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God never faults Job
for being finite, only for failing to recognize that he has no right to pass
judgment on the wisdom and goodness of an infinite Creator - even in eternity,
God will still be infinite, and we’ll still be finite
Randy Alcorn
When
I need a point-of-view adjustment, I read the last five chapters of Job. That’s
where the focus shifts from Job’s questions about his suffering — and his
friends’ proposed answers — to God’s majesty.
Yet after listening to Job’s grievances, God finally
speaks to him: “Brace yourself like a man; I will question you, and you
shall answer me” (Job 38:3).
God is saying, “You are unhappy with me, Job. You
have questioned me. You assume you know far more than you do. Now it’s my turn
to ask you some questions.”
“Where were you when I laid the earth’s foundation?
Tell me, if you understand. Who marked off its dimensions? Surely you know!” (verses 4–5).
In
Hebrew culture, wisdom came with old age. God is eternally old, Job
ridiculously young.
God
says, “Tell me, if you understand.”
Job
doesn’t and can’t.
We
lack God’s omniscience, omnipotence, wisdom, holiness, justice, and goodness.
If
we insist we have the right, or even assume we have the capacity, to understand
the hidden purposes of God, we forfeit the comfort and perspective we could
have had in kneeling before his vastly superior wisdom.
While
this doesn’t answer the question of evil and suffering, it does suggest God’s
answer is beyond our understanding.
One
day we’ll know far better than now; but even in eternity, God will still be
infinite, and we’ll still be finite.
Job finally says to God, “Surely I spoke of things
I did not understand, things too wonderful for me to know.… My ears had heard
of you but now my eyes have seen you. Therefore I despise myself and repent in
dust and ashes” (Job 42:3, 5–6).
Charles Spurgeon stated, “He who demands a reason
from God is not in a fit state to receive one.”
It
is when Job surrenders himself to God that he at last, at the end of himself,
finds comfort.
Father, thank you for both inviting us to ask
questions and instructing us to listen carefully to your answers. Help us rely
on you even when we don’t understand. As a loving Father, you want us to trust
you rather than blame and resent you. After all you’ve done for us as Creator
and Redeemer, how could we do less?
Randy Alcorn, founder of EPM
Randy Alcorn (@randyalcorn) is
the author of fifty-some books and the founder and director of Eternal
Perspective Ministries.
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