Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Job CCCXII

 Job 34:31-37, “For has anyone said to God, ‘I have borne chastening; I will offend no more; teach me what I do not see; if I have done iniquity, I will do no more’? Should He repay it according to your terms, just because you disavow it? You must choose, and not I; therefore speak what you know. Men of understanding say to me, wise men who listen to me: ‘Job speaks without knowledge, his words are without wisdom. Oh, that Job were tried to the utmost, because his answers are like those of wicked men! For he adds rebellion to his sin; he claps his hands among us, and multiplies his words against God.’”

Look, it’s not just me thinking this way, lest you think I have a bone to pick with you, or anything of the sort. Men of understanding and wise men who listen to me have also approached me and complained about some of the things you’ve said. Some have even gone so far as to say that your answers are like those of wicked men. So why don’t you just get with the program, acknowledge that we were right, submit to our feigned authority, and perhaps the Almighty will have mercy on you? Otherwise, there isn’t much hope save for you to continue to suffer in perpetuity until you go to the grave.

Think of it this way: could all these people be wrong? You have what amounts to an army arrayed against you, from your friends to your wife to men of understanding who know the situation you’re in, and let’s not forget, myself. We’ve all come to the same conclusion; in our own way we’ve all said, basically, the same thing, and for you to continue insisting upon your innocence, for you to say that you’ve done nothing wrong and there is no wickedness to be found in you, just adds rebellion to your sin.

When you juxtapose Elihu’s words with what the Word declares, confirming that in all this Job did not sin with his lips, nor charged God with wrong, you come away with one fundamental understanding of men’s natures that has remained consistent throughout the history of mankind: men hear what they want to hear, and interpret what they hear in such a fashion as to confirm their biases, and undergird their conclusions.

For the most part, men don’t want their minds changed; they do not want to weigh the merits of a differing opinion; they just want to exist in an echo chamber where everyone says exactly what they say, thinks exactly as they think, and any deviation from the monolith of thought in that particular clique is dealt with quickly and viciously.

Likewise, any idea at the core of a group or clique of people, no matter how illogical or outside the realm of possibility, becomes self-perpetuating; not only does it become the one thing that defines and unites them, but also becomes the purity test by which all others who want to enter their sphere are measured.

It’s no longer about declaring the whole counsel of God, but about being in lockstep with a singular tertiary doctrine, and amplifying that one thing above everything else, even above Christ Himself. Paul addressed this readily enough when writing to the Corinthians, after discovering that rancor had arisen within the household of faith because, rather than declaring themselves to be of Jesus, they bickered among themselves, due to some being of Paul and some of Apollos.

1 Corinthians 3:4-9, “For when one says, ‘I am of Paul,’ and another, ‘I am of Apollos,’ are you not carnal? Who then is Paul, and who is Apollos, but ministers through whom you believed, as the Lord gave to each one? I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the increase. So then neither he who plants is anything, nor he who waters, but God who gives the increase. Now he who plants and he who waters are one, and each one will receive his own reward according to his own labor.”

If a tertiary issue becomes a salvific doctrine and the litmus test by which others determine whether or not someone is saved and sanctified, it is no longer about Jesus, but about the issue which then becomes an idol of sorts which men elevate above what should be its rightful place.

Take your pick; there are plenty to choose from, whether the timing of Christ’s return, referring to Him by His Hebrew name exclusively, insisting that the Pauline epistles were the devil’s way of infiltrating Scripture, the frequency of communion, water baptism and whether one is baptized in the name of Jesus, or the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, the availability of spiritual gifts, and the list goes on.

If any one issue becomes the defining marker of your faith and it’s not the risen Christ, humbling yourself at the foot of the cross and receiving forgiveness, being washed, made clean, reborn and sanctified by Him, through Him, and in Him, it’s idolatry, pure and simple.

We brush off the things the Word tells us we ought to be doing like praying, fasting, studying Scripture, and building up our most holy faith, and instead choose to bicker endlessly, throw mud at each other, and evict others from the Kingdom as though we were the landlords rather than God.

