Job 37:14-24, “Listen to this, O Job; Stand still and consider the wondrous works of God. Do you know when God dispatches them, and causes the light of His cloud to shine? Do you know how the clouds are balanced, those wondrous works of Him who is perfect in knowledge? Why are your garments hot, when He quiets the earth by the south wind? With Him, have you spread out the skies, strong as a cast metal mirror? Teach us what we should say to Him, for we can prepare nothing because of the darkness. Should He be told that I wish to speak? If a man were to speak, surely he would be swallowed up. Even now men cannot look at the light when it is bright in the skies, when the wind has passed and cleared them. He comes from the north as golden splendor; with God is awesome majesty. As for the Almighty, we cannot find Him; He is excellent in power, in judgment and abundant justice; He does not oppress. Therefore men fear Him; He shows no partiality to any who are wise of heart.”
By the end of his
heated and impassioned oratory, one gets the sense that Elihu realized he’d gotten
ahead of his skis. He’d assumed, presumed, taken it upon himself to speak on
God’s behalf, insisted that pure knowledge flowed from his lips, then wondered
as if to himself, Should God be told that I wish to speak? Should I have gotten
permission to say what I said, rather than assuming I knew the mind of God and
the entirety of his plan for Job?
Even with that
small dose of self-awareness, however, Elihu can’t help himself. He couldn’t
stop himself from condescending to Job, insisting that Job teach them what they
should say to God. It was not an honest request or a sincere desire to know how
to approach God, but more akin to, well, if you’re so smart and so spiritual,
why don’t you teach us what we should say to the Almighty? If you have all the
answers, clue us in.
The problem is
that Job never claimed to have all the answers. He was distraught at God’s
silence and did not understand why he had been allowed to suffer the
misfortunes he’d suffered. Even so, he neither found fault with God nor did he
sin with his lips in his suffering. This was not something Job claimed; it is
something God said.
It is frightening
to see so many superimpose their opinions over God’s will, insisting that they
are one and the same. Oftentimes, the opinions differ wildly from what
Scripture declares to be the truth, but that doesn’t stop some from insisting
that they know better, or that they are on equal footing with the Almighty when
it comes to declaring what is pleasing in His sight and what He finds
abhorrent. Men might be allowed to ramble on for a season, but in the end, God
will have the last word. He will have His say, and He will judge with righteous
judgment.
It is true, God shows
no partiality to any who are wise of heart, for wisdom in and of itself is not
something that God weighs in the scales when declaring a man blameless and
upright. God sees the hearts of men, as they are, without artifice or pretense,
and it is the heart, its focus, desires, and yearnings that He judges. Has the heart
been transformed? Has it been regenerated? Has it been born again and set upon
the path of sanctification, or does it remain as it ever was, as the individual
in whom the heart beats boasts of his own righteousness?
Lest anyone think
I am judging Elihu harshly, go back to when he was first introduced, and see
the spirit in which he approached Job and his three friends. Within the span of
three verses, we are told no less than three times that the wrath of Elihu was
aroused against Job and his three friends, and it persisted throughout his
monologue.
Angry people say
dumb things. When one’s wrath is stirred, they don’t take the time to consider
what they’re saying or whether it's factual and true. The anger dulls their
senses, it unbridles the tongue, and they let fly, without a shred of humility,
meekness, or self-awareness. Elihu wasn’t powered by Red Bull or caffeine; he
was powered by wrath, and for five chapters he did everything he could to convince
Job of his guilt, even though Job knew himself to be innocent.
Notwithstanding
the oddity that Elihu appears on the scene, as if out of nowhere, spends a
considerable amount of time slinging mud, and just as readily disappears and is
mentioned no more, his presence was just another opportunity for the enemy to attempt
to whittle down Job’s resolve. The enemy isn’t picky about who he uses to achieve
his objectives. The ends are all that matter, and the means are a triviality as
far as he is concerned.
Some within the
leadership of the contemporary church have convinced themselves that God
operates in a similar fashion, and as long as the pews are full and the electric
bill gets paid, the way they conduct themselves is irrelevant. That in itself
is a snare, and one many a soul has fallen into, and we see the aftereffects, the
collateral damage, and the destruction such individuals leave in their wake.
The Biblical standard is there for a reason. What God requires of His own was
established for a purpose, and when men lose sight of this and justify their
rebellion by pointing to the size of their church or ministry, it’s only a
matter of time before they are exposed for all the world to see, and yet
another mark is suffered by the household of faith.
The difference
between knowing about God, His attributes, His might, or His perfect knowledge,
and knowing God personally and intimately, is that one who knows God obeys Him
in all things, while one who knows about God attempts to justify himself based
on his own understanding of who God is and what He requires. Elihu knew more than
most of his time about the attributes of God, but as far as knowing Him, he
admitted to his own ignorance.
Just because
someone is loud and brash doesn’t mean they’re right. Just because someone
speaks about God, it doesn’t mean they know Him. It’s in the good fruit one
produces that you can determine a good tree from a bad one. Everything else is
noise. A good tree that produces good fruit will defer to the One in whom it is
planted, knowing that the good fruit isn’t of their own making or design, but
by His alone. A bad tree that produces bad fruit will never give God the glory
rightly His, but attempt to elevate themselves, seeking the praise and honor of
men rather than to be well-pleasing in the sight of God.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.