In the End, It’s All Good, Or Is it? —Lectionary Reflection for Pentecost 23B (Job 42)
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William Blake, "Job and His Family Restored to Prosperity" |
Job 42:1-6, 10-17 New Revised Standard VersionUpdated Edition
42 Then Job answered the Lord:
2 “I know that you can do all things
and that no purpose of yours can be thwarted.
3 ‘Who is this that hides counsel without knowledge?’
Therefore I have uttered what I did not understand,
things too wonderful for me that I did not know.
4 ‘Hear, and I will speak;
I will question you, and you declare to me.’
5 I had heard of you by the hearing of the ear,
but now my eye sees you;
6 therefore I despise myself
and repent in dust and ashes.”10 And the Lord restored the fortunes of Job when he had prayed for his friends, and the Lord gave Job twice as much as he had before. 11 Then there came to him all his brothers and sisters and all who had known him before, and they ate bread with him in his house; they showed him sympathy and comforted him for all the evil that the Lord had brought upon him; and each of them gave him a piece of money and a gold ring. 12 The Lord blessed the latter days of Job more than his beginning, and he had fourteen thousand sheep, six thousand camels, a thousand yoke of oxen, and a thousand donkeys. 13 He also had seven sons and three daughters. 14 He named the first Jemimah, the second Keziah, and the third Keren-happuch. 15 In all the land there were no women so beautiful as Job’s daughters, and their father gave them an inheritance along with their brothers. 16 After this Job lived one hundred and forty years and saw his children and his children’s children, four generations. 17 And Job died, old and full of days.
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Our
four-week journey through Job, where we hit some of the highlights (or is it
low lights?), comes to an end. As they say, “All is well that ends well.” For
Job, it seems like he lands on his feet. Yes, he’s somewhat humbler than at an
earlier point, but everything seems to work out for him. For many readers, the
end of Job is a bit of a letdown. We start with a wager that leads to the death
of Job’s children, the destruction of his lands, and an attack on his own body.
Then, we have the so-called friends who, at first seem to treat him
with some respect and empathy, but then later turn on him when he won’t
admit to being the cause of his misfortune.
In the previous chapters, a portion of which we looked at the week before, God responds to Job’s complaints. In doing so, it appears that God puts Job in his place. When Job finally gets to respond, all he can say is “I know that you can do all things.” Yes, God had made it clear that no one could do what God can do. That went for Job as well. So, Job throws up his hands and affirms God’s potency. Yes, “no purpose of yours can be thwarted.” It’s true, God made a good case. God had challenged Job to put up or shut up, and all Job could do was shut up. He had been defeated, or at the very least he admitted his ignorance when it came to the things of God.
Job,
now humbled by God, admits that he “uttered what I did not understand, things
too wonderful for me, which I did not know.” He had heard of God but now had
seen God with his eyes. As a result, Job tells God that he despises himself and
repents in dust and ashes. Yes, Job had been defeated. God won. That’s the way
it is supposed to be is it not?
Job’s
confession that there was much that he didn’t know or understand is appropriate.
There is much that I do not know or understand about God, the world, the
universe, and my self. I’ve reached the point in life where I must admit
that I’m numbered among the senior citizens. I now draw Medicare! I’ve lived
the better part of my life span. I will admit that I still have much to learn.
Perhaps that’s what Job is saying here. He had discovered that he might know
some things but not everything, especially the kinds of things God knows since
God’s experiences are much greater than those of a human being.
What
God impressed upon Job is what Isaiah revealed about God. Job is reminded that God
sits on a throne, high and lifted up, surrounded by the heavenly host singing
God’s praises (Is. 6:1-3). Who can resist such a God as this? Yet, the picture
painted of God at the beginning is of a somewhat petty monarch, who permits a
staff person to torment Job just to prove a point. Yes, Job is a righteous man,
but even he can only take so much suffering without pushing back. Thus, what we
see here is somewhat anti-climactic.
After
Job humbly repents of his temerity to question God’s greatness, God turns on
Job’s friends/tormenters. The lectionary skips over these verses, but they are
intriguing. The friends served as God’s defenders. They wanted to defend
orthodoxy, at least as they saw it. They didn’t appreciate Job questioning
their belief system. No one does. This is why heresy trials have been
undertaken regularly. While Job gives in to God’s self-defense, God has a word
to give to these defenders of orthodoxy. They either misrepresented God or took
on a role that wasn’t necessary. As we’ve seen, God is quite capable of putting
up a fitting defense. Even Job gives in.
It is
possible that the book of Job originally ended in verse 6, nevertheless, in verses 7-9, which the Revised Common Lectionary omits, God lays into Job’s
companions. The author speaks of the wrath of God being kindled against the
three friends. In that state, God tells Eliphaz that he and his two friends
have misrepresented God in their response to Job. Job is the one who spoke the
truth about God. So, God tells Eliphaz and his two friends to take seven bulls
and rams and offer up a burnt offering with Job presiding. One must assume that
the sacrifice didn’t involve the entirety of the animals, so perhaps Job got to
benefit from this. As for Job, his responsibility would be to pray for his
inquisitors. If Job prays for them God will receive his prayers. As a result,
Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar did as God instructed, and God received Job’s
prayer.
The Book
of Job ends much like a fairy tale. The final section (verses 10-17) tells us
that Job and his family lived happily ever after. Disney couldn’t have provided
a better conclusion to this challenging book. After a series of unfortunate
events (permitted by God) that wiped out Job’s family and fortune and even
caused him great suffering, everything seems to go back to some form of
normality. After Job prayed for his friends, God restored his fortune. God gave
Job twice what he had accumulated before disaster struck. That’s landing on
your feet! The author even describes a family reunion with Job’s brothers and
sisters, along with everyone who knew him, joining in a meal at Job’s house.