I get that believing we have the authority to declare who enters the Kingdom and who will be left on the outside looking in is an ego boost that few other things can match, but there will come a day when we will be called to account for presuming God’s judgments and our own are interchangeable.

The greatest of all the people of the East had been brought low, and now everyone was piling on. That neither changed who Job was, nor how God viewed him. The words of Elihu did not change God’s opinion of Job, nor did He concur with the assessment of those who approached Elihu in confidence and shared what they thought of the man.

If your relationship with God is grounded in Biblical truth, and the desire of your heart is His presence, then it matters not what men say about you, or how many array themselves against you. If God is on your side, everything’s going to be all right.    

With love in Christ,

Michael Boldea, Jr. 

Monday, June 22, 2026

Job CCCXI

 Job 34:21-30, “For His eyes are on the ways of man, and He sees all his steps. There is no darkness nor shadow of death where the workers of iniquity may hide themselves. For He need not further consider a man that he should go before God in judgment. He breaks in pieces mighty men without inquiry, and sets others in their place. Therefore He knows their works; He overthrows them in the night, and they are crushed. He strikes them as wicked men, in the open sight of others, because they turned their back from Him, and would not consider any of His ways, so that they caused the cry of the poor to come to Him; for He hears the cry of the afflicted. When He gives quietness, who then can make trouble? And when He hides His face, who then can see Him, whether it is against a nation or a man alone? – That the hypocrite should not reign, lest the people be ensnared.”

If God’s eyes are on the ways of man and He sees all his steps, it is God and God alone that can determine the rightness of his way, for only God knows all, the things both open and secret, the things done in the shadows and the brightness of the day. It is the logical destination Elihu never arrived at, because he was too busy puffing himself up and insisting that men wiser than he lend him their ears to realize that he was attempting to appropriate God’s authority and pass judgment regarding Job.

Men can couch a lie in the truth often enough, but what they fail to realize is that the lie at the center of the truth in which it is encased pollutes it, and twists it into something other than the truth it began as. Factually, there was nothing wrong about what Elihu said. God’s eyes are indeed on the ways of man; He does see all his steps, and there is no darkness nor shadow of death where the workers of iniquity may hide themselves. All true, save for the presupposition that because Job had been brought low he must have been one such worker of iniquity.   

I have exceedingly more respect for someone who says they don’t know something, whether regarding spiritual matters or otherwise, than one who assumes, presumes, or tries to make out like they know the intricate details of a thing when they are wholly ignorant of it. In an attempt to save face, or keep their pride intact, men will double down on insisting they know something they clearly don’t until their ignorance is so evident as to be undeniable, or they are called out by someone who knows what they’re talking about.

Given that most people don’t like confrontation and they go out of their way to avoid it, the shameless among us who insist upon things that are clearly untrue usually get far before they are rebuffed, called out, or run out of steam.

When there is no pushback, when there is no resistance, they become more emboldened and, as such, become louder, to the point that they begin to believe their lies, passing them off as the truth. I’m sure you can think of a handful of things off the top of your head that are demonstrably false, that have, nevertheless, been passed off as the truth, and because few, if any, stood against them, they are now regarded as unimpeachable truth.

Elihu continues building his narrative, sprinkling in what God does with the wicked and the workers of iniquity, inferring that Job himself must be one such man since that is precisely what God does to them. Because God strikes wicked men, and Job himself had been stricken, then Job must be a wicked man.

Not only does Elihu detail what God does to the wicked, but he also insists he knows why, which is because they turned their back from Him, and would not consider any of His ways, and so Job must have, likewise, done these things since he had been stricken.

Generally speaking, Elihu is not wrong about God’s justice, or that He hears the cry of the afflicted. These are both true and factual statements, yet he applied them to Job, insisting this was the only viable explanation for why Job had lost and endured so much.

Elihu had already gone beyond judging Job, to condemning him for perceived wickedness he had no evidence of, not because he was a warrior for truth, or because justice flowed through his veins, but because he saw an opportunity to elevate himself by demeaning another. Before jumping on any bandwagon and adding to the chorus, perhaps it would be wise to determine why one individual has it out for another, and whether the intent behind their accusation is justice or their own self-aggrandizement.

