The Bible Recap - Day 006 (Job 10-13) - Year 4
Episode Date: January 6, 2022SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Song: “Though ...You Slay Me” PREP EPISODES (in case you haven’t listened yet): Let's Read the Bible in a Year (Chronological Plan)! How I Learned to Love (Reading) the Bible Why Reading the Whole Bible is Important (interview with Lee McDerment) Preparing to Read the Bible Avoiding Common Mistakes: What to Look for When You Read the Bible Reading the Bible in Community SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
We're in the book of Job for 9 more days. We're already 25% of the way through it. This
book can be challenging for some people. Maybe it tries their patience or just feels
like a real downer. Interestingly though, a lot of people say that Job is their favorite book of the Bible, but most of them don't feel that way until
they've read it all the way through. So if I may, let me offer you a challenge that
one of our team members likes to present to people. She says, don't quit in Job. You can
quit before Job or you can quit after Job, but don't quit in Job. I love that advice.
And obviously it's too late for you to quit before Job so you're stuck with us. This book ends with praise and triumph. So be
sure to stick around for the party. We're getting closer to it every day. And I
want to say a big thanks to our staff member Cali Summers for laying out that
challenge for us all. Today we met Job's third friend so far. We've already
heard from Elifaz and Buildad who gave their reasons they thought
were responsible for Job's life falling apart.
The hard part about listening to these guys
is that sometimes they do say things that are true.
It's not like it's all wrong.
For example, when Sofar is talking about God in 116,
he says, he exacts less of you than your guilt deserves.
First of all, this is generally true of all of us,
not just Job.
We talked about this yesterday.
God is merciful.
We all deserve death, yet he lets us live.
That's his mercy.
And the fact that we get to live on God's earth
and breathe God's air and eat God's food
that's so much more than we deserve.
That's his grace.
He does exact less of us than our guilt deserves.
So far, I said a lot of true things about God.
It was when he started drawing conclusions about Job
that things took a left turn.
And we get to hear Job's reply
where he started getting sarcastic with his friends.
Did you catch that?
In 122, he said, no doubt you are the people
and wisdom will die with you.
In 125, Job had some words of wisdom
for those of us who want to comfort grieving friends.
He said,
in the thought of one who is at ease,
there is contempt for misfortune.
It is ready for those whose feet slip.
Job was pointing out that those who aren't struggling
don't seem to understand those who are.
In fact, they often have contempt for them, not compassion.
It seems like Job was beginning to sense
his friend's contempt for him.
Maybe some of this was rooted in their jealousy.
I know it sounds crazy to be jealous of Job at this point,
but this was a man who had everything
who was honorable and respected,
and this might be the first time in their lives
that they've had a chance to feel superior to him.
Maybe they jumped at the chance to try to identify his sins because of their own insecurities.
In 12-9, Job acknowledges that God is the author of everything, even when he isn't the
active agent in it. God didn't commit these actions toward Job, but if God could have
stopped it and he didn't, doesn't it still kind of terminate on him? This is a really
mysterious aspect of God's character.
Don't try to overlook it,
but don't try to understand it fully just yet.
God's not the agent of evil,
but it's a necessary part of the story he's writing.
We will continue to talk more and more about this
as we move through Scripture,
but don't get hung up on it,
don't let it turn you off from reading,
resist the urge to reach conclusions about God based on what you think at this point,
and especially resist the urge to reach conclusions about God based on what you think humans deserve.
Unless you're primarily recalling that we deserve nothing but hell and death.
I'll be honest, most, if not all, of my frustrations about God's actions,
are rooted in the lie that I deserve
something.
Deserve is my least favorite word.
It's disgusting to me.
It's entitled.
You will see it in advertising everywhere.
Companies will appeal to your entitlement, try to get you to feed on your self-centeredness.
It's disgusting to me, especially because I know how gullible I am when it comes to appealing
to my comfort and pleasure.
What did you see about God's character today in your reading? It might be different than what I saw, and it probably is, but here's my God shot for today. I saw that God is our hope. In 1315, Job said
these incredible words, though he slay me, I will hope in him. Job knew the only place his
hope was found. After all had been through, even as a righteous man who was being wrongly called
to account by his friends, he knew that the mercy of God was his only salvation, not even the understanding
of his friends. If you're in a dark place, dig deep into the story of Job, he gets it.
And his words have been turned into a beautiful song called
Though You Slave Me,
which we've linked to in the show notes.
I think it will be a real comfort to you,
so be sure to swipe up and listen to that.
Not only is God our hope in the darkest night,
but ultimately, he's where the joy is.
The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group.
The Cypleship and Bible Study Groups that meet in homes and churches around the world each
week.
For more information on D-Group, visit mydeggroup.org. [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