Friday, August 24, 2012

The Patience of Job: Understanding the Balance of Suffering and Pleasure

When Job's faith was tested, he had a choice to make.  He could either rail against God and curse God for being unjust, or he could accept his situation for what it was and try to find some peace in it.  Suffering is an undeniable fact of life.  It doesn't do any good to try to point fingers of blame or to wallow in self-pity.  Instead, Christians need to understand Jesus' words when He said that God makes the sun to shine and the rain to fall on the righteous as well as the wicked (Matthew 5:45).

The reader must realize that Job's story of suffering is only unusual for two reasons:  First, it is is unusual in the sense of its extremity.  Evil comes to everyone.  Job's story doesn't recount the troubles of his friends or his neighbors--not because they had no troubles, but because it is his story.  No doubt, their stories would, if they were told, also involve suffering on various levels.  

Second, it is unusual because Job's response to suffering was different than that of those around him.  Some told him that he should blame himself.  Others said he should curse God and die.  But only Job showed a righteous response that understood a balance of both pleasure and pain in the world.  The world is full of nakedness and loss, but it is also full of God's gracious gifts.  You can't experience one without the other, for they are inherently interconnected.  So his response is one of praise.  1 Thessalonians 5:18 tells us to "give thanks in all circumstances, for this is God's will for you in Christ Jesus."  Psalm 34:1 says, " I will extol the LORD at all times; his praise will always be on my lips."  Job took this sentiment literally.

In today's meditation from Job 1:21 (ISV), seek to understand the balance between pleasure and suffering in your own life.  Ask God to give you the patience, and the peace, of Job.

MEDITATION WITH ECUMENICAL PRAYER BEADS:
(Click here to get your own)

Invitatory
...I left my mother’s womb naked,
and I will return to God naked.

Cruciform
May the name of the Lord be blessed.

Weeks
The Lord has given,
and the Lord has taken.

Benedictory
2:10 ...Are we to accept what is good from God but not tragedy?”...

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