Page 88 - Job
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they will understand”. And then an agony erupted from his soul and he
           poured out his spirit before them. And he thought they would understand
           as he vented his heart. They had misinterpreted his agony, his crying, his
           wailing. And so Job answers now in chapter 6 and 7.
           Let me give you the facts of Job’s reply, and then let me show you how he
           answered Eliphaz at least in two particulars. Job’s reply is also in three
           parts. Let me give you a simple outline. In chapter 6:1-13, he  says  you
           did not understand why I cried; let me explain. He gives an explanation of
           his crying. Chapter 6:14-30, he tells how disappointed he is over his three
           friends. He said I expected more than this from you. Then in chapter 7,
           you are not going to believe this, but he does it again. He lets out a wail
           and a lament and an agony that makes chapter 3 look like a song of praise.
           In Chapter 3 he is lamenting his birth, his conception and everything else,
           but  it  gets  worse  in  chapter  7.  And,  those  men  true  to  their  calling,
           misinterpret this cry also. And when Bildad hears this, then he lets out his
           explanation. And this is hot. And we will get to that. Chapter 6: 1 - 13,
           Job explains his cry. I will encourage you to read it on your own time.
           Here’s some key verses from Chapter 6,
           Verse 5: “Does the wild donkey bray over his grass, Or does the ox
           low over his fodder?”
           Verse 12: “Is my strength the strength of stones, Or is my flesh
           bronze?
           Is it that my help is not within me, And that deliverance is driven
           from me?”
           Here  is  what  Job  is  saying.  Will  you  at  least  give  me  the  same
           consideration you give animals? If an animal cries out, if an animal brays,
           what do you conclude? He is hungry? He is hurt? If an animal screams,
           you know that something is wrong. I scream, and you do not say, “Job
           must be hurting”. You say, “Job must have sinned”. He said,  “Give me
           the same  consideration  you  give  animals.  Do  you  know  why  I  cried?  I
           cried because I hurt. Because, it is painful. I am suffering. Do you know
           why I cried loud? I cried loud because I am in great pain!”

           Then in verse 12 he says, “Is my strength the strength of stones?  Is
           my flesh bronze?” When God made me, He did not make me a stone.
           When God made me, He did not make me out of brass. He made me flesh
           and blood, and I have nerves and nerve endings, and I hurt.
           We need to pay attention to this and how we might apply it in our lives.
           Someone cries out, and the first thing you say is he is not trusting in the
           Lord. He is rebelling against God. Maybe he is just suffering. When God

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