Alastair's Adversaria - Biblical Reading and Reflections: April 24th (Job 22 & Hebrews 12:1-17)
Episode Date: April 24, 2021Eliphaz's indictment of Job. The discipline of sons. My reflections are searchable by Bible chapter here: https://audio.alastairadversaria.com/explore/. If you are interested in supporting this proj...ect, 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 22. Then Elaphaz the Timonite answered and said,
Can a man be profitable to God? Surely he who is wise is profitable to himself? Is it any pleasure to
the Almighty if you are in the right? Or is it gain to him if you make your ways blameless?
Is it for your fear of him that he reproves you and enters into judgment with you? 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.
Therefore snares are all around you, and sudden terror overwhelms you, or darkness so that you cannot
see, and a flood of water covers you. Is not God high in the heavens? See the highest stars,
how lofty they are, but you say,
What does God know?
Can he judge through the deep darkness?
Thick clouds veil him, so that he does not see,
and he walks on the vault of heaven.
Will you keep to the old way that wicked men have trod?
They were snatched away before their time,
their foundation was washed away.
They said to God, depart from us,
and what can the Almighty do to us?
Yet he filled their houses with good things,
but the council of the wicked is far from me.
The righteous see it, and are glad, the innocent one marks at them, saying,
Surely our adversaries are cut off, and what they left the fire has consumed.
Agree with God and be at peace, therefore good will come to you,
receive instruction from his mouth, and lay up his words in your heart.
If you return to the Almighty, you will be built up,
if you remove injustice far from your tents,
if you lay gold in the dust, and gold of Ophia among the stones of the torrent bed,
then the Almighty will be your gold and your precious silver, for then you will delight yourself in the Almighty
and lift up your face to God. You will make your prayer to him, and he will hear you, and you will pay your
vows. Beside on a matter, and it will be established for you, and light will shine on your ways.
For when they are humbled, you say, it is because of pride, but he saves the lowly. He delivers even the one
who is not innocent, who will be delivered through the cleanness of your hands.
Job chapter 22 is the start of the third and final cycle of dialogues.
Once again it is Elaphaz who opens it.
Elifaz had opened his first speech to Job in chapter four quite gently.
His fundamental message had been that mortal man could not be pure in the sight of a holy God.
In the face of God's transcendent holiness, all of man's faults would be seen,
and man therefore had no standing to claim to be in the right before God.
Elifaz's third speech divides into three sections.
verses 2 to 11, verses 12 to 20, and verses 21 to 30.
This time, in contrast to his first speech,
Elefaz takes a very aggressive approach.
He will accuse Job of most serious sin.
Versus 2 to 11 present a list of charges,
matters in which Elefaz suggest that Job has sinned.
Versus 12 to 20 present Job as having taken the way of the wicked,
having aligned himself with the wicked,
and the rest of the chapter presents a call to repent,
which could be read in different ways.
Perhaps Elefaz thinks that Job might be receptive,
or perhaps the call to repentance is designed to highlight Job's impenitence by contrast.
The opening verse of Elifaz's speech raises some questions for translation.
John Hartley translates it as follows,
Can a man benefit God that a wise man should be in harmony with him?
Hartley understands Elifaz to be arguing by this
that the wise man has no purchase upon or demand upon God,
and in consequence no basis upon which to claim reconciliation with him.
Norman Harbel translates it as,
Can a hero endanger El, or a sage endanger the ancient one?
Understood this way, Elfaz would be saying that Job can't force God's hand.
God is the transcendent ruler of the world.
His justice is beyond question, and there is no way that Job can arraign him.
David Klein presents a third possible translation.
Can a human be profitable to God?
Can even a sage benefit him?
This would be making a similar point, but from a different perspective.
God can't be put in anyone's debt. God doesn't need anyone.
He neither gains nor loses from the conduct of someone such as Job.
The ESV is an example of yet another reading of the second half of the verse.
Surely he who is wise is profitable to himself.
Again, the fundamental point of the verse is similar,
but the second half of the verse would be designed to show the true purpose of wisdom.
The person is not wise because God needs them to be wise,
or because that wisdom brings any benefit to God himself?
No, the person is wise for their own sake and benefit.
Verses three and four develop the point of verse two.
God is impartial.
He is also transcendent.
He does not have a vested interest in this situation.
He is neither threatened by it, nor is he benefited by it.
The implicit logic of Elaphaz's argument seems to be that since God does not have such an interest,
he is not benefited by Job's actions, and he is not threatened by them.
