Well, God showed up, (pt 4)

Have you ever been speaking with a friend and you're trying to convince them of something or share how they hurt your feelings and they say, "Fine", or "Whatever"?

When someone says that to you do you really feel like things are fine? When someone says "whatever" do you feel like you've gotten your point across? No, not really. Today Job is going to tell God "whatever," and it's not going to go over well with the Almighty.

In the last section God exposed to Job that there are things in the universe Job can neither control or understand, that there is mystery and power in the universe. Now God is going to stop and allow Job a chance to respond. As always, please read along in your Bible, Job 40-41.

"Shall a faultfinder contend with the Almighty? He who argues with God, let him answer it," (Job 40:1-2). God is giving Job a chance to say, "You're right, I was wrong." He is giving him an opportunity to admit his limited knowledge and understanding. How does Job respond?

"Behold, I am of small account; what shall I answer you? I lay my hand on my mouth. I have spoken once, and I will not answer; twice, but I will not proceed further," (Job 40:4-5). At first glance this looks good, right? Job says he is small and he's not going to talk anymore. But do you know what's lacking? "I'm sorry. I was wrong. I repent of thinking you don't know how to run the universe. I repent of saying you're unfair." Here's what Matthew Henry has to say about Job's attitude. "Job was greatly humbled for what God had already said, but not sufficiently; he was brought low, but not low enough; and therefore God here proceeds..."

So Job gives the Old World equivalent of "whatever" to God. The problem is God desires that the relationship between he and Job be restored and "whatever" isn't going to cut it. It's the same way if you're arguing with your husband, wife, child, or friend. You know that things are not okay if they say, "fine." You want things to be restored. You want things to be okay. God loves Job and wants their relationship to be fixed. Since Job doesn't acknowledge his wrong, God continues.
Behemoth? Maybe...who knows?
The conversation in Job 40-41 centers around two creatures, Behemoth and Leviathan, the greatest creatures of the land and sea. Now if you read any other commentators about Job you will get a long diatribe about whether these creatures were real or mythological and what exactly they were, (a dinosaur, hippopotamus, rhinoceros, elephant = Behemoth and crocodile, shark, dinosaur of the sea, dragon = Leviathan). I'm not interested in the debate. For our purposes I'm assuming these were real creatures that actually existed in Job's day, (whatever they were). They were the greatest creatures of the land and sea.

So why does God bring these incredible creatures up in his conversation with Job. The key verses are 40:7-14 and 41:10-11. The rest of the verses describe Behemoth and Leviathan. Let's look at the first group of verses. "Will you even put me in the wrong? Will you condemn me that you may be in the right?" (40:8). This is exactly what Job had done. He had condemned God, stating that he was unjust in his running of the universe. He had concluded God had erred in how he operated in the world. He had declared he was a righteous man and didn't deserve to suffer. God had messed up. Then Job had challenged God, a la Matlock, to explain himself. God continues in his response.

"Do you have an arm as powerful as God's and can you thunder with a voice like his? Look at everyone who is proud and bring him low...Hide them all in the dust together...then will I also acknowledge to  you that your own right hand can save you," (40:9-14, selected). Job had challenged God. Now God challenges Job. Can Job humble the proud? Can he destroy the evil? Can he stand with the same power and might as God? Can he shaken the heavens and the earth and bring them to nothing by the voice of his mouth? The point God is making is this: you have no business challenging how I run the universe when you can't challenge me in strength comparable to mine.
Leviathan? I don't know, but this movie kept me out of the water until I was 14.

God goes a step further in exposing Job's impotence when discussing the Behemoth and Leviathan. His point in describing these creatures in such detail is connected to Job's limited power. Behemoth and Leviathan are the greatest creatures of the land and sea. Job cannot challenge or stand against created beings of the earth and sea who live and die just like Job. How, therefore, can Job challenge the ways of a God who is eternal and almighty? What right has Job to tell God how to run the universe? If Job can't even stand against a Brontosaurus or Jaws, (I'm guessing here), then how can he stand against and accuse God of failing to act with justice.

Job is just a created being. He is small, finite, and will one day die. He is weak and limited. God is infinite and limitless. He has no beginning and no end. God is eternal and immortal. God is Almighty and Sovereign. Job stands before THE LORD as one limited in knowledge and power and he is challenged to bend his knee to him. Job cannot control or manipulate God or his designs anymore than Roy Scheider is going to hurt Jaws with that tiny stick. In other words Job is going to need a bigger boat. "Who then is he who can stand before me? Who has first given to me, that I should repay him? Whatever is under the whole heaven is MINE," (41:10-11, emphasis added).

Job had challenged God, stating that he didn't run the universe fairly. He had professed his righteousness and stated he should not be suffering because of his righteous character, (and God never refutes Job's righteousness by the way). Job told God that he had messed up. Job wanted to stand before God and get his "why" questions answered. He wanted God, the holy creator, to come before him like a common litigant and give him answers on why he had suffered, why God ran the universe like he did, and why he (supposedly) messed up in Job's life. Job wanted answers. God responded by asking Job 70 questions exposing Job's limited knowledge and power. He challenged Job's ability to even stand before lesser beings, much less the God of the universe. In the end, God showed Job there was a limit to his knowledge, understanding, power, and authority. In the end, Job was shown he would not get the answers he sought. In the end, Job would have to submit to the only one who did have the knowledge and power to run the universe. In the end, Job would have to trust the Lord.

Now how will Job respond?
"I know that you can do all things, and that no purpose of yours can be thwarted...I have uttered what I did not understand, things too wonderful for me, which I did not know. I had heard of you by the hearing of the ear, but now my eye sees you; therefore I despise myself, and repent in dust and ashes," (Job 42:1-6, selected). Job, instead of just being silent, admits his folly. He admits the purposes and plans of God are too high for him to understand. He admits his knowledge is limited. He acknowledges the sovereign control, purposes, and wisdom of God which is higher than a man's comprehension. He turns from demanding God reveal and explain himself and humbles himself in repentance and nothingness. The relationship is now restored between Creator and the created one. Job kneels in humility not from fear or show of force, (which God could have done), but from the exposure of his own limited knowledge, understanding and power.

Final thoughts and blogs on Job coming up.

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