mark to shoot at? Because, compared with others,
his sufferings seem wholly disproportionate to any faults he can
confess. To him it seems that his affliction can only mean that
God has turned against him, and this moral problem adds to his bitterness.
The "tents of robbers" prosper: why should the righteous suffer?
If God is judging him, is it right that he should be judged by a
standard human nature cannot reach?
The
friends utterly fail to shake Job's conviction in his own righteousness,
and at last they cease to argue. But underlying Job's contention
is an ultimate faith in God, in spite of all the questionings, and
a belief in God's justice; and so Job reaches out to the hope that
in another life, if not now, God as his Redeemer will vindicate
him and be on his side. And so he introduces a new element in the
argument when he looks beyond the grave to resurrection and reconciliation.
That belief, hinted at in Job, is fully declared elsewhere in both
the Old and New Testaments, and it gives a new perspective to the
problem. Yet it does not in itself explain why men and women should
suffer in this life.
God
Speaking to Man
When the friends are silenced and Job has made his final speech,
the young man Elihu comes into the argument. He shows that Job in
his extremity has impugned the righteousness of God, but he also
throws a new light on the problem. God speaks to men (a) through
revelation, and (b) through suffering. God, by His own means, is
communicating with men and women and bringing them to Himself (read
Job 33:14-18).
God
speaks to men, says Elihu, for their spiritual education, their
guidance in life and their preservation from destruction. He "withdraws
man from his purpose, and hides pride" from him, leading him away
from his own self-assertive course of life, for pride is the source
of sin. As to the other means of communication, Elihu says:
"He
is chastened also with pain upon his bed, and the multitude of his
bones with strong pain: so that his life abhorreth bread, and his
soul dainty meat. His flesh is consumed away, that it cannot be
seen; and his bones that were not seen stick out. Yea, his soul
draweth near unto the grave, and his life to the destroyers" (Job
33:19-22).
The
description of suffering perfectly fits Job, and Elihu is saying
that even he needs the chastening, reproof, discipline of the Lord-not
for the specific sins alleged by his friends, for Elihu does not
mention them, but for a more subtle fault. Elihu has already hinted
at it, for it is the sin of spiritual pride, and only the experience
of suffering can bring it to light so as to convict him of it.
God's
Working with Man
Suffering can, therefore, be part of the ways of God's working with
men for their own development and to bring them to a knowledge of
Himself; and the outcome for Job was a new and intimate knowledge
of God. He could say:
"I
have heard of thee with the hearing of the ear: But now mine eye
seeth thee. Wherefore I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes"
(Job 42:5-6).
This
working of God with man must in its nature be individual: only the
man who suffers can gain this as a personal experience. The larger
problem of suffering remains, and the only answer to be extracted
from the Book of Job is that man cannot question the majesty and
wisdom of God: He is the Creator and Sustainer of all life, and
His works are beyond man's knowledge. It is this answer which is
elaborated with such power and beauty by the Voice from the whirlwind
in chapters 38-41. Man can only accept that the ways of God are
beyond his judgement.
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