Bottom | Table of Contents | Index to Key Themes | Burning Coal | New Wine Online |
back | next |
This is not really a lament so much as Job capturing the refrain of his lament (23:2) and his call for a face to face meeting with God (23:3-4).
The word translated‘bitter’ in verse 2 is ‘merîy’, which can also mean ‘rebellion’ (Strong, H4805). The NAS Bible favors: “Even today my complaint is rebellion” (23:2, NASB, see Clarke, note on 23:2). I suggest that Job is not committing himself to rebellion, but is stating something more than bitterness. He is protesting his affliction or ‘complaint’. Perhaps the verse could read: ‘Today my complaint is my argument.’
Job is certain that if he could come before God, he would be able to present his arguments (23:3-4). Job questions, “Will He plead against me with His great power? No; but He would put strength in me” (23:6). Job is confident: “so should I be delivered forever from my judge” (23:7). The sense is that of exoneration in court (Clarke, note on 23:7). One significat point: “It is the chief distinction between Job and his friends that he desires to meet God and they do not” (Vicchio 2020, loc. 5891; quoting Stevenson in H.H. Rowley, Job, 1970. 200).
‘While as hard as I search, I cannot find God’ (23:8-9). Job is frustrated. “He knoweth the way that I take” (23:10). Grabbing Eliphaz's mention of gold and jewels, Job creates an allegory: the gold that God is digging for is not in the ground: “When He hath tried me, I shall come forth as gold” (23:10). Job appears to assert that there is no dross to be removed. The Job who goes into the fire, so he believes, will be the one who emerges. The spirit of it is that he is willing to enter the fire to be exonerated. Job is the one most surprised to find there is reason for the refiner's fire. I don't imagine his friends ever understand.
Job reasserts his steadfastness in God (23:11), and the value he places on God's word, “I have esteemed the words of His mouth more than my necessary food” (23:12). “I am afraid of Him” (23:15), admits Job, ‘because I know God cannot be turned and He may well have more troubles yet in store for me’ (23:13-14). Deeper down, though he won't admit it to himself, Job knows that the refiner's fire has the purpose of burning away the dross. If he remains in the fire, there is a reason. “The curse causeless shall not come” (Prov. 26:2). Again, let me remind you, Job is not under this curse because he has done something wrong. God is trying to change the condition of Job's heart. A condition by which Satan is hoping to exploit Job and bring him to ruin.
“For God maketh my heart soft” (23:16). Perhaps Job is sensing what God is after. Job, not being ready to surrender, knows that God will continue to press until he does. In my own life, I have resisted the pressure of God only to see the pressure increase until I did surrender. Job appears to know this. Is Job beginning to see what God is after? Perhaps, but he is resisting.
“As they gather silver, and brass, and iron, and lead, and tin, into the midst of the furnace, to blow the fire upon it, to melt it; so will I gather you in mine anger and in my fury, and I will leave you there, and melt you.” (Ezek. 22:20). There is a hardness in Job that is melting before the refiner's fire. As we are seeing, despite his own resistance, Job is hearing the Spirit speak to him more and more. Like Saul on the road to Damascus, Job is being driven to where he has no choice but to listen. Job is still frustrating God's purpose. God will finally declair “thine own right hand can save thee” (40:14) as Christ will ask, “Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? it is hard for thee to kick against the pricks” (Acts 26:14). I suppose it is reassuring to know that even the greatest of saints do not always come willingly to God's call.
Job is bold before God. At first his boldness is in the confidence of his own righteousness (23:7). “Beloved, if our heart condemn us not, then have we confidence toward God” (I John 3:21). His insight has revealed something more: “Because I was not cut off before the darkness, neither hath he covered the darkness from my face” (23:17). Job now understands that this suffering has a purpose, even if Job doesn't fully understand it. This gives him a boldness that is not surface, but is deep down and internal. A boldness of faith.
back | next |
Top | Table of Contents | Index to Key Themes | Burning Coal | New Wine Online |