Guilt or innocence are determined by whether someone actually did what they’ve been accused of doing, and not whether or not you like the way they come off, present themselves, or what denomination they belong to. To deem a man guilty when you know him to be innocent just because you don’t like his attitude or the manner in which he speaks is sinful. It is equally sinful to deem a man sinful when you know him to be guilty just because they’re likable or they belong to your particular clique.

God is not a respecter of persons. He will not judge you by your pedigree, lineage, level of education, or what continent you were born on. What impresses men does not impress God, and what disappoints and frustrates them isn’t what disappoints and frustrates Him. He knows you as you are; He sees beyond projection, façade, or image, to the heart of you, and when He looked upon Job, He saw a blameless and upright man, one who feared the Lord and shunned evil. Can the same be said about you or me? If not, then why not? It is not an impossible feat, after all. Job proved as much.     

With love in Christ,

Michael Boldea, Jr. 

Friday, June 19, 2026

Job CCCX

 Job 34:16-20, “If you have understanding, hear this; listen to the sound of my words: should one who hates justice govern? Will you condemn Him who is most just? Is it fitting to say to a king, ‘You are worthless,’ and to nobles, ‘You are wicked’? Yet He is not partial to princes, nor does He regard the rich more than the poor; for they are all the work of His hands. In a moment they die, in the middle of the night; the people are shaken and pass away; the mighty are taken away without a hand.”

If you cannot convince someone of your position by the soundness of your argument, your next best bet is to wear them down with the multitude of your words. I envy people who can tell the same banal story a thousand times with the same enthusiasm and fervor. Unfortunately, I am not one gifted in this area of oratory, and to the dismay of those who hear me preach, teach, or drone on for the hour or so on the radio program every week, there isn’t much repetition.

In what seems like another life, I was an interpreter for my grandfather. When we traveled, and it was often, those who came to hear him wanted to hear his testimony, and he told it not because he wanted to elevate himself in any way but because it was a springboard to the real message of repentance and holiness unto God lest judgment be visited upon this nation.

I never found that dull or tedious, because it was his testimony, and he was, after all, my grandfather whom I loved and had great fondness for. What I do find dreary and lackluster, however, is when out of the entirety of the Bible, sixty-six books in all, some preachers choose one favorite passage from which they preach the same message to the point that the audience can quote it verbatim, and they never seem to tire of it.

It’s the reason I’m reticent in retelling my grandfather’s testimony: it’s his testimony, and as far as the message for America goes, it’s available for free, on multiple platforms, whether in written form or audio, so for me to retread already tilled soil seems like an ill use of the time I’ve been given.

It would be no hard thing for me to endlessly hopscotch down rabbit trails, and regurgitate my grandfather’s testimony ad nauseam, but to what end? There must be a purpose to what we do beyond endless self-promotion, or the attempt at riding someone else’s coat tails for the sake of clout. The time I spent traveling with my grandfather wasn’t always easy; oftentimes it was brutal, but they are all fond memories because I got to spend a solid decade and change with the man who taught me how to ride a bike, made me my first slingshot, and was a consistent example of servanthood and obedience. There are far worse ways to spend your teenage years, but I am a teenager no longer, and the calling to which I have been called differs from that of my grandfather, perhaps not substantively but in the granular details.

You can tell a lot about a person by the things they say and what they choose to focus on. Elihu was so wrapped up in himself, so eager to prove his mettle and unveil his genius, that he demanded anyone within earshot stop what they were doing and listen to the sound of his words. It is, after all, the only way you will see how wise I am, how brilliant, how compelling, and you will walk away knowing how unique and special I am. By the end of his oratory, they may have walked away thinking him special, but not in the way he would have liked.

There are some nuggets of truth buried in Elihu’s self-honoring, self-promoting speech that deserve to be unearthed and pondered, chief among them the reality that God is not partial to princes, nor does He regard the rich more than the poor. It is men who judge other men based on their appearance, their wealth, their position, or their prominence. None of the things men judge others by are what God judges men by. We are all the work of His hands, fashioned from the same clay, and the only things that set men apart and are noticed by the Almighty are the selfsame things that made Job stand out: being blameless, upright, and fearing the Lord.

