Tag Archives: Job 29-33

June 15, 2023 Bible Study — Perhaps The Reason You Do Not Hear God Answering Your Prayers Is Because You Are Not Listening

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Job 29-33.

I am always struck by Job’s friend Elihu.  He is not mentioned earlier in the Book, when the other three were first introduced, and he is not mentioned at the end when God tells the other three to ask Job to pray for them.  In today’s passage we are told that Elihu was angry with Job for justifying himself rather than God, and that he was angry with the other three friends because they condemned Job, but could not refute his arguments.  Now I want to consider what Elihu had to say.  He acknowledges that it was right that he wait and listen while the others, his elders, spoke, but now that they have had their say (and failed to prove Job wrong), he would speak.  In his speech Elihu makes two statements which show greater wisdom than anything said by Job’s other friends.  Elihu declares that he is no better than Job.  He is as much of a flawed, limited mortal as Job.  Then he challenges Job’s complaint that God does not respond when mortals cry out to Him.  Elihu contends that God does indeed speak to us, but we, all too often, fail to hear when He does so.  Elihu makes the claim that God’s apparent silence is our fault for not listening, not God’s fault for failing to speak.  This should remind us of the still, small voice with which God spoke to Elijah, but Elihu does go on to list some of the ways in which God speaks to some of us.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

June 15, 2021 Bible Study God Is Not Silent

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Job 29-33.

Elihu responds to Job in today’s passage, he is the only one of Job’s friends whom God does not condemn when He finally speaks.  Also, Elihu is not mentioned at the beginning of the book when Job’s other friends are introduced.  This, and some stylistic differences, have led some scholars to conclude that Elihu’s portion is a later addition to the Book of Job.  We should certainly be aware of the possibility that what Elihu said was added by a later scribe.  Nevertheless, there are a couple of things in what Elihu says to which we should pay attention.  Elihu starts out by telling Job that he, Elihu, was no better than Job, that Job should not fear him.  Elihu made clear that he did not think he was better than Job, and that none of what either of them said would change that. Elihu also challenges Job’s contention that God does not speak.  We, as human beings, often miss what God has to say, but that does not mean the He does not speak to us.  Elihu is right, God is not silent.  If we will buy open our ears, we will hear what He has to say.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

June 15, 2020 Bible Study Each And Every One Of Us Has Been Made In the Image of God

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Job 29-33.

We can take a lesson about what is important in life from Job’s list of things of which he is not guilty.  The first of those things, and one to which he returns after touching on another, is lust.  He emphasizes that he has not looked on a woman with lust and calls lust a shameful sin.  The presentation here suggests to me that when a society starts to find lust acceptable all of the other sins become more prevalent.  This does not mean that the other sins to which Job refers are any less bad, just that lust is the one which we are most likely to pass over and justify in others (and perhaps in ourselves).  However, lying and deception, mistreating those over whom we have power, abusing the powerless, and greed are all deep sins of which Job finds it worth proclaiming innocence.  Most of these sins are sins of commission, but Job also gives prominence to sins of omission.  We should all be challenged by Job’s reference to the sins of failing to help the poor or allowing someone to go hungry.  Do we help the poor in all of the ways that we can?  Have we allowed someone to go hungry when it was within our power to feed them?  If we are not sure that the answer to the first is “yes” and to the second is “no”, let us look for ways to change that.

Now we hear from Elihu for the first time.  It has always struck me that Elihu is the only one of the characters in this account whom God does not chastise for what they said when He speaks.  Elihu starts by stating that he waited until his elders were done speaking before speaking his piece.  He only spoke up because he thought none of the others had made the argument which he thought most telling.  Elihu makes clear that, while he thinks he is not inferior to Job or the others, he also does not think that he is better than them.  We need to seek to emulate Elihu when we attempt to correct others, or enter into a disagreement with them.  Consider yourself neither inferior not superior to those with whom you are disputing.  Each and everyone of us has been made in the image of God.

June 15, 2019 Bible Study — When God Seems Silent It Means We Aren’t Really Listening

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Job 29-33.

There are multiple lessons which can be taken from Job’s monologue in today’s passage, but I want to focus on his declaration of innocence.  In particular, he does not base his claim on innocence on what he has not done.  No, he declares what he has done.  We often make the mistake of thinking that sinning is just a matter of what you have done.  However, Job shows us that we sin when we do not do the right thing.  Being a righteous person is more than not doing the things which God commands us not to do.  Being a righteous person means doing the things which God commands us to do: things like feeding the hungry and helping the poor.

