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forty-two chapters The Book of Job is forty-two chapters long, with a small introductory section of two chapters, and an even smaller conclusion that is only one chapter.
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Read More »Job, understandably, becomes quite impatient. He demands an audience with God: “Oh, that I knew where to find him, that I might come even to his dwelling! I would lay my case before him, and fill my mouth with arguments” (Job 23:3-4). In chapter 31, Job does make his case, listing all the sins he might have done to merit such suffering – but he is innocent of all of them. The Book of Job is not much about patience at all. It is about endurance. In the New Testament, when the Book of James talks about suffering, James 5:11 cites the “endurance” of Job – not his patience. There is no way I can adequately describe the pain and suffering that Job undergoes. Just as there is probably no way for any one of us to describe innocent suffering, whether that suffering is being experienced by our friends, or by us. Words rarely explain suffering. Just ask Job’s friends. Richard Rohr, the jolly Franciscan, said in one of his meditations this past week, that “Ultimately, our objective tools for analyzing and interpreting pain will always fail us because there is an aspect of suffering that is not within our rational reach” (October 19, 2018). Yes, the very nature of true suffering is that it has no adequate description, and no adequate justification. Instead, in the Book of Job, we hear the powerful and cutting poetry of truly innocent suffering, including both sarcasm and lament.
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Read More »Could there ever be someone who suffers as much as Job? Well, some of us have. We Christians present Jesus of Nazareth, Jesus the Christ, as the answer to Job. We might even say that Jesus of Nazareth is the New Testament version of Job. Both suffer innocently. Both cry out, moaning and lamenting to God. Remember how Jesus cries out, “My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?” Jesus was actually quoting another piece of poetry there, the twenty-second Psalm (Psalm 22:1). And that lament of Jesus, to God, my God, is exactly the comparison point with Job. Job and Jesus demonstrate a critical element of suffering, spiritual suffering: They stay in relationship with God. Stay in relationship with God. I don’t want to offer that line as facile advice, because it would seem shallow in the face of real suffering. But I do want to note the similarity of Job and Jesus in this regard. They both suffer spiritually by staying in relationship with God, even when God is absent and even when God seems angry. And, even when they are angry, they stayed connected. Maybe that is my advice: Please be angry with God! Please moan and yell out to God! Your anger is evidence that you are in relationship. That woman in the grocery store, with the whining and suffering daughter, stayed in relationship with her daughter, by staying in relationship with herself. When the people around her thought she was speaking to her daughter, she was really speaking to herself. She was speaking to herself. I believe that is why the Book of Job is in the Bible. It is not God speaking to us, giving us advice and counsel about the problem of innocent suffering. The Book of Job is in the Bible, because it is the witness of authentic community speaking to itself, authentic community speaking to ourselves. Authentic communities acknowledge pain and innocent suffering. They don’t try to avoid it or explain it away. They bear witness to suffering. So, authentic communities read from the Book of Job. Make sure you belong to a religion, an authentic community, who reads the poetry of the Book of Job. Make sure you belong to an authentic community who keeps sacred literature like the Book of Job. Make sure the Book of Job is in your Bible. Make sure you bear witness to suffering.
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