Pastor Sherry’s message for October 6, 2024
Scriptures: 10/6/2024, Job 1:1-22, 2:1-10; Ps 8; Heb 1:1-4, 2:5-12; Mk 10:1-16
I recently came across a list of laws on the books in various states that are both funny and even weird. Apparently, it is illegal in…
1. Alabama to wear a false mustache that causes laughter in church.
2. Delaware to whisper in church.
3. Alaska, to push a live moose out of an airborne plane.
4. Arizona to let a donkey sleep in a bathtub.
5. Arkansas to mispronounce Arkansaw as Ar-kansas.
6. Speaking of Illinois, to take a nap in a cheese factory.
7. Georgia to carry an ice cream cone in your back pocket.
8. Louisiana to eat more than 3 sandwiches at a funeral wake, or to let a snake loose at a Mardi Gras parade.
(Jack Browning, www.onelegal.com , 4/7/2024.)
People can enact some pretty strange rules by which they want us to behave, can’t they? We have been looking to the Bible this past month to discover what constitutes true wisdom. Remember, from God’s perspective, wisdom is godly or righteous behavior (just think What Would Jesus Do?) and foolishness is anything but. We’d have to look hard to discover the wisdom behind some of these laws I just mentioned above.
The writers of the Old Testament, the Jews, considered the books of Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and Job to constitute Wisdom Literature. Someone has said that Proverbs is optimistic and teaches us that we benefit most when we try to live lives pleasing to God (when we utilize wisdom). Ecclesiastes claims that human wisdom has its limits, and a life not centered on God is meaningless. And Job argues that, while God may be hidden as we–even if innocent of wrongdoing–undergo human suffering, we need to remember that (a) Satan is actively making every effort to discourage us from loving God; (b) there is meaning and purpose to our human suffering; and (c) God has not abandoned us but rather is rooting for us as we persevere in faith.
So, this brings us to a second consideration of what we are to do when God appears to be hidden. Our Scripture passages today provide some powerful answers.
A. In Job 1:1-22, 2:1-10, we are introduced to Job—> This man was blameless and upright; he feared God and shunned evil. In Chapter 1, God (the Father) holds Job up to “the Satan” [in the Hebrew, “Satan” is a title which means he is the embodiment of all evil] as His prime example of a truly good man. Notice we are told that the Satan had been busy (v.6)—> …roaming through the earth and going back and forth in it. What’s that mean? It means that he was sticking his nose in peoples’ business, trying to catch them at their worst so he could accuse them before God. This is why Scripture calls him “the accuser.”
So what’s he say to God about Job? “Well, yeah, Job loves You and does what You want him to, Lord, because You have greatly blessed him.
Let me get ahold of him and make his life miserable, and watch how quickly he blames You and turns his back on You! Wow! Notice the Satan’s pride?
He is saying, in essence, “I know humankind better than You, God. I’m sure this guy can’t really love You minus the good things YOU do for him, that is, without all the perks you bestow on people, You aren’t worthy to be loved.”
YIKES! God is love and God is good. No wonder pride was the reason Satan was kicked out of heaven. He hasn’t learned much over the millennia, has he?
God agrees to let Satan test Job, but He places a limit on what the Satan can do to Job–he cannot kill him. So, poor Job suddenly gets word that Sabeans (raiders) have taken his 500 yoke of oxen (1,000 altogether); his 500 female donkeys who provided milk that was highly prized in those days; and killed all his herdsmen except the lone messenger. In quick succession, Job also learns his 7,000 sheep have been hit and killed by fire from the sky (lightening? a meteor? a volcano?). Additionally, Chaldean raiders have swept in and taken off his 3,000 camels. And worst of all, a tornado hit the house where his 7 sons and 3 daughters were having dinner, and killed them all. Job is hit with a series of tidal waves or tsunamis, one following hard on the heels after the other.
Job’s amazing response is (v.21)—> Naked I came from my mother’s womb, and naked I will depart. The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away; May the name of the Lord be praised. Strickly speaking, Satan (not the Lord) caused Job’s stock market to crash and all 10 of his children to simultaneously die. Job seems to understand this and so he does not blame God.
Next, we pick up in Chapter #2,with a second test for Job. Satan asserts to God, “Well, I ruined his finances and his family, but he still loves You because he has his health. God allows Satan to take Job’s health and watches to see what he does. Again, do we all notice who is responsible for the dirty work? Again, it’s Satan, not God. Furthermore, God believes in Job…think about that: God trusts in Job’s love and fidelity. Wouldn’t we all love for Him to trust in us to that extent? So, Satan covers Job’s body with painful, itchy boils. Job sits on an ash heap, a sign of mourning. He’s thoroughly grieved and he does not really understand why so many bad things have happened to him, but amazingly he still doesn’t blame God! Instead his wife–who may have only married him for his wealth, etc.—says to him (v.9)—> Are you still holding on to your integrity? Curse God and die! She’s really supportive, isn’t she? Instead of comforting and encouraging Job, she very disrespectfully blows him and his grief off. Maybe leaving her around while all their children were killed was another part of Satan’s dastardly plan.
Job actually presents an excellent model for us: We need to remember his story when trouble comes to us. It is the evil one who causes our troubles. God allows them as a test, but meanwhile, God is for us, not against us. Indeed He provides us what we need to meet and even overcome the test. I am reminded of the present response to the victims of Hurricane Helene in the western Carolinas. The federal government has been slow to respond, but churches, neighbors, and many non-profit agencies have marshalled resources to rescue, water, feed, and provide shelter to those who have lost so much.
B. Psalm 8, written by King David, is a hymn of praise to God for creation. It begins and ends with those wonderful words, O LORD, our LORD, how majestic is Your name in all the earth! Then it goes on to celebrate God’s formation of the cosmos, from planets and stars to humans and infants. We could call this a Messianic psalm because it speaks to a time when all persons will revere our Lord Jesus. As we know, the names of God and of Jesus are not everywhere honored today; many even use them as curse words. But with Jesus’ 2nd Coming, all will know that God is real, that He exists, and that He rules in power and might. Those who love Him and believe in Him will discover the truth of what the prophet Jeremiah wrote in Jeremiah 29:11—> ”For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to proper you and to give you a hope and a future.” Again, our God is for us and not against us.
C. The writer to the Hebrews (1:1-4; 2:5-12) wants us to know that Jesus Christ is superior in position and power to all of the prophets who have lived and to all of the angels in heaven and on earth. Previously, God had spoken to humankind through prophets He ordained to communicate His thoughts to us; less often, through angelic beings who came with specific messages to particular persons; and, then through the 40 Holy Spirit inspired authors of the Old Testament written for our edification over 1500 years. But with the birth of Jesus, the Father has spoken to us through His Son, the full revelation of God. Or, as Peterson paraphrases it (v.3)—> By His Son, God created the world in the beginning, and it will all belong to the Son at the end. This son perfectly mirrors God, and is stamped with God’s nature. He holds everything together by what He says—powerful words.
(Eugene Peterson, The Message, NavPress, 2002, p.2181.)
God has put everything into subjection under Jesus’ authority. And He has made us sons and daughters of God. This is our position, no matter what life or the Satan throws at us. For this reason, we can trust in God the Father and we can trust in God the Son, even when we experience trials and tragedies.
So, when God’s purposes escape us, or when His actions—or seeming lack of action—frustrate us, let us remember…
(1) God is good and God is love.
(2) Thus, His plans and purposes for us are always good.
(3) And when He seems to be hidden from us, we can still, like Job, trust in Him and remain faithful to Him. Amen! May it be so!
©️2024 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams