Scripture Thought (What I Learned):
Chapter 32: Great Men are Not Always Wise
At the end of Job’s persuasive arguments in
Job 28-30, his friends had nothing more to say. They still thought that Job was
completely wrong, but they felt he was so grounded in his own opinions that it
was useless to keep talking with him.
Elihu,
the son of Barachel the Buzite, of the family of Ram (who is only mentioned
briefly in the book of Job critizes Job and tells him; “But there is a spirit in man: and
the inspiration of the Almighty giveth them understanding. Great men are not
always wise: neither do the aged understand judgment.” (Job 32:8-9).
Although this was an unjust attack on Job, Elihu brought up a good point, great
men, even men of great age and experience do not always have the most wisdom. Wisdom
is hard to attain, but those who have it and those who are willing to share
that wisdom, should be listened to carefully!
Chapter 33: God Speak to Men in Dreams
Elihu continues to challenge Job’s
defense. Elihu claims to be a spokesperson for God, while telling Job to listen
to all of his words.
“…God
is greater than man.” (Job 33:12) Elihu is telling Job, that he needs
to be more humble, because God is truly greater than man. Even though Elihu was
missing the point that Job was actually a good, humble guy… we can still learn
from this. We are not on the same level as God, we need to remember that.
For
a man who claims to have so much wisdom, he doesn’t walk the walk, but surely
talks the talk.
“For
God speaketh once, yea twice, yet man percieveth it not. In a dream, in a
vision of the night…” (Job 33:14-15)
Again,
we can ignore the words to Job, as I am sure he also ignored them. But take
away from the scriptures that God is always trying to communicate with us, so
we need to listen. Elihu insists that God has indeed answered Job.
Elihu had just suggested that God
spoke to Job in a dream; now he suggests that perhaps God spoke to him through
his physical suffering. In the view of Elihu, if Job would only receive and
respond to God’s messenger, if he would only admit to
God’s uprightness, then he would be restored to God’s favor.
No comments:
Post a Comment