Alastair's Adversaria - Biblical Reading and Reflections: April 22nd (Job 20 & Hebrews 10:19-39)
Episode Date: April 22, 2021Zophar's final speech to Job. Do not throw away your confidence! My reflections are searchable by Bible chapter here: https://audio.alastairadversaria.com/explore/. If you are interested in supporti...ng this project, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2.
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Job chapter 20. Then Zofar the Nehemetthai answered and said,
Therefore my thoughts answer me, because of my haste within me, I hear censure that insults me,
and out of my understanding a spirit answers me.
Do you not know this from of old, since man was placed on earth, that the exulting of the wicked
is short, and the joy of the godless but for a moment.
Though his height mount up to the heavens, and his head reach to the clouds,
he will perish forever, like his own dung. Those who have seen him will see him, will
say, where is he? He will fly away like a dream and not be found. He will be chased away like a
vision of the night. The eye that saw him will see him no more, nor will his place any more behold him.
His children will seek the favour of the poor, and his hands will give back his wealth. His bones
are full of his youthful vigour, but it will lie down with him in the dust. Though evil is sweet
in his mouth, though he hides it under his tongue, though he is loath to let it go, and
holds it in his mouth, yet his food is turned in his stomach. It is the venom of cobras within him.
He swallows down riches and vomits them up again. God casts them out of his belly. He will suck the
poison of cobras. The tongue of a viper will kill him. He will not look upon the rivers,
the streams flowing with honey and curds. He will give back the fruit of his toil and will
not swallow it down. From the profit of his trading, he will get no enjoyment, for he has
crushed and abandoned the poor. He has seized a house that he did not build. Because he knew no
contentment in his belly, he will not let anything in which he delights escape him. There was
nothing left after he had eaten. Therefore his prosperity will not endure. In the fullness of his
sufficiency he will be in distress. The hand of everyone in misery will come against him. To fill his
belly to the full, God will send his burning anger against him, and reign it upon him into his
body. He will flee from an iron weapon. A bronze arrow will strike him through. It is drawn forth and
comes out of his body. The glittering point comes out of his gallbladder. Terror's come upon him.
Utter darkness is laid up for his treasures. A fire not fanned will devour him. What is left in his
tent will be consumed. The heavens will reveal his iniquity and the earth will rise up against him.
The possessions of his house will be carried away, dragged off in the day of God's wrath.
This is the wicked man's portion from God, the heritage decreed for him by God.
Job chapter 20 is Zofar the Nehemetite's second speech, the final speech of the second cycle of discourses.
This is also Zofar's final speech in the book.
Zofar is not a named speaker in the third and final cycle.
Like the other friends, Zofar gives an extended discourse on the character and fate of the wicked,
he does not speak directly concerning Job's situation, it is clear that he is directing his comments
to Job, and he wants Job, as someone who, in his mind, fits the category of the wicked, to draw the
logical conclusions. Zofar is clearly troubled by Job's position. Zofar treats Job, not as a friend
in need of comfort and support, but as someone teaching a rival doctrine. To counter the false
teaching of Job, Zofar doesn't so much engage with him or seek to persuade him, as he more forcefully
expresses the retributionist dogma back at him. This, Zofar and Siss, is teaching that has been around
from the very beginning, from the first man from Adam himself. Job should know this. This teaching is
fundamental to understanding the moral structure of the universe. Anyone challenging this is rejecting
something absolutely fundamental. The wicked for a time may seem to prosper, but they will finally
get their comeuppance. Their downfall is fated, and it's only a matter of time until it will happen.
It may seem for a period that they are getting away with their sins, that they are prospering,
they will rise up even to the heavens, but from this great height they will be brought down
and they will perish forever, in the most dishonourable way, being compared to dung.
They will leave no trace behind them, they'll be wiped clean from the face of the earth.
From the disgust and dishonour a bodily waste, Zofar turns to the image of a dream.
A dream is forgotten in the morning, it's insubstantial.
The dream vanishes, and soon after its memory with it.
The image of downfall here is clearly intended to speak to Job's situation.
Job was once the richest and greatest man of the East,
and so far as suggesting that these great heights of prosperity
were only reached through oppression and wickedness,
and now Job is being reduced to his proper estate.
