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.