What has befallen Job clearly has not risen out of some private purpose on God's part,
as if God to get something out of one of his creatures had to shake him down.
Nor, of course, is God unjust.
And so the only logical conclusion is that Job is suffering as a result of his sins.
There is an irony in Elifaz's argument here, of course,
as the opening chapters of Job indicate that God does in fact have a vested interest in Job's righteousness.
Elefaz, who had started his first case against Job hesitantly, now breaks forth into the most scathing
condemnation of Job of all. Job, he insists, is guilty of immense sin. In particular, Elifaz accuses Job of
a series of acts of injustice. Job, we must remember, was the greatest of the men of the East. He was a
king or chief among his people, responsible for administering justice. To Elifaz's mind, there can only
be one explanation for what has happened to Job. He must have been guilty of the most
egregious oppression. These charges, of course, are nothing but falsehood. Job in Chapter 29 describes
the way that he had been the one who had delivered people who were oppressed, and in Chapter 31 he gives
a list of different sins that he might have committed, sins for which he might have been deserving of
such judgment, and denies that he is guilty of any one of them. Elfaz had described the doom of the
wicked in Chapter 15, verses 20 to 21. The wicked man writhes in pain all his days, through all the years that
are laid up for the ruthless. Dreadful sounds are in his ears. In prosperity, the destroyer will come upon
him. Job, he argues, is such a wicked person, and as a result, this is why he experiences all
these snares and terrors around him. This is why he's been engulfed and overwhelmed with his troubles.
He accuses Job in the second part of his speech of a sort of practical atheism. God is the most
high God. He's above all things. He's in the heavens, and he's ignorant of affairs on earth. They are not
occurring within his sight, bailed in the darkness he cannot see and he cannot judge.
He is distant and detached. Presuming Job to hold this theology, Elifaz accuses him of going with
the path of the wicked, a well-worn evil path that has been there since the beginning.
Such men thought themselves immune to God's justice, even as God was mercifully allowing them to
prosper for a time. Yet such men in their misplaced confidence are snatched away before their
time, as in a flash flood they are swept away.
When this happens, the righteous rejoice over them, seeing the Lord's justice in action.
The reference to the fire in verse 20 might again be intended to allude back to the fire of God that fell upon Job's servants and his sheep back in Chapter 1.
Elefaz concludes his speech by presenting Job with the way of repentance and what will follow.
If he agrees with God, submitting himself under the Lord's punishment, he might hope for some sort of restoration.
Judgment received in such a manner would be instructive and for Job's bettering.
To return to the Lord, he needs to eschew the injustice that he has been engaged in.
He has clearly been gathering gold by wickedness and oppression,
and so he needs to return the gold to its source,
back to the dust and the bed of the river.
Releasing his grip on this gold,
and turning to the Lord as his true wealth,
will be the way that he can be restored.
Gold has obviously taken over Job's heart,
and he must release his grip on it,
if it is going to release its grip on him, and then he can finally be restored.
Versus 26 to 29 are a portrait of the man who has been restored in fellowship with God.
He delights in the Lord. He has fellowship with the Lord in prayer.
His path will be established, and he will agree with the Lord in his judgments.
In his righteousness in this situation, Job will even be able to deliver others who are not righteous.
Through his intercession for them, they may be delivered too.
Of course, the irony here is that at the end of the book, Job will have to intercede for Elaphaz and the other friends.
A question to consider, while the reader of Job knows that Elaphaz is wrong, it might be worth reflecting upon how he is wrong.
In what ways does Elifaz here express a false view of God? What is he missing?
Hebrews chapter 12 verses 1 to 17.
Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every
weight and sin which clings so closely and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us,
looking to Jesus, the founder and perfector of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him,
endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God.
Consider him who endured from sinners such hostility against himself, so that you may not grow
weary or faint-hearted. In your struggle against sin, you have not yet resisted to the point of
shedding your blood. And have you forgotten the exhortation that addresses you as sons?
My son, do not regard lightly the discipline of the Lord, nor be weary when reproved by him.
For the Lord disciplines the one he loves, and chastises every son whom he receives.
It is for discipline that you have to endure. God is treating you as sons, for what son is there
whom his father does not discipline? If you are left without discipline, in which all have participated,
then you are illegitimate children and not sons.
Besides this, we have had earthly fathers who disciplined us,
and we've respected them.
Shall we not much more be subject to the father of spirits and live?
For they disciplined us for a short time as it seemed best to them,
but he disciplines us for our good, that we may share his holiness.
For the moment all discipline seems painful rather than pleasant,
but later it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who have been trained by it.