Once the great honored man, Job is now being treated as what he really is,
the excrement of the society.
The children of the wicked man will be reduced to begging from the poor,
all the wealth that the wicked man took, presumably by oppression.
has now been stripped from him. While his body is still young, he suffers an untimely death.
He is brought down to the grave in the prime of his life. From verse 12, Zofar develops the image of
the wicked man as one who savours as one who devours, as one who consumes. And finally as one
from whose distended belly, God will disgorge all that he has devoured through his oppression.
The evil that they are delighting and consuming is ultimately poison. It actually serves as a nematic.
that these unrighteous men have devoured, will end up being vomited back out.
Norman Harville remarks upon some of the poetic features of the poetry here.
At several points in his speech, Zofar uses the same term twice,
but with a different shade of meaning or connotations.
He writes,
This technique of repeating key terms with subtle variations in meaning
is employed by the poet to develop an intricate web of thematic interrelationships
in the design of the poem.
The wicked man that Zofar portrays here is a gourmandant,
who savours the taste of evil.
It is delightful to him,
but the very thing that he delights in
will finally be his downfall.
The evil he savours is like a serpent's poison,
perhaps the poison of that serpent of old himself, the devil.
This poison kills him,
preventing him from enjoying all the things that he would enjoy.
And the cause for his demise is his oppression of the poor.
Elifaz will make a similar claim in chapter 22 verses 5 to 9.
Is not your evil abundant?
There is no end to your iniquities,
for you have exacted pledges of your brothers for nothing and stripped the naked of their clothing.
You have given no water to the weary to drink, and you have withheld bread from the hungry.
The man with power possessed the land, and the favoured man lived in it.
You have sent widows away empty, and the arms of the fatherless were crushed.
This, of course, is an unmerited charge against Job.
Indeed, it is exceptionally unjust.
In Chapter 29, verse 11 to 17, Job describes his former conduct as one,
who was the deliverer of the poor. When the ear heard it called me blessed, and when the eyes saw
it approved, because I delivered the poor who cried for help, and the fatherless who had none to
help him. The blessing of him who was about to perish came upon me, and I caused the widow's heart to sing
for joy. I put on righteousness, and it clothed me. My justice was like a robe and a turban. I was
eyes to the blind and feet to the lame. I was the father to the needy, and I searched out the cause
of him whom I did not know, I broke the fangs of the unrighteous and made him drop his prey from his
teeth. In Zofar's understanding, God is the one who brings about the downfall of this wicked man.
In verse 15, God is the one who casts the riches out of the belly of the man who has devoured
them in his unrighteousness. In verse 23, God sends a reign to the person who's the devourer
and fills his stomach to the full, but with his fury and anger in judgment. In chapter 6,
verse four, Job had said, for the arrows of the Almighty are in me, my spirit drinks their poison,
the terrors of God are arrayed against me. In verses 24 and 25 of this chapter, the wicked man is
pierced by the arrows of God. All that he has laid up for himself is doomed to oblivion. He will be
devoured by the fire of God. This is an especially cruel thing for Zovar to say, knowing that Job had
lost his sheep and the servants with them to such a fire. In chapter 16, verses 18 and 19, Job had
appeal both to the heavens and the earth to bear witness on his behalf. O earth, cover not my blood,
and let my cry find no resting place. Even now, behold, my witnesses in heaven, and he who testifies
for me is on high. In verse 27, Zofar claims that both the heavens and the earth will speak in Job's
case, but as witnesses for the prosecution. In Deuteronomy, the heavens and the earth were witnesses
of the covenant, who would testify against the people if they had been unfaithful. So far believes that
something similar will happen to Job as one of the wicked. All of this occurs in the day of God's wrath.
Zofar likely sees a very neat correspondence with this dogmatic proclamation about what befalls the
wicked and what had actually happened to Job. In one day all of these things had come upon him.
The great wind, the fire of God and various peoples of the earth had all simultaneously risen
against him. This in Zofar's retrobutionist theology is the natural and appropriate portion of the wicked.
A question to consider, what do you think the Friends of Job hoped to accomplish through their speeches at this point?