Do you belong to Him not just in word but in deed? In modern parlance, are you merely talking the talk, or walking the walk? Is Jesus on the throne of your heart? Is His presence the overarching desire of your heart? These are all questions we can answer for ourselves as individuals, and if the answer is no, then no amount of influence, authority, or prominence will make Him regard you in a better light.

The rigidity with which Elihu viewed God and the implacable, unbending conclusion that there are no exceptions to the rules he established is what made him so myopic. This is the way God must operate, and no other. This is the way God must do things, and no other possibility exists. You, who was once the greatest of all the people of the East, are now a wretch, a pitiable thing covered in boils, and this can only mean one thing: you have sinned, committed wickedness, such wickedness that cannot be expressed given the extent of your troubles. Proof? No, there is no proof. There is no evidence, but your present condition is all the evidence I require.

The failure to understand that God does as He wills, and is not subject to the preconceptions of His creation, is one of the quickest ways to run afoul of God Himself. Creation will never be in a position to dictate what the Creator can and cannot do, and to claim such is to place oneself above His sovereignty.

You can declare and proclaim until you’re blue in the face, and if God does not will it, it’s for naught. When we pray “Your will be done,” it is in all things, not just the ones that benefit or profit us in some form or fashion. Often, God’s will humbles us and brings us low, but even in such instances, His purpose is to draw us ever closer to Him. While Job was honest enough to acknowledge that he did not, as yet, understand God’s purpose in his suffering, Elihu was supremely assured that he did. The only problem is that Elihu was wrong.      

With love in Christ,

Michael Boldea, Jr. 

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Job CCCIX

 Job 34:10-15, “Therefore listen to me, you men of understanding: Far be it from God to do wickedness, and from the Almighty to commit iniquity. For He repays man according to his work, and makes man to find a reward according to his way. Surely God will never do wickedly, nor will the Almighty pervert justice. Who gave Him charge over the earth? Or who appointed Him over the whole world? If He should set His heart on it, if He should gather to Himself His Spirit and His breath, all flesh would perish together, and man would return to dust.”

There’s nothing like a man’s own words demonstrating his ignorance that clarifies the situation beyond any doubt, or the ever-present, “that’s just your opinion, I think he’s really smart”. Granted, some people have a blind spot for certain individuals, and no matter the inane word salad that spills from their lips, no matter how incoherent, banal, illogical, or counterintuitive, they’ll still swoon and heap praise upon them as though wisdom itself had at last found a permanent home.

If ever Elihu’s wisdom was in question, uncertain as to whether he had the wherewithal to follow through with his claims, we now have a definitive answer and definitive proof. After endlessly puffing himself up and extoling his own wisdom, Elihu’s argument boils down to karma.

If you do good, good will come to you; if you do evil, evil will be visited upon you. Perhaps when all is said and done, the flesh is no more, and we stand before God, there was truth in Elihu’s words, that God repays man according to his work, and makes man find a reward according to his way, but what happens between now and then, between the moment a man is born and a man goes the way of all things has nothing to do with karmic justice, or karmic reward. Bad things happen to good people, the wicked prosper, and the righteous hang on by the skin of their teeth, and that has nothing to do with whether God is showing one favor over the other, or blesses one above the other, unless you boil everything down to how much is in a person’s bank account and equate that number with their level of righteousness.

If prosperity were the plumb line by which holiness were measured, then Elon Musk is the holiest man walking the earth today. If Elihu’s banal conclusion of karmic justice and reciprocity held any truth, then there is no man walking the earth that has done more good than the world’s first trillionaire.

It’s always tempting to wax poetic on things and topics we have no clue about, but it is a temptation we must resist lest we do as Elihu did, and go on a protracted rant regarding the nature, character, purpose, and sovereignty of God without having a clue as to what they entail.

Elihu might have known certain aspects about God, but he did not know God, at least nowhere near the level Job did. There is a different level of understanding between knowing about someone from what others have told you and knowing them personally, having had fellowship, broken bread, and spent countless hours together. Job knew God personally. Elihu, it seems, had heard about God, learned about Him, but as far as having a relationship with Him goes, knowing Him personally and intimately, it seems unlikely.