Therefore, lift your drooping hands and strengthen your weak needs, and make straight paths for your feet,
so that what is lame may not be put out of joint, but rather be healed.
Strive for peace with everyone, and for the holiness without which no one will see the Lord.
See to it that no one fails to obtain the grace of God,
that no root of bitterness springs up and causes trouble, and by it many become defiled,
that no one is sexually immoral or unholy like Esau, who sold his birthright for a single meal.
For you know that afterward, when he desired to inherit the blessing, he was rejected,
for he found no chance to repent, though he sought it with tears.
Following the great list of the forerunners in the faith in Chapter 11,
Chapter 12 points us to the one in whom the entire story of faith reaches its climax,
Jesus Christ, the pioneer and the perfector of faith.
He does not just run the way of faith himself, he also trailblazes the way to its heavenly destination.
He is both our example and our deliverer.
He both leads the way and clears the way.
He opens our way to approach God here and now,
but is also the high priest who establishes our final and complete access to God's presence.
The way of faithfulness is most perfectly exemplified in him,
but he is also the one to whom our faith looks as its object.
Without the salvation of Christ, faith would be in vain.
The promise and the deliverance to which it looks would not be realized.
In this respect, Christ is both like and unlike those who live by faith.
He faithfully obeys and perseveres through suffering,
but while his people must depend upon his work by faith to have a way to God,
he is the one who creates this way for them as the faithful son.
He does not need this way himself.
Rather, he takes flesh and suffers, so that he might furnish a way for others.
The author of Hebrews paints a picture for his hearers of a race before a vast audience,
but not just of mere spectators.
This is like a relay race of faith,
with each generation passing on the baton to the generation succeeding them.
We saw this relay race in the preceding chapter,
where generation after generation the people of faith passed on
the torch of faith to those after them.
Now these persons who have completed their leg of the uncompleted race
are watching us run ours.
They exemplify what faithfulness looks like,
and we look forward to Jesus.
who has blazed the trail ahead of everyone to the finish line.
He has brought the entire race of faith to its glorious completion.
In him we see an example of faithfulness in extreme suffering,
and an example of one who overcame through suffering.
He endured the shame of the cross,
a death that was ignominious and humiliating,
but also a death in which he bore the shame of mankind,
the sin by which man lacks integrity and is cut off from God's face.
He entered into our condition and bore our condition,
and he did so for the joy that was set before him. The shame of the cross is set over
against the joy that is awaited beyond it. And here we have a similar contrast to that which
is drawn in 2 Corinthians chapter 4 verses 17 to 18. For this light momentary affliction is
preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison as we look not to the things
that are seen but to the things that are unseen for the things that are transient but the things that
that are unseen are eternal.
Christ is the one who can look beyond the shame of his death.
He can look beyond and see the power and the promises of God,
and as a result can persevere through suffering.
In this respect, he is the example to all who would follow.
The author of Hebrews wants his heroes to consider the example of Christ,
lest they become weary and faint-hearted.
Compared to the sufferings of Christ,
their sufferings have been relatively minor.
They've not yet had to shed their blood.
not experience the same degree of shame or of hostility from others. In chapter 4 verse 15 he had written
for we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses but one who in every
respect has been tempted as we are yet without sin. The author of Hebrews does not think of temptation
as all the little sins that might tempt us on the way. Rather he sees it as the more fundamental
temptation of turning back or turning aside from the path that God has set before us.
In this respect, Christ is our great example to follow.
He has faced the full onslaught of the devil's temptation to turn back or to turn aside,
and persevered through suffering and difficulty and tribulation,
the like of which we will never experience,
in order to obtain the glory and the joy that was set before him by the Father.
He quotes from Proverbs chapter 3, verse 11 to 12,
a passage about fatherly instruction.
Christ learned obedience through what he suffered,
Hebrews chapter 5 verses 7 to 8
In the days of his flesh
Jesus offered up prayers and supplications
with loud cries and tears
to him who was able to save him from death
and he was heard because of his reverence
Although he was a son
He learned obedience through what he suffered
Christ's heavenly exaltation
came through the path of earthly obedience
As human beings we grow in strength
and character through suffering
Our metal is tested and proved in such times
Christ is the son who directs our attention to the Father,
and he's the model and pattern of our obedience.
He learned obedience through his suffering,
and this is a model of sonship,
and the model that we must follow ourselves.
Sonship is learned through suffering.
We could think of the example of Job, for instance.
It is precisely on account of God's special regard for Job, his servant,
that he is subject to the sort of suffering that he experiences.