Hebrews chapter 10, verses 19 to 39.
Therefore, brothers, since we have confidence to enter the holy places by the blood of Jesus,
by the new and living way that he opened for us through the curtain,
that is, through his flesh, and since we have a great priest over the house of God,
let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith,
with our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience, and our bodies washed with pure water.
Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who promised is faithful.
And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works,
not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another,
and all the more as you see the day drawing near.
For if we go on sinning deliberately after receiving the knowledge of the truth,
there no longer remains a sacrifice for sins, but a fearful expectation of judgment and a fury of fire that will consume the adversaries.
Anyone who has set aside the law of Moses dies without mercy on the evidence of two or three witnesses.
How much worse punishment do you think will be deserved by the one who has trampled underfoot the Son of God
and has profane the blood of the covenant by which he was sanctified and has outraged the spirit of grace?
for we know him who said,
Vengeance is mine, I will repay,
and again the Lord will judge his people.
It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.
But recall the former days when,
after you were enlightened,
you endured a hard struggle with sufferings,
sometimes being publicly exposed to reproach and affliction,
and sometimes being partners with those so treated.
For you had compassion on those in prison,
and you joyfully accepted the plundering of your property,
since you knew that you yourselves had a better possession and an abiding one.
Therefore do not throw away your confidence, which has a great reward.
For you have need of endurance, so that when you have done the will of God,
you may receive what is promised.
For, yet a little while, and the coming one will come and will not delay.
But my righteous one shall live by faith, and if he shrinks back, my soul has no pleasure in him.
But we are not of those who shrink back and are destroyed,
but of those who have faith and preserve their souls.
In the last few chapters, the author of Hebrews has been concerned with the high priesthood
and the greater sacrifice of Christ, presenting the heroes of the book with a sermon that now
reaches its applicatory punch in the second half of chapter 10.
A new way into God's presence has been opened up to us by the once-for-all sacrifice of Christ.
The effectiveness by which this root has been opened up means that we can now enter with an appropriate
confidence. This way did not formally exist. It's now a reality for those who believe. The holy places
of which the author is speaking are not just the copy and the shadow that existed in the most holy
place in the tabernacle, but the heavenly realities to which they testified. Our access is by the
blood of Jesus, by his self-offering, and by a new and living way opened for us through the curtain.
The curtain of the old sanctuary was a veil, dividing the first section of the sanctuary from the
second, which could only be entered once a year by the high priest on the Day of Atonement,
and then only with blood. As the author has already written, this anticipates the movement
from the old age to the new age that we have entered in Christ. The former situation in the
tabernacle testified to the fact that the way had not yet truly been opened. Many have seen
an association between the curtain and Jesus' flesh here. I think it's more likely that
verse 20 should be read in closer parallel with verse 19. So entering the holy places corresponds
with the way through the curtain and the instrumentality of the blood of Christ in verse 19
corresponds with Christ's flesh in verse 20, as in his body and flesh Christ offered himself
for our access to God's presence. The way that we have into God's presence is a new and
living one. It was inaugurated and consecrated by Christ's sacrifice. It is also always new in some
sense. It is never going to age, become defunct or deteriorate. Hebrews has already spoken of the importance
of the eternal life of our Malkisadecian high priest. And the same point is significant here.
Our access into God's presence is not just through some physical building, but through the
eternally enduring person and work of Jesus Christ. Such a living way, a living way established
by the eternally living Jesus and the eternal spirit, is best suited to bring us to the living God.
Jesus is a great high priest over the house of God. He is not merely a servant within the house,
as Moses was, but the reigning son, the one who is placed over the entire house as its lord.
The access and authority enjoyed by such a person greatly exceeds anything that a mere steward
of the house could enjoy. Knowing these things about the way that we have access into God's presence,
the appropriate response is to draw near. We must do this with a true heart and in full assurance of faith.
The true heart contrasts, among other things, with the hardened hearts of the Israelites,
who failed to enter into God's rest.
The full assurance of faith is the sure confidence in the certainty of the promise of God
that will cause us to grasp hold of what he has set before us.