That didn’t stop Elihu from demanding that everyone listen to him, because although ignorance may not be a virtue, it is a warm blanket that shields against self-awareness, or objective introspection. We’ve seen it often enough in our day and age wherein everyone is an instant expert on the most niche of topics, and once they’ve made up their mind, once they’ve decided that they’re right, no amount of evidence to the contrary will sway them.

To add to the growing list of things we shouldn’t do, Elihu goes on to presume the mind of God, and establish what God can and cannot do based on his underlying belief that karmic justice is the only true and viable explanation for Job’s suffering. This type of hubris is becoming commonplace in the contemporary church, with men declaring, in full authority, that there are limits to what God can do, or that, because they’ve decided it is so, there are things He no longer does.

They come to their conclusions not based on what the Bible says, not based on Scripture, but based on their individual, intellectual reasoning, and the most relevant thing of all, it isn’t happening to them, or they’re not personally experiencing it. It is flawed logic at best. It presupposes that if they never learned to swim, then everyone else is incapable of swimming by the sheer fact that they can’t.

Have you tried, though? Why would I bother? It’s impossible! But other people have experienced it, so it can’t be impossible. They’re just lying, that’s all, because if it were a possibility, then I would be doing it!

When we presume to declare what God can and cannot do, we are, in essence, limiting His omnipotence, appropriating His authority, and speaking on His behalf when He said nothing of the sort.

Although Elihu had the right of it when he declared that God would never do wickedly nor pervert justice, what he failed to acknowledge was the reality of the enemy of all that is upright, blameless, and pure, as well as God’s ability to test one’s faith by allowing the enemy to buffet and harass the righteous.

Yes, Job was a unique case, but if the enemy were given free rein to do as he wills, we would all be as Job, lying in an ash pile and scratching at our boils. There are no limits to the enemy’s hatred of God’s children. It is a hatred so overarching and all-consuming that only by God’s mercy and protection and the limitations he places on the devil as to what he can and cannot do to come against us can we still be about the work of the Kingdom.    

With love in Christ,

Michael Boldea, Jr. 

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Job CCCVIII

 Job 34:1-9, “Elihu further answered and said: ‘Hear my words, you wise men; give ear to me, you who have knowledge. For the ear tests words as the palate tastes food. Let us choose justice for ourselves; let us know among ourselves what is good. For Job has said, ‘I am righteous, but God has taken away my justice; should I lie concerning my right? My wound is incurable, though I am without transgression.’ What man is like Job, who drinks scorn like water, who goes in company with the workers of iniquity, and walks with wicked men? For he has said, ‘It profits man nothing that he should delight in God.’”

The more Elihu speaks, the worse off he comes. There are a plethora of things to unpack in these nine verses, but in the hope of keeping the word count of this second volume under the benchmark of War and Peace, I will only focus on three.

First, Elihu continued to make it all about himself. It wasn’t about hearing the word of the Lord, but about hearing his words. It wasn’t about seeking an answer from outside of himself, but about those present giving ear to him. There’s a difference between being wise and being wise in one’s own eyes. The wisdom to which I am referring is not book knowledge, or the attaining of degrees and diplomas, but the wisdom that comes from God, which only He can give to whom He chooses, at a time He has appointed.

In reading the words Job spoke, and the depth of wisdom he possessed, it is undeniable that he wasn’t the source of his wisdom. He spoke of things he had no way of knowing, or discerning with human reason, and one could readily tell that it was of divine origin.

Young as he was, perhaps Elihu had some head knowledge; perhaps he’d read a parchment or two, he’d happened upon a dusty scroll and perused it, sat in the counsel of those older than him and gleaned some measure of understanding, but he wasn’t anywhere near as wise as he believed himself to be, yet that in no way kept him from declaring his wisdom to any who would hear.

Hear my words, and give ear to me is what Elihu declared to those present. There was no mention of the Lord, or hearing the voice of the Lord, or giving heed to His counsel. We’ve got it from here, and we will determine whether Job is guilty or innocent. Whatever the Lord’s input, whatever the Lord’s judgment, whatever He might have to say on the matter is now moot, for I, Elihu, have come to pass judgment.

