Being who he was, Satan tried to get God to be the instrument of Job’s testing, but God saw through his ruse. “But now stretch out your hand and touch all that he has, and he will surely curse You to Your face!”
If you think he is unshakeable and unbreakable, that he will
remain faithful regardless of creature comforts or blessing, then why not stretch
out your hand against all that he has? That was Satan’s opening salvo, his
opening gambit, but God would not take the bait. Instead, God said to Satan, “Behold,
all that he has is in your power; only do not lay a hand on his person.”
There was a line Satan was not allowed to cross, that being
the person of Job. Everything else was up for grabs. Yes, even Satan is subject
to the authority of God. He is on a leash, even though it may not seem like it
at times, and there are limits to what he can do; otherwise, the havoc he would
wreak would be unfathomable.
There is a difference between the consequence of one’s actions
and testing the likes of which Job was about to endure. When one suffers
because of sin, it’s not testing; it’s the direct result of disobedience and
rebellion. Men love to spiritualize their failures and insist that being
exposed for being a philanderer or adulterer, to say nothing of worse things certain
high profile individuals have been criminally charged for committing, is God
testing them or allowing them to be tested. It’s not. It’s their sin finding
them out. It has nothing to do with testing but everything to do with the consequence
of action.
The testing of the righteous allows for their faithfulness to
shine all the brighter once the testing is done. It strengthens an already
established faith and dependency on God that grows the spiritual man beyond the
stage of what he’d been thus far. The sin of the compromised being exposed only
serves to give an already battered church another bruise. We cannot conflate
the two.
Job was a blameless and upright man not by his standard, or
some other arbitrary standard, but by God’s standard. God saw him as blameless
and upright. Job himself didn’t claim to be so; he didn’t brag about his
uprightness; he simply loved God, served God, and worshiped God.
If you are more concerned about your image than you are about
serving God, then you’ve lost the plot somewhere along the way. You have preachers
and teachers spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on image consultants because
they want to put their best foot forward and present their best face to the
world when it’s not about them, nor has it ever been. Rather than make crisis
management firms rich beyond their wildest dreams, why not walk circumspectly
with your Lord and serve Him as a faithful servant should?
Job wasn’t trying to make a name for himself; he wasn’t
trying to build a brand; he wasn’t trying to put on airs or pretend he was
something he wasn’t for the sake of a following or a guest TV spot on some talk
show. He was a man satisfied in God and desired only true fellowship with Him. That’s
what Satan didn’t understand when it came to Job. Since Job was so rare, he’d
never run across anyone like him and assumed offhand that if he was serving
God, then Job had an ulterior motive for doing so.
You may look at Satan’s assumption and think it jaded, but
all the evidence he’d had up until that point lent credibility to it. Thus far,
his success had been predicated on his ability to find that one thing he could
offer a given individual to make them take their eyes off their goal, purpose,
or calling. In his mind, there was always something if you looked hard enough.
There was always something that men would be swayed or tempted by, and he’d
just have to find it when it came to Job.
It’s not as though the enemy’s cockiness wasn’t justified to
a certain extent. He’d been at this long enough to understand human nature and
knew how rare it was for someone to be wholly surrendered to God and serve Him
out of purity of heart. He’d likely applied pressure the likes of which he was
planning to apply to Job before and was sure that Job would fold, throw up his
hands, and curse God when everything in his life turned to rubble.
We’ve all seen it play out often enough: When someone’s circumstances
change, so does their attitude toward God. Although they may not have verbalized
it, there was a part of their heart that felt entitled to creature comforts and
the things of this earth because they worshipped God, and when those went away,
they felt shortchanged and taken advantage of.
This is why purity of purpose matters when it comes to serving
God. We don’t serve God to get stuff from Him or to make this present life more
comfortable. We serve God because He is God because He sent Jesus to give His
life so that we might have life and be reconciled to Him. We love Him because
He first loved us with a perfect love, and nothing beyond that should factor into
whether or not we remain faithful.
That sort of commitment and mindset is as rare today as it
was during the days of Job. The unscrupulous among us realized how few people
they’d be able to draw with that message, and they took it upon themselves to
add to the Gospel and shift the focus from the things above to the things of this
earth. Prosperity has become the focus of many congregations rather than
humility, repentance, and obedience, and they’ve seen their numbers catapult
into the stratosphere overnight. What happens when all the promises of thousandfold
returns and a mountain of money don’t materialize, though? What happens when
what drew people to their sanctuaries, the selling point that made them become
members in good standing, turns out to be man-made fables without root or
foundation in the Word of God? Those peddling such things don’t care about the
fallout. They’re getting theirs, and they’re quick to brag about it. It’s the
callousness of such men that’s most disturbing, knowing that sooner or later,
those who’ve bought into the promise of wealth beyond measure will be disillusioned
and disenchanted to the point of bitterness.
Job had wealth, and Satan wrongly assumed that this was his Achilles heel. He concluded that if he could strip Job of his possessions, it would only be a matter of time before he’d turn on God. Satan never figured that rare as they are, Job was indeed a man who feared God and shunned evil because knowing God more fully every day was his ultimate pursuit.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
1 comment:
Thank you for this study. I look forward to each entry. It is convicting and nourishing to me at the same time. I.have a thought that the prosperity gospel which we were “under”.years ago is really a religious ponzie scheme. ; (
Than you again, Mike.
Loy
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