The heart sprinkle clean from the evil conscience
probably refers to the consciousness of sin that afflicts those under the old covenant,
where sins still had not been decisively addressed,
also to the uncleanness of their hearts that had not yet been purified.
Behind this we might hear the new covenant promise of places such as Ezekiel chapter 36
verse 25 to 27.
I will sprinkle clean water on you and you shall be clean from all your uncleannesses
and from all your idols I will cleanse you and I will give you a new heart
and a new spirit I will put within you and I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh
and give you a heart of flesh,
and I will put my spirit within you
and cause you to walk in my statutes,
and be careful to obey my rules.
The sprinkling of clean water
recalls various old covenant rituals,
but it's now fulfilled in the gift of the Holy Spirit.
By the gift of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost,
the underlying heart problem of the people of God as a whole
is addressed as the Spirit communicates Christ's life,
the life of the one faithful one,
the one who offered himself as a true and perfect sacrifice of human obedience, that life is communicated to us.
The body is the means of access, and our bodies are washed with pure water.
There is likely some reference to baptism here.
The priest had his body washed in order to enter the service of the sanctuary, as described in Exodus
Chapter 40 versus 12 to 15.
Then you shall bring Aaron and his sons to the entrance of the tent of meeting,
and shall wash them with water and put on Aaron the holy garments
and you shall anoint him and consecrate him that he may serve me as priest
you shall bring his sons also and put coats on them and anoint them
as you anointed their father that they may serve me as priests
and their anointing shall admit them to a perpetual priesthood throughout their generations
we have our bodies washed with pure water as a seal of our access to God's presence
The body is the foundation of the self.
Before we ever developed a sense of self, interiority, subjectivity and agency, or a clear will,
we are and were bodies.
Our washed bodies assure us that we have true access to God's presence,
that we are welcomed as persons into God's house.
Our faithful confidence to enter God's presence draws confidence from the faithfulness of the God who called us.
God has not only promised, but he backed up his promise with an oath,
so that there might be no doubt.
The author of Hebrews follows his exhortation
to hold fast and unwavering the confession of their hope
with a second exhortation.
The heroes of the book should also stir each other up
to love and good works.
They must take an active concern in the spiritual well-being
and growth of their brothers and sisters,
desiring that they will be encouraged in love and good works,
which are the appropriate fruit of a true faith.
A particular concern here is that they are committed
to their meeting together. The danger they faced was that of abandoning their duties to each other
and abandoning the ministry that other Christians performed towards them. They would fail to stir
other people up to love and good works, and they would neglect the other people who would stir them
up to love and good works. The value of meeting together is not just some message from the front,
as it were, it's the constant mutual encouragement that occurs in our fellowships. The neglect of such
assemblies seems to have been a real issue among the people to whom the author of Hebrews writes.
However, he wants them to feel the urgency of faithfulness at that time. The day was drawing near.
I suspect by this he is referring not to the final day of judgment, but to a more imminent
day of judgment that is nearer in time, the day of judgment that would occur in AD 70,
as judgment would come upon the temple and upon the Jews who had rejected Christ in that generation.
His tone at this point shifts. It goes from an encouraging,
to a stern warning. There are those who purposefully turn away from God, who reject all the good
gifts that have been given to them, and end up bringing a greater judgment upon themselves.
He has already presented similar warnings earlier in the epistle. The contrast between the salvation
received by the Israelites under Moses, and that received through Christ, is an important spur to this.
It allows him to make an argument from the lesser to the greater. If rejection of the salvation
given through Moses was so significant, how much more so, that which is received through Christ?
Intentional, willful, persistent sin after receiving the truth faces serious consequences.
We know the reality of the salvation given in Christ, and if we turn our backs upon it,
then there remains no hope for us. There is no salvation left in the Judaism to which such
people could return. Judgment is going to fall upon Jerusalem and its temple. All its efficacy looked
forward to the efficacy of a sacrifice that would be offered in Christ. There is no hope to go back
now. All that awaits is literally the fury of fire that will destroy that whole system in a few years
time. Reject the sacrifice of Christ, and there's no other sacrifice towards which you can turn.
