Thursday, October 12, 2006

Thoughts From a Small Town

“WHEN ALL HELL BREAKS LOOSE”
Job 1:1, 13-22, 2:1-10
Faith United
October 8, 2006


Everybody knows Job
Even people who don’t read the Bible
and who aren’t religious people… know Job
Job is the name of suffering
of really horrible, hit-the-bottom, lost everything kind of suffering
We say about people, “she has the patience of Job”
saying that someone has an never ending supply of patience
I’ve never preached on Job
where do you begin?
You can’t preach on a little bit of Job
without preaching on the whole story
And this whole image of God and Satan sitting at a poker table
wagering bets on Job’s endurance and integrity
playing with his life just to prove a point
I don’t know about you, but I’m uncomfortable with that!
Job becomes a character in some tragic novel,
his life at the mercy of the sadistic whims of the writer’s pen
and so I’ve not preached on Job
but now seems to be a good time to preach on Job
with the school shootings in Amish country
the lockdowns of schools,
when I got home this week I heard my friends
son lost his 15 month battle with cancer
Bad news around the community
lost jobs, people in the hospital,
my sister-in-law on the up and down rollercoaster
of dying and rallying, back and forth
it goes on and on and on…
It seems like a good time to preach on Job
Job was the cream of the crop
he was the poster child for integrity
he’d do anything for you,
he was one of those rare individuals
who was just a good guy
Everybody could agree on that,
there was no denying that Job was an exceptional human being
But then it all falls apart….
enemies came and plundered Job’s livestock,
killed his servants,
a fire destroyed sheep and servants
other enemies came and killed
and plundered,
and then a tornado came and destroyed the house
where all of Job’s children were having a party
That would be enough to destroy anyone
but then Job was afflicted with sores all over his body
causing him great physical pain and suffering
and still Job persisted in his faith
MRS. Job came to him and said,
“what is it with you? When will you give up?
Curse God and die!”
Mrs. Job has gotten a terrible reputation in this story
as someone who was trying to tempt Job away from God
It may not surprise you that I want to stick up for the woman…
Consider Mrs. Job…
She has just lost 500 oxen, 70,000 sheep, 3000 camels
all her servants, 7 sons and 3 daughters…
it’s a wonder the woman is still standing upright
and on top of that, her husband is suddenly afflicted
with terrible physical suffering
and ugly boils on his skin
that she can do nothing about
Give her a break
The woman has a right to lose it, I’d say
She can’t stand to see her husband suffering
on top of everything else she’s lost
She says, “Curse God and die.”
It sounds harsh, but in the Hebrew, the word that is translated “curse”
literally means “bless”
so she’s really saying, “bless God and die!”
So maybe she’s tired of the endless suffering
maybe she sees her husband undergoing a slow death
maybe she just wants to end the misery
turn off the machines, you might say
Bless God and die, give it up, Job, just go to sleep and don’t wake up
Have you ever known Mrs. Job?
The person who has suffered an immeasurable amount
and just loses it?
I’ve met her many times
You just can’t blame her for going over the edge
for being weary of the pain
of thinking death would be a welcome blessing
for the one she loves who has suffered so much, too much already
Job is sitting among the ashes
It’s a painful image
a man sitting among the ashes…
Have you ever been there?
After a loss? After some indescribable pain?
All you can do is sit in the ashes and feel the weight of it
for the time being
Yet even in the ashes, Job says, “Shall we receive the good
at the hand of God, and not receive the bad?”
Good question
When life hits us hard in the stomach
our first inclination is to blame God
or say, what have I done to deserve this?
Many people immediately blame God
seek a reason for the pain
there HAS to be a reason
It’s human nature
The story of Job is considered an Old Testament parable
it’s part of the Wisdom literature of the Bible
which includes Proverbs and Ecclesiastes
Literature that examines the nature of the world and life
and the meaning of it all
The story of Job looks at human suffering
and at faith in the midst of suffering
“There once was a man in the land of Uz
whose name was Job…
one who feared God and turned away from evil….”
At first Job seems too good to be true
but after he rebukes Mrs. Job about giving up
Job himself does give up
He curses the day he was born
he starts to really feel sorry for himself
he starts to rail against the universe
and the unfairness of his demise
In the midst of this, comes three friends
and if you read the book of Job
you’ll see that these are friends that
no one wants to have when the chips are down
But they are also very familiar people
we know them in our own time
They start off fine, they simply come and sit with Job
for 7 days and 7 nights,
and they don’t say a word,
because there is nothing to say
they just sit with him
And that’s the last good thing they really did for Job
Then they opened their mouths…
In a way, having to listen to his friend’s speeches
is probably more painful to him
than all the sores on his body
But we understand his friends, too, I think
We need to make sense of everything that happens to us
I heard someone say this week
about the Amish girls who died,
‘well, it must have been their time,
and if it was their time, then what could be done?’
I don’t mind saying that that kind of talk makes me physically sick
The belief that God would will the murder of innocent little girls
who live in a peaceful community
where they believe nothing bad can happen
That is not God’s will
But we have to make sense of the senseless, don’t we?
It was no different in Job’s day
The image of God was one of a God who rewards the faithful
if you’re good, you prosper
you get rich; you have servants, livestock,
many children, you have everything
The belief in Job’s day
was that wealth was a sign of God’s favor
and poverty and suffering were a sign of God’s punishment
Is it so different today?
There are books and DVDs sold,
tickets sold in coliseums to hear so-called Christian speakers
speak about what is known as the Prosperity Gospel
The belief that God wants you to be rich
and that if you are right with God, you will prosper greatly
and avoid unnecessary suffering
Well, as my seminary professor used to say,
that’s just BOVINE EXCREMENT
What about Jesus?
