Job 22:27-30, “You will make your prayer to Him, He will hear you, and you will pay your vows. You will also declare a thing, and it will be established for you; so light will shine on your ways. When they cast you down, and you say, ‘Exaltation will come!’ Then He will save the humble person.” He will even deliver one who is not innocent; yes, he will be delivered by the purity of your hands.”
Do what I tell you, the way I tell you to do it, and things
will work out. That was the conclusion of Eliphaz’s third and final oration. Generally
speaking, there was nothing improper about the advice he was giving to Job, but
contextually speaking, as it pertained to Job himself, Eliphaz missed the mark
because his underlying premise was that Job was guilty of sin, had committed
wickedness, and must therefore acknowledge it, repent of it, and return to God.
If anything, the purpose for which Job should have done these things was a bit off
kilter, but we will get to that in due course.
Imagine someone knocking on your door and insisting you have
to go home. But I am home. You came to my house, knocked on my door, and
insisted I ought to go to the place I’m already in. Return to God, and He will
hear you. Return to God, and He will deliver you. But I never left! I’m exactly
where I’ve always been at my Master’s feet, crying out to Him, knowing He is
the only remedy to my current situation.
Someone trying to invalidate your relationship with God
because you don’t see some tertiary issue the way they do, don’t idolize the
preacher they do, or don’t belong to the same denomination as them, isn’t your
friend, nor are they looking out for your spiritual well-being. The plumbline
isn’t their opinion; the plumbline is the Word of God.
That more and more seem to be following after the words of
men while disregarding the Word of God is not accidental. It was foretold and
prophesied. It’s not that they don’t have access to the Word; it’s that they
don’t like what the Word has to say, and so, having itching ears, they turn
away from the truth and are turned aside to fables.
2 Timothy 4:3-4, “For the time will come when they will not
endure sound doctrine, but according to their own desires, because they have
itching ears, they will heap up for themselves teachers; and they will turn
their ears away from the truth, and be turned aside to fables.”
The reason for it isn’t something as noble as wanting to get
to the truth, or because they want to unravel some mystery they deem of
existential import, but because they prioritize their own desires over sound
doctrine, and will find a way to facilitate dismissing it. If the Bible is
clear on a topic and I happen to disagree with it, doing the opposite of what
it prescribes, I know I’m walking in rebellion. If, however, I find someone
deemed a spiritual authority who validates my rebellion, who insists that God
didn’t mean what He said, then I have enough of a justification wherein I won’t
have to repent, turn, and follow after the truth.
Men gravitate toward those who offer them liberties the
Scriptures would otherwise not allow because their true heart is not about
denying themselves, picking up their crosses, and following after Jesus, but
having some perceived fire insurance while doing as they will.
It’s no longer about finding a church that focuses on prayer,
studying the Word, and sound doctrine; it’s about finding one that entertains,
puts men at ease, and doesn’t last longer than forty minutes on the dot because
we’ve got things to do and places to be, and being there isn’t about being in
His presence anymore, but about making sure we were checked off at roll call as
though attendance was the thing God takes into account and not the hearts of
men.
Although I have no concrete evidence, given the early date of
the book of Job, it seems to me that Eliphaz was likely the first-ever
quasi-prosperity preacher, the forefather of what has become the doctrine du
jour for so many today. Do good, and good will come to you; declare a thing, and
it will be established for you. Be God’s friend, and nothing bad will ever
happen in your life.
This creates a false standard of righteousness, wherein men
can boast that because they are rich, they are favored of God, because they
have wealth, God is on their side, and those who don’t aren’t as special in the
eyes of God, nor are they walking uprightly, because if they were, they too would
live in opulence and luxury.
We’ve all seen the clips of supposed shepherds boasting to
their flock about the new jets, the watches that cost more than a single-family
home, the mansions they’ve acquired, or the money they’ve amassed, insisting
that their way is right, evidenced by the earthly goods they’ve procured.
This is the selfsame mindset Eliphaz had, insisting that if
Job would reacquaint himself with God and return to Him, his coffers would be
so overflowing as to lay his gold in the dust, and the gold of Ophir among the
stones of the brooks.
If you serve God in the hope that He will make you rich, you’re
serving riches and not God. All you’re doing is using God to obtain what your
heart truly desires, which isn’t Him, but the things He can give.
Eliphaz insists that God prospers the righteous in the
material sense, and their prosperity is a sure sign of their righteousness.
Paul insists that God chastens those He loves, and scourges every son whom He receives.
Given all the times he’s been wrong thus far, I’d take anything Eliphaz has to
say with a grain of salt. The same goes for the modern-day Eliphazes, who insist
that trials, tests, tribulations, pruning, scourging, and chastenings are not
of God.
Without trials, there would never be a need for long-suffering,
which is a fruit of the Spirit. Without being wronged, we would never have to
learn to forgive. Without need, we would never have to have faith that God will
provide. Without temptation, we would never need to resist it, thereby proving
our faithfulness. All the things that the flesh deems as negative facilitate
the growth, maturing, and sanctification of our spiritual man. All the things the
world looks down upon and mocks only serve to deepen our relationship with God.
Some of us don’t need deliverance; we just need to see the
world through spiritual eyes. Then, rather than praying for deliverance, we
will pray for endurance; rather than pray for escape, we will pray for
boldness, rather than pray for riches, we will pray for contentment of heart,
and find our joy and satisfaction in what He’s already done, and not what we’re
hoping He will do on our behalf.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
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