Elihu’s second blunder was assuming he had the right or authority to determine what justice looked like, or that he had the wherewithal to know what is good based on the partial information he possessed regarding Job.

“Let us choose justice for ourselves; let us know among ourselves what is good.” And who exactly gave you the authority to do this? Who appointed you judge, jury, and executioner of a man God Himself deemed blameless and upright? If the Lord has spoken, if the Lord has sent, if the Lord has appointed, then by all means speak what the Lord has spoken and go where He has sent you, walk in His authority as you go about His work, but to claim and appropriate an office, a position, or an authority that He has not given you is a recipe for disaster on a grand scale.

The difference between walking in His authority and yours is the difference between victory and defeat. The difference between speaking His words and your own in His name is that one will be rewarded due to the obedience required to go and speak a difficult message to someone reticent to hear it, and the other punished for appropriating God’s authority and speaking in His name when He never spoke. Be absolutely certain that when you speak in His name, they are His words, for all men will be held to account for the words they speak and whose name they speak them in.

Every time I speak, whether on the radio or before an audience, I go out of my way to delineate between personal opinion and revelation, between the word of the Lord and my own words. Although asked to do so on multiple occasions by various individuals, I refuse to take a word from the Lord, a prophecy, or some revelatory insight, and interpret it, flesh it out, or give my opinion on what I think it means, because that’s not my place. I do not have the authority to do it.

If God gives a message, deliver it verbatim and be done with it. If you want to wax poetic on why you should include tofu in your diet for better gut biome health, do your worst, but never claim it was something the Lord commanded His children to do.

As an aside, if God gives you, personally, a specific instruction to either abstain from something or do something, it does not automatically become general doctrine for everyone else. When Samson’s head was shaved, he lost his strength. This does not mean that everyone with long hair will have Samson's strength. He neither went around demanding everyone grow out their hair, nor did he insist that the reason they did not have his strength was that their hair wasn’t long.

The third and most egregious thing Elihu did was that he put words in Job’s mouth that Job never uttered just to make his point and position more credible. Although Elihu claimed Job had said that it profits man nothing that he should delight in God, those words never passed his lips.

If you are so inclined, go back through the previous thirty-two chapters, and see for yourself. Job never said that! What he said was the opposite of what Elihu claimed he’d said, insisting that God was the only thing worth pursuing in this life, and whether prince or pauper, whether rich or poor, if the presence of God abided, it was more than enough and the only thing his heart desired.

Whether he’d misheard Job’s words, or he did so knowingly, Elihu lied. Given that his lie served to bolster his assessment of Job’s situation, I tend to lean toward him knowingly insisting Job had said something he never did just to get a win. If saving face, or keeping your pride intact, is worth besmirching and lying about what another has said, there is something very wrong in your heart that must be dealt with before any claim of wisdom, or being on a mission from God, can be made.         

With love in Christ,

Michael Boldea, Jr. 

Sunday, June 14, 2026

Job CCCVII

 Job 33:29-33, “Behold, God works all things, twice, in fact, three times with a man, to bring his soul from the Pit, that he may be enlightened with the light of life. Give ear, Job, listen to me; hold your peace and I will speak. If you have anything to say, answer me; speak, for I desire to justify you. If not, listen to me; hold your peace, and I will teach you wisdom.”

In all of his self-serving diatribe and repeated attempts to elevate himself to a position of authority he had no right to appropriate, Elihu did happen upon a nugget of wisdom that cannot be dismissed or readily brushed off. In an admittedly roundabout way, Elihu hit upon the grace and mercy of God, wherein He will endeavor to bring a man’s soul from the Pit not once, but twice, in fact three times as Elihu states, and for some even more than that.

I’ve never been a fan of modern technology, and with the increase in spam calls, or individuals trying to sell me extended warranties for a car that isn’t worth the monthly premium of said warranty, the ringer on my phone is permanently on silent. I don’t like distractions, especially when I’m spending alone time with God, and wouldn’t you know it, that hour or two in the morning that I carve out as both intentional and exclusive to get into the Word and spend time in prayer is when everyone decides to reach out.