Jesus, the center of our Gospel, our faith?
Jesus was born into a poor family,
lived as a homeless man his short life
and then died an excruciating death
for crimes he did not commit?
Doesn’t sound like Jesus was the epitome of success!
And Jesus preached that things weren’t as important as people
that things weren’t as important as the Kingdom of God
that as Christians we are to serve the poor,
reach out to the least of these wherever they are
and serve the Kingdom on this earth
often at the expense of our reputations,
our success by the world’s standards,
and sometimes even at the risk of our lives…
No where in Jesus’ teachings or in his life and ministry
do I see him leading us to look out for ourselves,
pad our own bank accounts
and pursue wealth for the sake of wealth
But that was the belief in Job’s day, too
If you’re good, you’ll do well
If you suffer, you’ve made God mad
So Job’s so-called friends
spend many, many chapters trying to get him to repent of sins
he hasn’t committed
they are torturing him with words,
trying to get him to acknowledge what a faithless
scumbag he must be
to have suffered this much …
And Job gets mad
Even Job
Job is faithful and upright and resists evil
but when he’s sitting in the ashes
he starts to get bitter, frustrated and hostile
He rails against his suffering
He wants an audience with God
to ask, what are you doing to me??
What have I done to deserve this?
Have you ever been there?
I have
Either for myself or for someone I love
Maybe I’ve told you about Larry’s father’s funeral
Larry’s father died suddenly after a three-month battle
with cancer
At the viewing, one of Larry’s crazy Aunts came through the line
and said to Larry’s Mom, who was devastated at her loss,
“Oh Bea, you should be rejoicing! Jim is dancing in heaven
and it is glorious!
Why, I’ve been to heaven three times, and I tell you it’s beautiful!
You should be rejoicing for Jim, not weeping!”
Not helpful,
and Larry commented later that he wondered why
if she was so faithful, why heaven turned her away three times
that that’s not something to brag about….
The thing we see in Job’s story
is that he suffered for no good reason
his suffering was NOT just at all
He was a good man, a man of incredible integrity
He didn’t deserve such evil and pain
There was no good reason for Job’s suffering
Suffering happens
We live in a world so bent out of shape by evil
No matter how good we are, we will be touched by that evil
It’s everywhere, all around us
The evil that others commit,
the things that have gone wrong with our world
all have an effect on us
the drunk driver, the poisons in the air and water,
the insanity of some people who have gone over the edge
and have access to weapons
the greed for power, the hunger for violence
the disregard for the stranger across the world
All of it adds up
all of it touches us
The story of Job doesn’t ever answer the question
why do bad things happen to good people?
There is no definitive answer
And what would we do if there was?
In her novel, “The Kitchen God’s Wife”,
Amy Tan’s fictional character says,
“my father had died of stomach cancer when I was 14
and for years my mother would search in her mind
for the causes, as if she could still undo the disaster
by finding the reason why it occurred
in the first place.”
Sometimes, we just have to say,
it is what it is.
And it hurts, and we can’t imagine that hell could feel any worse
than what we’ve experienced
Grief is not a simple thing
it’s an ongoing thing, a journey of sorts
You never get rid of grief completely,
when you’ve suffered terrible loss
At first, Job is confident, then he gets really bitter and angry
he curses the day he was born
and begs God to just kill him
rather than let him suffer
But in the end, despite everything, Job finds peace
He never gets an answer as to why he ever had to suffer at all
Suffering happens
especially in this world
In his book, “Farewell to Arms,” Ernest Hemingway writes:
“The world breaks everyone, and then some become strong
in the broken places.”
It’s a tough world to live in
It always has been
So what’s the good news?
Where’s the hope?
In Chapter 38, after all this long-suffering
and really annoying speeches by Job’s so-called friends,
God speaks to Job out of the whirlwind
God speaks to Job of creation
of the complexities of the world
the very mysteries of the universe
that are beyond human comprehension
God asks Job impossible questions
and therefore draws him deeper and deeper
into mystery and awe
and through that, despite everything,
or maybe because of everything,
Job is drawn into a deeper communion with this awesome God
the very author of the universes
Job is not a speck of worthless dust to God
but God cares so much for Job
that he reveals himself personally to Job
and shares with him the great vastness of all creation
God was angry at Job’s pious friends
for saying things about God that are not true
for making God out to be some sadistic force in the heavens
ready to lash out and destroy Job for petty sins
But in the end, Job prayed for God to show mercy on their friends
perhaps he said to God,
“forgive them, for they know not what they do.”
We don’t have all the answers,
and apparently God’s not going to give them to us in this life
as we struggle through this imperfect world
seeking glimpses of God’s eternity
We live in a very painful world
Unfortunately, we know what happens every minute of every day
24 hours a day
and that’s just too much for any human being to take
The truth is, the world has always been painful
life has always been unjust
and I believe God weeps with us
over the lives of those little girls in Lancaster, PA
as God weeps over the lives lost every day in
Iraq, Afghanistan, the Sudan, the United States
those who suffer incredible loss and injustice
What can we possibly do? It’s too much,
there’s always too much
that sometimes we just shut down
for the sake of our hearts
Yet we know our hope is in Jesus
who cares so much that he came here himself
to suffer our pain, to be a victim of our injustice
and to die our death
In the worst of times, when we sit in the ashes ourselves
we can know that Jesus is there with us
and will be with us always
And we can be there for each other
to be God with skin on for others who are sitting in the ashes
and offering the hope that life comes after death
and that joy comes in the morning…
Together we can help each other see that day ahead
when there will be no more tears, no more death
no more senseless suffering
but only the glory of God all around….

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