There's no other way to get access to God. All that awaits is eternal loss. If there was a death
sentence for those who formerly apostatized and rejected Moses' law, how much more for those who
reject Christ. They face that eternal loss. There is no hope for them. There's a threefold
description that he gives of what rejecting Christ means. They have trampled underfoot the son of God,
profane the blood of the covenant by which he was sanctified, and outraged the spirit of grace.
Such a person who willfully rejects Christ, even knowing what that salvation means, is someone
who tramples Christ underfoot. They profane the blood of the covenant by which that new and
living way into God's presence was made open for us, treating that blood of Christ, his sacrifice,
as a mean or a common thing, something of no value, even though it is the most holy and precious
thing of all. There is a contrast here between sanctification, that which renders us holy,
and profanation, that which despises or holds something up to contempt. Such a devaluation or denigration
of the sacrifice of Christ is a deeply serious matter. Such an apostion. Such an apostion.
The past state is also insulting or outraging the spirit of grace, disdaining the one who communicates the grace of God and the life of Christ to us.
This is what the rejection of Christ and his sacrifice will lead to, and the consequences for such a person are of the utmost severity.
The author of Hebrews does not want to give any ground for presumption.
While he seeks to spur Christians to a proper confidence in God's promise and the surety of his word,
he does not allow them to take confidence just in a once saved always saved position for instance.
True salvation requires perseverance in the faith, holding on to God's grace and not letting go.
Those who once receive God's blessings and abandon them and reject them and despise them
face the devastating prospect of eternal loss.
While some might be tempted to look back to their first start in the faith as a source of presumption
that once they had received the grace of Christ
there was never any risk of their losing it,
the author of Hebrews wants them to look back in a different way,
to look at the start that they made in the faith,
to seek to keep up that same spirit
that enabled them to face the challenges of persecution and opposition,
to recognise how much they valued the hope
and the promise that they had been given at that point,
and not to let go.
They had looked forward to a greater reward,
which enabled them to hold their earthly position,
with an open hand, to be prepared to sacrifice or lose much on account of the much greater gain and reward that they awaited.
They once had that confidence, and they should not throw it away. It is invaluable. Don't give up what you began.
Recognise those earlier sacrifices and commitments that you made. Follow them through. Abandon those sacrifices at this point, and all that you once suffered will have been in vain.
There is a value of looking back here, not to take presumption, but to read them.
double your commitment. The salvation of God will surely come, even though it might appear to tarry.
Here he quotes Habakkuk chapter 2 verses 2 to 4. And the Lord answered me, write the vision,
make it plain on tablets, so he may run who reads it. For still the vision awaits its appointed
time. It hastens to the end. It will not lie. If it seems slow, wait for it. It will surely come.
It will not delay. Behold, his soul is puffed up. It is not upright within him.
but the righteous shall live by his faith.
That passage speaks of God's judgment upon the Chaldeans that would occur,
even if it appeared to take time.
Paul also quotes this in Romans chapter 1.
The author of Hebrews hear quotes from the Septuagint,
the Greek translation of the Old Testament which he is using,
and he tweaks it in order to strengthen the contrast
between living by faith and drawing back.
The wilderness generation were those who drew back,
but the people of Christ should be those of faith.
righteousness, proper standing in good relationship with God
is confident faith in the certainty of God's promise.
The author gets his hearers to look back, to look at the start that they made,
to look forward to the hope that they await
and to redouble their energies and their commitment,
striving to enter into the promise that God has set before them.
The confidence with which they began is of inestimable value.
To abandon it at this point would be a tragedy indeed.
He is like the coach encouraging the runner on the last leg of the race.
Don't give up now. Think of all the sacrifices that you have made.
Think of all the things that you are looking forward to as a reward for this victory.
Do not let go. Do not give up.
Continue and persevere.
Grasp hold of what you are waiting.
It is all so close.
There's only a little further to go.
At the beginning of Chapter 12, he will turn to this language of a race,
a race that must be run with endurance,
and talks about the witnesses that help us in pursuing this,
the great gallery of faith to which he will introduce us in the following chapter.
A question to consider,
can you identify some of the sources of confidence and commitment
that the author of Hebrews directs our attention to in this chapter?