I often find three or four missed calls when I finally get around to checking my phone after I’m done with my quiet time, and they're always spam, potential spam, or an unknown caller who picked that specific time to dial my number.

I learned early on that one of the most often used and undeniably effective tools of the enemy is distraction. You commit yourself to a time of prayer, or study, you purpose in your heart that this thirty minutes, an hour, or two hours will be used exclusively for that pursuit, and suddenly everyone wants a piece of you, a moment of your time, something that can’t be put off or delayed, because if the enemy can keep you from spending time with God one day, he will attempt to rinse and repeat the rest of the week, then the month, then the year.

It never ends up being the emergency it was presented as being, and you find yourself having missed that window of being alone with God, because once the day gets started, it never stops. Between rushing the kids to school, packing their lunches, going to work, or the hundred other things we need to do to keep our head above water, the moment has passed.

The point is that a relationship must be reciprocal. If you want to know God on a deeper level, you must make the time to spend with Him. If you want understanding about a given biblical topic, you must make the time to study it. Yes, God works all things twice, in fact three times, to bring a man’s soul from the Pit, that he may be enlightened with the light of life, but it requires the individual’s consent and participation insofar as he does not resist the spirit of grace, nor turn his back on the proffered love.

God doesn’t take hostages. He will not keep you in His kingdom at gunpoint. Jesus Himself said if anyone desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me. This is the way, walk in it.

Jesus did the heavy lifting. His purpose on earth was to reconcile us to the Father, something He alone could accomplish, and by His sacrifice made a way for us to be with Him in paradise, saved from the Pit, born anew, sanctified, and cleansed of what we once were, to be transformed into an image of Himself. In His own right, God extends grace, mercy, and forgiveness to all who humble themselves, but He will not force Himself on anyone. He knocks, and we open. He calls, and we answer. He molds, and we submit, not growing brittle or stiff-necked, but remaining malleable.

Any goodwill Elihu may have fostered by his mention of God’s grace gets canceled out when he once again attempts to bring the spotlight back on himself and insists that Job should listen to him, hold his peace, and allow him to teach him wisdom. A person who thinks they know more than they do is a danger not only to others but also to themselves. There was no humility in Elihu, no allowance for the possibility that things weren’t as they seemed at first glance, and like a bull intent on goring whatever stands before him, Elihu pushed ever onward, insisting that anything he had to say was wisdom personified.

Elihu was the quintessential armchair quarterback, the man who not only knew everything but believed he would have acted and reacted to a specific situation better than the individual in question. He never bothered to consider all that Job had lost, all that he had been through, or all that he’d endured thus far. His narrative was firmly established, and he would not be swayed from his position. He was wise in his own eyes, and he was sure to let everyone know it, for after all, if you don’t point out your wisdom, who’s going to do it?

You see this happening in churches and ministries often enough: a soon-to-retire pastor or head of a ministry brings on a young, unseasoned individual to take the helm, only to have them reimagine the ministry's mission statement and transform it into something unrecognizable within a matter of months. Never mind the hostile takeovers taking place in the corporatized Christian landscape, wherein someone believes they can do a better job than the individual who spent decades building up the work. The one question that’s rarely asked, and one that should be asked more often, is if you’re so star-spangled awesome and you have the vision to grow something exponentially, why covet another’s ministry rather than starting your own?

As was the case with Elihu, the sad reality is that some men’s hubris exceeds their intellectual ability, and when it comes to ministry, many go without being sent, doing more harm than good in their single-minded pursuit of something that was never theirs to begin with.   

With love in Christ,

Michael Boldea, Jr. 

Friday, June 12, 2026

Job CCCVI

 Job 33:23-28, “If there is a messenger for him, a mediator, one among a thousand, to show man His uprightness, then He is gracious to him, and says, ‘deliver him from going down to the Pit; I have found a ransom’; His flesh shall be young like a child’s, he shall return to the days of his youth. He shall pray to God, and He will delight in him, he shall see His face with joy, for He restores to man His righteousness. Then he looks at men and says, ‘I have sinned and perverted what was right, and it did not profit me.’ He will redeem his soul from going to the Pit, and his life shall see the light.”