His family and his friends showed compassion and sympathy for all he had
suffered. Oh, and each person gave Job some money and a gold ring. He had
suffered greatly and went up against his friends and God, but now he’s being
blessed. After all, he was a righteous man.
Thus, Job was not responsible for the calamities that came upon him,
even if that was the message his friends tried to impress upon him.
One person who isn’t mentioned to
this point in the “happily ever after” portion of the story is Job’s wife. I
have to wonder where she is. Last we saw of her; she was telling Job to curse
God and suffer the consequences. While she is not mentioned, it appears she did
play a role in the aftermath of Job’s trials. You see, the narrator lets us
know that not only was Job blessed financially, but he got a new family as
well. Yes, he was blessed with seven sons and three daughters. The daughters
were the most beautiful women in the land. It’s interesting that the narrator
doesn’t name the sons but does name the daughters. Job had three daughters, Jemimah,
Keziah, and Keren-Happuch, of whom it is said that “in all the land there were
no women so beautiful as Job’s daughters.” In another break from tradition, not
only were the three daughters named, but they got to share in the inheritance
along with their brothers. While these
are unusual revelations, perhaps the message is that his children got to share
in Job’s blessings. That seems to fit with how Job was described in chapter
one. He took good care of his children (his first family). For example, he
offered sacrifices for them in case they fell short of righteousness. Even if
not stated, we can assume that his wife got to share in the blessings!
More good news, for Job at least,
is that after all his trials and tribulations, he got to live a long life of
one hundred and forty more years. As we read elsewhere in the Old Testament,
especially the genealogies, lengthy lives suggested divine blessings. However,
it has been pointed out that “all the
days of Methuselah were nine hundred sixty-nine years, and he died” (Gen.
5:26). He lived longer than anyone but apparently had little to show for
it. Nevertheless, things went well for Job after his trials and tribulations came
to an end. He was blessed with thousands of sheep, donkeys, and oxen. He even
got to see the birth of four generations of descendants. Then he died, “old and
full of days!”
Job gets celebrated for his “patience”
and “integrity.” While we can sympathize with him, the story itself is
troubling. At one level it does seem to respond to the retribution doctrine in
that blessings flow to the righteous, while the wicked are punished or cursed.
That’s the message the friends offered Job, but here in chapter 42, God tells
them that they got it wrong. Thus, there is something positive to say here
about the message of this book. However, the book offers a problematic picture
of God. Here is a God who makes wagers with one of his employees, allowing that
agent of God to torture this servant of God, just to see if he’ll stay
faithful. Thus, the picture we get here at points is a God who is something of
a bully. In God’s lengthy response to Job, God almost seems to be a narcissist.
Look at me, God tells Job. I can do great things, so be quiet in my presence. There
is more to the story of Job than this, but questions do get raised that require
careful analysis and response. One way of looking at the story is to focus not
on God’s true nature, but on how we understand what it means to be righteous or
faithful. It’s worth pointing out again that in the section omitted by the
Revised Common Lectionary, where God speaks to the friends, God lets them know
that Job was right about what caused Job’s misfortune. It wasn’t Job’s
wickedness or unfaithfulness. It’s just the way things worked out.
The story of Job, whether intended
or not, is a form of theodicy, a defense of God in the face of evil and trauma.
From time immemorial people have been asking why bad things happen to people. While
we may reap what we sow, too often the question is why bad things happen to
good people. Lutheran theologian Deanna Thompson devotes considerable attention
to the story of Job in her book Glimpsing Resurrection. In that
book, she addresses the reality of trauma that many face in light of Job’s
story. She writes that what she finds most intriguing about the story of Job,
especially in light of serious illness (something she has experienced dealing
with cancer) “is the way in which it can be interpreted as an antitheodicy.
Rather than answering the question of God’s justice related to Job’s suffering,
the story offers something else; a realistic story about Job’s undoneness that
refuses to validate tidy explanations of sufferings and, in the end, opens a
way to continue on in the aftermath of great suffering, even when answers are
not forthcoming” [Glimpsing Resurrection, pp. 89-90]. As someone who has
found attempts to create theodicies unfruitful, this is a helpful word. She
continues, writing:
And perhaps most important, the book of Job models a relationship with the Divine that allows for anger, grief, complaint, and protest, a relationship that may not yield clear answers regarding the reason for suffering but one that can move between tragedy and joy, and one that dares to include laughter even when the risks of living are intimately understood. [Glimpsing Resurrection, p. 99].
While Job is often offered up as a theodicy, perhaps that’s
not what it does for us. This story doesn’t give us a full answer as to why bad
things happen to good people. It raises questions but doesn’t tell us who God
is. Yes, the God who speaks in the book of Job talks a lot about what God can
do, but who is this God who has allowed Satan to torment Job? As we reach the
end of the story, it becomes clear that we might have to look elsewhere for an
answer. After all, if love is part of God’s identity, we don’t see that side portrayed
in Job. Power yes, love, not so much. In the end, the book leaves us with no easy
answers as to why people experience suffering and trauma.
The story ends on a high note with
good things flowing to Job. It’s almost as if everything that transpired before
that moment in the story is meaningless. With that, the story might have ended,
but the creators of this story have chosen to end on a high note. Of course,
that’s not the way life always turns out. I know too many good people who have
suffered great tragedies, including deaths. I think back to when I was nine
years old. One of my classmates, Jill, a girl I had a little boy’s crush on,
died on the way to school when a train hit the car she was riding in. As a result
of that crash, Jill and her father were killed. That happened nearly sixty
years ago, but that memory stays with me. So, maybe it’s best to end with verse
6, and simply kneel before God in sackcloth and ashes and ask why, even if no
answers are forthcoming.
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