Tuesday, November 14, 2017
Job 17:1 says, My breath is corrupt, my days are extinct, the graves are ready for me. Job felt that his life was in such torment that even his breathing was corrupted. The days when he had a purpose in life seemed to be extinct, or a thing of the past. I believe that Job really felt that he was beyond physical redemption, so he was ready to go to the grave and a spiritual restoration with God. We may at times feel that death is our only hope, but we need to remember what happened with Job later on. As long as we have life, we should have hope. In verse two, Job asks, Are there not mockers with me? and doth not mine eye continue in their provocation? Job was speaking of his friends and neighbors. They were mocking his profession of innocence. In their concept of God, the status of a person on this earth indicated their relationship with God. Since Job had been very prosperous and was now reduced to torment, his friends ridiculed him for being a hypocrite. I believe that Job was saying that the fact that he could still look them in the eye and proclaim his innocence provoked them to anger at him. When we set ourselves up as moral judges and pronounce a person guilty of sin and they deny it, we tend to become angry at the person, and not the perceived sin. We are not called to ridicule and provoke others, but to simply reach out to them with the love of God. Verse three says, Lay down now, put me in a surety with thee; who is he that will strike hands with me? Job put his surety in God. Like Job, our friends may fail us, but as followers of Christ we can put our surety in God. When we are resting securely in God's hands, no one can take us away from Him. Those around us might want to ridicule or even fight with us, but God is our defender. In verse four Job declares, For thou hast hid their heart from understanding: therefore shalt thou not exalt them. Job said that God had caused his friends to be blinded to the truth. Since I do not believe that God hides Himself or His truth from certain people and reveals it to others, a more accurate statement would be that Job's friends refused to see the truth of God. They were so certain that they knew the reason for Job's suffering that they were not listening to God. In our relationship to anyone, we need to first listen to what God has to say. Verse five says, He that speaketh flattery to his friends, even the eyes of his children shall fail. I believe that Job was saying that those who only seek to flatter, or speak good things about only their successful friends, will ultimately fail even their families. If they are basing God's will on material things, then they do not have a true understanding of God, and they will ultimately fail spiritually. Verse six says, He hath made me also a byword of the people; and aforetime I was as a tabret. Job said that his friends were using him as an example of God's punishment of the wicked, whereas beforehand they had used him as an example of God's blessing on the righteous. That is the problem with exalting people as great examples of faith based on material possessions. Verse seven says, Mine eye also is dim by reason of sorrow, and all my members are as a shadow. Job said that sorrow had dimmed his eyes and he was but a shadow of what he had been. Still, he didn't believe that he had committed some great sin that was causing his suffering. Verse seven says, Upright men shall be astonied at this, and the innocent shall stir up himself against the hypocrite. Job declared that even the upright, those who were honestly trying to follow God, would be astonished by Job's words of innocence, and the hypocrites would be stirred to speak out against Him. Sometimes, if God's truth seems to go against what we believe, we may be astonished that we are wrong. If we have been and are being hypocritical, then we will naturally oppose this truth from God, because if we don't, then we have to acknowledge our own sinfulness. Verse nine says, The righteous also shall hold on his way, and he that hath clean hands shall be stronger and stronger. Job said the righteous, those that God had made spiritually clean, should hang on to their faith, no matter what. If we keep our faith in God, we will grow stronger and stronger spiritually, no matter what our physical condition might be.
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