If you get the sneaky feeling that you’ve met Elihu before, you’re not alone. The reason for this is that you’ve likely run across an Elihu type in your life, as I have, because they are more common than one might think. Elihu was the type of individual who, no matter the situation or circumstance, had the ability to make it all about himself. He was the star of his own show, and everyone around him was an extra.

If a typhoon devastates an entire region, the Elihu type will bemoan the fact that their flight might get delayed or diverted. Never mind that thousands of people are missing and presumed dead, or that an entire nation is without power for going on two weeks; your plans got ruined, you were inconvenienced by having to wait in an airport for two extra hours, and that was the real tragedy.

Elihu took what was happening to Job, and you guessed it, made it all about himself, and how Job was lucky, or at least should feel lucky, because God had sent him along to act as mediator, and by Elihu’s very presence, his selfless act of standing in for Job, he would be spared from the Pit if he would only confess and admit to having sinned and perverted what was right.

In his hubris, Elihu saw himself as one in a thousand, and if he’d had a say in the matter, the book would have been called the Book of Elihu rather than the Book of Job. Job was auxiliary, as far as Elihu was concerned, and the real story here was the selflessness Elihu exhibited by being willing to mediate between Job and God.

Even at the pinnacle of his success, Job never made it about himself. He didn’t go fishing for accolades or seek the praise of men; he didn’t see himself above the need to have a true and abiding relationship with God, nor did he forego the time he spent in God’s presence.

By the time the story of Job begins to unfold, his children were already grown, each in their own houses, yet, even then, Job would send and sanctify his children once the days of feasting had run their course, and offer burnt offerings according to the number of them all.

He understood that everything was dependent on God, His good pleasure, and His sovereign will. For some, once they “make it,” whatever that entails and however that plays out in their minds, God becomes less relevant, less necessary, less important, because their desire was never to have intimacy with God but to succeed, to outshine their competition, and to reach their earthly goals. Not so with Job. By any metric, he’d made it. He was the greatest of all the people of the East, yet that did not dampen his desire to be in God’s presence and walk uprightly.

It’s not as though Job was secretive about his desire for God, nor about his relationship with the Almighty. By his own admission, Elihu had overheard the back-and-forth between Job and his three friends, had witnessed Job’s repeated insistence that he had not done wickedness and that God remained his singular priority and pursuit, but Elihu refused to believe him.

If Job had lived his life incongruent with the will and plan of God up until that point, not only would God not have singled him out as blameless and upright, but there would have been enough evidence to point to and rightly call him a liar to his face when he claimed innocence. He was well known enough that, had he done something wicked, it would have been discovered no matter how hard he tried to hide it.

Job wasn’t trying to save face or claim innocence when he knew himself to be guilty; he wasn’t trying to get off on a technicality, asking what the definition of wickedness was; he knew that he knew himself to be one who feared the Lord, and was not reticent in saying it.

Anyone who seeks to judge others before they judge themselves is not acting out of love, kindness, or righteous indignation, but a desire to elevate themselves and highlight their own perceived righteousness.

There are a few things that are offputting about Elihu and his approach of Job, but for me, worse than any other, it is the prism through which he saw Job, from an elevated position, thinking himself righteous and within his rights to pass judgment on a man who had, up until this time, denied all the accusations leveled against him, and conducted himself in such a manner as to make those who had been arguing with him have no retort or counterargument.

Elihu might have been a fresh face on the scene; he may have seen himself as superior since Job’s friends were, in his words, very old, but when he opened his mouth to speak, we soon realize he was the worst of the lot. Say what you will about Job’s three friends, but none of them had the temerity to appoint themselves as mediators between Job and God as Elihu had.

As the adage goes, respect isn’t given; it’s earned, and although Job’s friends had earned his respect by traveling to him in his time of need, Elihu had done no such thing. He saw an opportunity to exalt himself, and he took it, thinking it would be an easy thing given Job’s state. What Elihu hadn’t counted on was that it wasn’t any man who was Job’s defender but God, and when God is your defender, no matter what men might say, you will continue to stand firm and resolute.         

With love in Christ,

Michael Boldea, Jr.