Suffering is a mark of legitimacy.
The suffering in view is not merely or even primarily punitive.
It can be punitive on occasions, but much of the time, and primarily it is for the purpose of growth through testing.
In Romans chapter 8 verses 13 to 19, we have a similar point.
For if you live according to the flesh you will die, but if by the spirit you put to death the deeds of the body you will live.
For all who are led by the spirit of God are sons of God, for you did not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear.
but you have received the spirit of adoption as sons, by whom we cry, Abba Father.
The spirit himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God,
and if children, then heirs, heirs of God and fellow-aurs with Christ,
provided we suffer with Him in order that we may also be glorified with Him.
For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory
that is to be revealed to us, for the creation waits with eager longing for the revealing
of the sons of God. God forms us in the character of sonship through suffering. Rather than
drawing back from suffering then, suffering should be welcomed as a sign and proof of sonship, a sign of
God's fatherly concern for our well-being and growth in character. We submitted to earthly fathers.
How much more to our heavenly father? If we trusted our earthly fathers to develop character in us
by following their instructions, how much more the instructions of God? Discipline has a purpose,
its value is seen in its fruit in the character that it produces in those who have been trained by it.
Suffering is educative throughout scripture so that people might mature through testing.
This consideration should spur us to redoubled efforts. What undermines people is not suffering,
so much as meaningless suffering. When we truly grasp the end and purpose of our suffering,
it ceases to undermine us and actually can spur us to growth. We can think of the hand from which
we are receiving suffering.
of Job shows that it is not ultimately Satan who brings suffering to Job, but God. God has a purpose
in the suffering that Job experiences. He wants Job to grow through the experience of suffering
so that he might enter into a fuller experience of what it means to be a son of God. If we know and
trust God as our Heavenly Father, we will receive suffering from his hand, knowing that whatever
purpose he has in it, it is a good one. We have a birthright as sons and daughters of God, and we
must not squander it. Peace and holiness are essential. Indeed, without holiness, no one will see
the Lord. We are charged to undertake a collective pursuit here. We are striving for peace and holiness
together. It's one of the reasons why meeting together is so imperative. We must look out for
each other, ensuring that no one falls short. And the author of Hebrews alludes to the covenant
warning of Deuteronomy chapter 29 verses 14 to 20 here. It is not with you alone that I am making
this sworn covenant, but with whoever is standing here with us today before the Lord our God,
and with whoever is not here with us today. You know how we lived in the land of Egypt,
and how we came through the midst of the nations through which you passed, and you have seen
their detestable things, their idols of wooden stone, of silver and gold, which were among them.
Beware lest there be among you a man or woman or clan or tribe whose heart is turning away
today from the Lord our God to go and serve the gods of those nations. Beware lest there be among you a root
bearing poisonous and bitter fruit, one who, when he hears the words of this sworn covenant,
blesses himself and his heart saying, I shall be safe, though I walk in the stubbornness of my heart.
This will lead to the sweeping away of moist and dry alike. The Lord will not be willing to forgive him,
but rather the anger of the Lord and his jealousy will smoke against that man, and the curses
written in this book will settle upon him, and the Lord will blot out his name from under heaven.
Esau is put forward as a particular example of such a person who fell short and squand at his
birthright and blessing. Esau is a negative example, in contrast to the positive examples of the
preceding chapter. The danger of such persons is that they will infect others, that their pattern of
unbelief and unfaithfulness will be taken up by others. Esau is described as sexually immoral and
unholy. There is debate in the commentators about whether that term should be translated as sexually
immoral. However, it seems appropriate to the story of Esau. Esau was a man who squandered the great
blessings that he had received. He gave up the invaluable gift of the birthright of the covenant,
of being the one who would carry on the legacy of Isaac for just a small meal. He devalued these
things out of his sexual desire, marrying Canaanite women when he should have been faithful to the
covenant. His desires were entirely for this world and what is seen. He could not live in terms of the
unseen, and his final end was tragic, and as a result, cautionary. He could not undo what he had done
in selling the birthright and losing his blessing. He had set his course by his behavior. He may have
mourned his loss, but he never seemed to truly repent of his sin. There is a real danger of
apostasy, and the author of Hebrews is concerned to drive this home to his reading.
and hearers. Do not throw away what you have received. Learn from the positive example of the
people of faith and learn also from the cautionary example of people like Esau. A question to consider,
much of the book of Hebrews is devoted to the consideration of examples of faith and unbelief.
How can we make more and better use of the examples of others in the path of faith, both positive
and negative?
