Page 136 - Job
P. 136

he would be good to me? Is there anything gained by being good? On the
           level  of  earth  there  is. There  is  a  lot  to be gained. You  do  unto  your
           neighbor  as  you  would  have  them  to  do  unto  you.  Otherwise,  they  are
           going to be vindictive, and they are going to hold a grudge, and there is
           going to be animosity. He says there is blessing to be gained down here –
           men with men in society. But God is above all that. God does not bless
           you because you are good. He does not curse you because you are bad.
           Not in this life. And so, again, he turns his eyes to God.
           God does speak. It is incompatible with God’s nature to be unjust. God
           transcends all of this. On the level  of earth it does pay to be righteous
           because it is going to save you a lot of headaches and a lot of heartaches
           with your neighbors. And this is his conclusion. He gives a tremendous
           picture of God. In chapter 36, he presents Him as the God of providence,
           the  God  of  nature,  the  God  who  controls  everything  and  is  doing
           everything. And then he ends chapter 36 with this picture of a storm. I
           love this!
           “For He draws up the drops of water, they distill rain from the mist,
           (That is evaporation) Which the clouds pour down, they drip upon
           man  abundantly.  (That  is  rain)  Can  anyone  understand  the
           spreading of the clouds, the thundering of His pavilion? Behold, He
           spreads His lightning about Him, And He covers the depths of the
           sea.”
                          (Now you’re in a thunderstorm)
           “He covers His hands with the lightning, and commands it to strike
           the mark. Its noise declares His presence.”
           Here is what he does. He takes the storm of nature and he says, “God is in
           charge”. The evaporation goes up and it forms a cloud and a cloud begins
           to rain, and thunder begins to come, and lightning  strikes.  But where
           does it strike? Arbitrarily? Hit this tree?  Hit this barn?  Hit that  man?
           No!  He  commands  it,  and  it  strikes  its  mark.  He  says  lightning  never
           strikes anything unless it is directed by God. God always hits His target.
           Then he says, what is true in the physical storm, Job, is true in the storms
           of life. You have been struck by God, but God has hit His target. God has
           done it deliberately. Job, you ought to be praising God. This did not just
           happen to you. God directed it!

           Then  in  chapter  37  he  does  the  same  thing.  He  continues  to  exalt  the
           power  and  wisdom  of  God.  In  verse  1-5  he says  God sends  storms.  In
           verse 9 he says sometimes they are good, the south wind, and sometimes
           they are bad, the north wind. Verse 11-13 says all God’s storms have a


                                                                        136
   131   132   133   134   135   136   137   138   139   140   141