Lectionary Passage: John 42: 1-6, 10-17
To read this passage online, go to http://bible.oremus.org/?ql=218124859
We come to the end of the Book of
Job.
Job has suffered.
He has lost everything.
He has questioned God and expected God to
give him reasons for why all these horrible things have happened to him.
But the actions of God are not centered in
conventional responses to wickedness and righteousness.
The universe is, instead, filled to the brim
with mystery and surprise and wonder.
God’s answer to Job is:
“Think
again, Job.
Open your eyes wider to the
whole of the cosmos.
Redirect your
attentions away from what you have done to what I am doing.”
This is the turning point—Job now has
received a new vision of God as YHWH, creator and sustainer as well as
struggler with a complex and mysterious order.
It is that new vision of YHWH to which Job responds here.
Job inhabited a closed-minded world of
retribution and distributive justice, where people get what they deserve, where
there is a just God to see that all get what they earn based on who they are
and what they do.
But then Job is
invited out to a new world, a world not based upon simple, distributive
justice.
And Job sees now that he is not
the center of the world—that his relationship with God is found in his
interconnectedness to all of the cosmos—that he is but a small, albeit
essential, part of the wisdom of God.
In
other words, Job has found not an answer but a true relationship with God.
In her book,
Sometimes I Hurt: Reflections on
The Book of Job, Mildred Tengbom says it like this: "
No one could tell me where my soul might be;
I sought for God, but God eluded me. I
sought my brother out and found all three—my soul, my God, and all
humanity." (Page 200)
So some would like the drama to end
here.
After all, hasn’t Job gotten the
point?
But if Job has become new, we
must see him act out of his newness to discover if that newness is
genuine.
We need to see Job back in the
world again.
And so the Lord restores Job’s
life.
Some of us struggle with
this.
It gives it a sense of some sort
of fairy tale ending and we all know that that type of ending is seldom, if
ever, realistic.
It also gives us the
image of that all-too-common presumption that God somehow rewards us, accepts
us, or even (as horrifying as this notion is to me!) loves us based on what we
do or who we are. But think about it in the context of the larger vision to
which Job and we as readers have been invited.
God does not just put Job back together again.
It is better.
If we read it literally, it is better because Job is given more.
But, again, step back and look at the larger
picture.
Perhaps it is a metaphor of
what is to come.
It says that Job’s days
were blessed but it doesn’t say that others were not.
Perhaps it is a vision of what the world can
be when we allow ourselves to look at it through the lenses of God.
It is a world of plenty in which all of
Creation prospers.
It is a world where
we recognize family and our interconnectedness.
It is a world where all receive the inheritance of the world.
It is a world where we all die, old and full
of days of a life to come.
“And they all
lived happily ever after…”
God has allowed Job to be the
hero.
God lets us struggle and win and
when we lose our life, God gives it back to us.
The point is that Job actually encountered God and his life
changed.
Catherine Marshall once said
that
Those who have never rebelled
against God or at some point in their lives shaken their fists in the face of
heaven, have never encountered God at all.”
God remains Job’s God.
There can no longer be any talk of “reward”
here—we have dispensed with that way of thinking.
God has blessed Job because God loves and
wants to bless Job.
There is no other
reason.
It is not for us to ask
why.
Restoration is a feature of life;
restoration is what God can do and does.
At the end, I don’t get answers.
I get a deepened relationship with God.
God doesn’t come with easy answers; God comes offering presence.
THAT is the Wisdom of God.
The story of Job is the story of
life—our story.
It does not travel in a
straight, easy-to-follow line.
It is not
level or soft or easy.
It means much,
much more than that. If someone tries to present it in some other way, they
just don’t get it.
Sometimes life is
chaotic; sometimes it’s just hard; and sometimes, through no fault of our own,
it’s downright unbearable.
Answers are
not what we need. That’s why I like Job.
It DOESN’T give you answers; it teaches you how to journey through life.
So, here is what I get from the story of Job:
- Life happens (but we are never alone.)
- Some things just don’t
make sense. (Perhaps we are reading them
through a clouded lens, or even too MUCH correction—try
wearing your contacts AND your glasses)
- We need to make sure that our
images of God do not stand in the way of God’s
presence in our lives or in the lives of those around us.
- God desires to be in
relationship with us more than God desires for us to figure God out.
- Sometimes we need to just shut
up and listen.
- Sometimes we need to just give
up and let it be.
- Everything comes from
God. God breathed life and it was so.
- The future is an enigma. Our road is covered in mist. There will be times when the journey seems
perilous and filled with despair. But when
we fling ourselves into what seems an impossible abyss, it is then that we will
finally meet God.
- God is God. We are not.
- And then we will die, old and
full of days, and realize that life has only just begun.
Grace and Peace,
Shelli
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Posted By Rev. Shelli Williams to
Dancing to God at 10/24/2012 07:41:00 PM