Job held himself to a high standard, knowing it was nothing less than what God expected. Becoming a son or daughter of God in truth, being born again and sanctified, comes with a wide array of privileges to be sure, top among them the honor of calling Him Father, and He, in turn, knowing you as one of His own, but it also comes with a code of conduct and responsibilities for which we are accountable and to which we must adhere. Chief among these is to deny ourselves, pick up our crosses, and follow after Him who hung on the cross that we might be reconciled to God.
We are duty-bound
to walk circumspectly, to search our hearts regularly, ensuring that Jesus sits
upon their throne, and resist the devil that he might flee. God can’t resist
the devil on our behalf, nor, for that matter, can your pastor, elder, bishop,
cousin, or next-door neighbor. He can put guardrails and limitations on what
the enemy can do to a specific individual, but the active resistance of his
devices is on us.
We’ve all heard
some variation of the worst advice one human can give to another, which is to
follow your heart. Job understood that the heart is influenced by what the eyes
see, and what the ears hear, and declares that if ever his heart had walked
after his eyes, may others eat what he had sown. Unless a heart is regenerated,
made new, and imbued with Christ, it is flesh and as such will lead you to what
the flesh desires.
Every great country
song and human tragedy is the direct result of following one’s heart, based on
what the eyes saw and what the ears heard. True biblical counsel isn’t to
follow your heart, but to follow Jesus. Even if your heart resists, even if it
tries to tell you that you’ve got plenty of time to right the ship and find
your way to His loving embrace, it isn’t doing it for the benefit of your
spiritual man but for the benefit of your flesh. Follow Jesus even if your
heart protests and your flesh bristles, because the flesh does not want to die
yet knows it must for Christ to live in you.
Because he feared
the Lord, Job knew himself to be a man of clean hands, one who shunned evil,
and whose step had not turned from the way. There was no fakery in his worship,
devotion, or service to God, and all that he did he did from a pure heart
rather than the thought of what others would say or how they would view him.
A relationship,
by definition, cannot be performative. I love my wife. I don’t pretend to love
her, or simply speak the words once in a while; I genuinely, truly love her,
and my actions day in and day out prove that reality. Many men have said they
love God, but their actions proved otherwise. Many have said they serve Him,
only to be proven that they served no one beyond themselves. Job knew God, and
God knew Job, and from the onset God validated Job’s uprightness, judging him
to be blameless.
When men only
pretend to love God, it shows in their conduct, their choices, and how they
spend the time they’ve been given. Some men have even convinced themselves that
they love God. Yet, if they took a breath to employ pattern recognition and
assess whether they spend more time watching sports than reading the Word, or
if they’d rather go fishing than spend time in prayer, they would soon come to
realize that their words have no follow-through. Their declarations of love
were empty and baseless.
We must know that
we love God with the same certainty that we know God loves us. There is no
doubt or shadow of turning in our resolute certainty that God loves us. There
is no ambiguity there; we don’t have to guess at whether God loves us or not,
or wonder if His love is genuine. He proved it two thousand years ago to such
an extent that it is undeniable.
John 3:16-17,
“For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever
believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. For God did not
send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through
Him might be saved.”
God’s love for
Job was not unrequited. Job prioritized God above all else because he, in turn,
loved God. There was a reciprocity of affection, but even so, Job did not
attempt to exploit it or think himself above others because of it. He
understood that God was God, and he was a man, Creator and creation, and one
must submit to the authority, will, and purpose of the other in all things.
Because of this
foundational relationship with God, Job knew what wickedness and iniquity were,
and guarded himself against them with the tenacity of a man keeping a pack of
wolves at bay. He understood the implicit and explicit dangers of sin, knew
that if he allowed it to worm its way into his heart, it would dampen his
relationship with the Almighty, and made it a priority to keep his hands clean
and his heart pure before Him.
Job did not sin,
hoping his relationship with God would keep him from judgment, banking on the
idea that God loved him too much to punish him were he to stray or turn from
the way. He knew himself to be a man of integrity who rightly acknowledged that
had he committed wickedness, had he done iniquity, it would be deserving of
judgment regardless of how intimate he had been with God.
Closeness with
God is not a license to sin without consequence or repercussion, as some
insist. The closer we draw to God, the more we are refined and purified, as the
fire of His holiness burns away the dross, the excess, the worthless, and the
temporal.
God doesn’t need
me enough to overlook wickedness or iniquity in my life. He does not make
exemptions or concessions when it comes to one’s obedience to His word and
will. If nothing wicked or defiled will enter the kingdom of heaven, what makes
anyone think that God will overlook wickedness in the lives of those who claim
to be not only His servants, but also His ambassadors and representatives?
Yes, there is
room for grace. We’ve all fallen short, but one cannot willfully continue in a
pattern of sin, abusing grace, and thinking themselves immune from God’s righteous
judgment. Job wasn’t asking for special treatment, nor did he attempt to
leverage his relationship with God, hoping He would overlook wickedness in his
life. He was asking to be weighed on honest scales, that God might know his
integrity.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.