Page 86 - Job
P. 86

whose foundation is in the dust, who are crushed before the moth!
           Between  morning  and  evening  they  are  broken  in  pieces;
           Unobserved,  they  perish  forever.  Is  not  their  tent  cord  plucked  up
           within them? They die, yet without wisdom.”

           I believe this testimony shows great delicacy and consideration for Job. I
           did  not  look  at  it  like  that before. But  instead of  coming  right  out and
           saying,  Job,  you  are  a  dirty  sinner,  you  have  sinned  against  God,  he
           narrates the truth of how man’s sinfulness was brought home to his own
           heart.  He  said  let  me  tell  you  an  experience  I  had  and  how  I  was
           convinced of how wicked man is – mankind in general. And then he tells
           of this vision and contrasts God’s holiness with all of God’s creatures. He
           said even the holy angels in the sky are dirty. How can you say you are
           not dirty? God is so Holy compared to Him even perfection is unclean. Of
           course, he suggests to Job that the cause of his suffering is sin, but he does
           it in an inoffensive way. He says, Job, I believed like you did one time,
           but then I had this vision and God showed me my heart, and it was dirty.
           And even the angels are dirty. How much  more man? You see, he had
           truth.  And  then  in  chapter  5:1-7,  he  warns  Job  against  his  murmuring.
           Only the wicked, he says, resent the afflictions of God. Verse 2 and 3,

          “For anger slays the foolish man, and jealousy kills the simple. I have
          seen the foolish taking root, and I cursed his abode immediately.”

          Then he describes what happens to the wicked.
          “His sons are far from safety, they are even oppressed in the gate, and
          there is no deliverer. His harvest the hungry devour and take it to a
          place of thorns.”
          Of course, his description is strikingly like the experience Job just had.
          And of course he is insinuating that this is what has happened to you Job.
          And then he concludes logically from his premise. Verse 6

          “For affliction does not come from the dust, nor does trouble sprout
          from the ground.”

           What he means by that is trouble is not accidental or spontaneous. There
           is a reason for it. There has to be a cause and effect. Trouble did not just
           happen, Job. Something must have happened in your life. Then he  says,
           “Man is born for trouble, as sparks fly upward.”

           What he means by that is this. Because of sin, trouble is as natural to man
           as it is for sparks to come out of the fire. Job, you are denying that? It is

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