Now we come to Elihu’s monologue.  I struggle with what to make of it.  Elihu is not mentioned in the beginning of the Book as one of the friends who came to comfort Job, nor is he mentioned at the end when God reprimands the other three.  Of those who challenged Job, Elihu seems to make an argument which we should heed.  First, he makes a point of being humble and stating that he is no better than Job.  This is the first lesson we can learn from Elihu, if we find it necessary to point out error or sin in those who are suffering we must be emphatic in stating that we make no claim to being better than they.

Second, Elihu reprimands Job for accusing God of wrongdoing in not responding to people.  Elihu points out that the fault is not God’s, because God speaks to people in multiple ways.  The fault lies with those who refuse to listen to what God has to say because He does not say what they want to hear in the way in which they wish to hear it.  Further, Elihu points out that sometimes God sends suffering upon the righteous in order to correct them or draw them closer to Himself.  We need to remember that when God seems silent it just means that we are not listening to what He has to say, perhaps because we do not want to hear it.

June 15, 2018 Bible Study — Humility and Listening When God Speaks

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Job 29-33.

    Job discusses how good his life had been and relates how bad it now is. Then he lists off sins which he believes are deserving of his suffering, but declares that he is not guilty of any of them. I am not going to write about those sins, but it is worth our time to read what Job says here because we should strive to live up to the life he claims for himself. Job demands that God answer and tell him what he has done to deserve the suffering he is experiencing.

    When Job is finished a new person speaks, Elihu. Elihu was not mentioned at the beginning when we are told the names of Job’s other friends and he is not mentioned at the end when God condemns what the other three had to say to Job. Those two facts mean that we should look at Elihu’s comments differently from the other three friends. Elihu starts with humility. First he acknowledges that he is younger than the others and remained silent in order to give his elders time to speak. Now that they are silent he begins to speak and he starts by declaring that he is no better than Job. I cannot emphasize enough how important this is. Elihu makes it clear that he is not speaking to Job as his moral superior.

    From there Elihu goes on to challenge Job’s complaint that God does not speak to him. God speaks to people again and again, even though we often fail to recognize His voice. If we do not hear God’s voice it is not because He does not speak. Rather it is because we fail to listen. Let us listen to God’s words as He speaks them to us, whether in dreams at night, or random encounters with strangers. If we listen to God and confess our sins to Him, He will listen to us and accept our repentance.

June 15, 2017 Bible Study — Job’s Ideas About What Constitutes Sin

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Job 29-33.

    In his final protestation of innocence Job lists the most heinous sins he can think of, while stating that he is not guilty of them:

  • he did not lust after a woman not his wife
  • he did not lie or deceive
  • he did not lust after his neighbor’s wife
  • he was not unfair to his servants
  • he did not refuse to help the poor, the widow, or the orphan
  • he did not oppress the powerless
  • he was not greedy, he did not worship money
  • he did not worship the sun, the moon, or the starts
  • he did not rejoice when disaster struck his enemies

The thing that struck me about that list is that the only sexual sin which makes the list is lust, but Job felt the need to mention it twice. The only other sin mentioned with similar emphasis is failure to aid widows and orphans. Although the latter is only mentioned once, Job goes on longer and in more detail than on any of the other sins. It is also worth noting that the other sins are active sins. It is the failure to act which is the sin here (the failure to aid the poor, widows, or orphans).

    I am hesitant to take much in the way of lessons on proper behavior from Job’s friends. However, Elihu makes a point which I think is worth noting. God speaks to people again and again. When we say that God is silent, it means that we are not listening. God is constantly speaking to us and giving us direction. One of the most common reasons that we do not hear God is because we do not like what He is telling us. If we want to hear God’s voice we must overcome our reluctance to follow His instructions and our fear of where He will send us.

June 15, 2016 Bible Study — If We Do Not Hear God’s Voice, It Is Because We Are Not Listening

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading. I had been using One Year Bible Online, but it was time for a change.

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Today, I am reading and commenting on Job 29-33.

    Once more Job declares his innocence. It is worth reading through chapter 31 and seeing the list of sins which he believed would have justified his suffering. More than one of those sins was a sin of omission rather than a sin of commission. That is, Job considered it just as much of a sin to fail to do the right thing as it was to do the wrong thing. When Job finished speaking his three friends had nothing more to say. They were unable to list a specific sin which Job had committed. However, a fourth friend, who had not been mentioned until now, speaks up. He speaks humbly, acknowledging that he is not wiser than Job or the others, nor does he claim greater stature. In fact, he emphasizes that he is no better than Job. Elihu confronts Job’s accusation that God is silent. He tells Job that God speaks again and again. It is just that we do not recognize His voice. The main point here is that if we do not hear God’s voice it is because we are not listening. Often the reason we do not hear God’s voice when He speaks to us is because we do not like what He is saying.