The Bible Recap - Day 012 (Job 32-34) -Year 5
Episode Date: January 12, 2023SHOW 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 - Win a trip to Israel! - Listen to Way FM ... FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: Follow us on social media! Join PATREON/RECAPtains! 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! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today for the first time in almost a week of reading, someone new showed up on the scene.
And what we know about him right away is that he's very angry.
Elihu, this new angry man, is angry not only at Job,
but also at Job's three friends,
because they were all kind of self-righteous.
Chapter 32, verse 4, makes it sound like Elihu had been there all along
listening to the whole back and forth from everyone
and had been holding his tongue.
Perhaps out of some humility since he was younger than everyone else,
but also out of fear of man as we find out in verse 6.
But then, after listening to the Maltaugh,
it turned out that these three older men
had nothing good to say, so he spoke up.
Age doesn't always equal wisdom,
and youth doesn't always equal foolishness.
Eli who points out in verse 8 that it's God,
not time, who grants wisdom.
It doesn't only come via time and life experience.
Sometimes those of the means God uses,
but sometimes he just dispenses wisdom at will.
And for Elihu, he believed God had advanced
his wisdom beyond his ears,
and we'll have to wait a little longer
to see if we think he was right.
He starts out by rebuking Job's three friends
and telling them that in all their speeches,
they were never able to offer a proper rebuttal to what Job said.
Then in chapter 3 he goes on to Rebuke Job, even though he approaches it initially with a little more gentleness than the other three did.
He says, my pressure will not be heavy on you. I too was pinched off from a piece of clay.
He seems to stay humble in his approach to rebuking Job, unlike Job's other
friends. Elihu gets a few things wrong in his rebuked Job, though. In verse 9, he says Job had
claimed to be without transgression, and Job never actually claimed that. The very fact that Job
offered sacrifices meant he knew that he wasn't innocent before God. If he sat before God as judge, he knew there would be claims
against him. In verse 29 through 30, Elihu points out that sometimes God brings hardship
in the temporary in order to bring healing in the eternal. He says, behold, God does all
these things twice, three times with a man, to bring back his soul from the pit, that
he may be lighted with the light of life. Elihu is basically saying here that God plays the long game.
God's eternality allows him a vantage point that you and I don't have.
And it also solidifies his patience toward us when we're going through trials.
It's easier to be patient when you can guarantee the process and outcome will be worth it.
God has that kind of guarantee because of his
eternality, because of his sovereignty, because of his omniscience, which is just a big word,
meaning that he knows everything. But here's the thing about all that. It's true that God sometimes
does allow hardship to turn people's hearts back to him. But by adding this idea to his speech,
Elihu starts to take on the same themes that Job's
friends presented repeatedly, basically saying God let all this happen to bring back Job's soul
from the pit, or in more direct terms, so Job would turn from his transgression. I'd hope
it would play out differently this time around, honestly. I thought Job would finally found a friend
who understood, but it's all starting to sound very familiar. He starts to accuse Job of walking with the wicked men of being foolish and not only
of sinning, but also rebelling against God.
Are you guys exhausted of the way Job is misunderstood?
Imagine you just lost your job and your home and your family was killed and God feels distant
and your friends all just keep rebuking you and you can't for the life of you think
of what you might need to repent of,
and on top of that, you're covered in boils.
I do not envy Job,
but I'm so glad his story is recorded in Scripture,
because I think we've all experienced seasons of life
that feel like this to some small degree.
And if you haven't yet, you will.
Tomorrow, we'll finish up Elihu's speech.
But as for today, what was your God shot?
For me, it was the part where Elihu was talking
about how God plays the long game.
Much of what these men say about God is true.
It's when they talk about Job that they really get it wrong.
So when Elihu points out that God will allow us
to struggle in our lives as it serves to turn our hearts from darkness to light, it made me grateful.
Maybe this feels cruel to you, but isn't that what all good parents do?
If you're a parent, don't you let your child learn the lessons the hard way sometimes,
especially if you know that the long-term consequences of learning something are less
detrimental than the short-term consequences of the lesson.
I want the kind of parent who lets me scream through the terrors of a swim lesson if they
know what means I won't drown when they take me to the ocean.
I love that God isn't always lined up with my desires in the moment and that he can see
further than I can.
It makes me trust him more.
It reminds me that I might only be right here in the pain and uncertainty of the moment,
but if I can connect to him and learn to trust him in that, then I can access something
more than my current emotions.
In fact, that's when I selfishly want to connect with him most, because I know he's where
the joy is.
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