Presented by Julie Busteed

Have you ever read the book of Book of Job? Or is it one of those books you tend to skim through in your Bible reading plan? I understand if you do. It can be difficult to read chapter after chapter filled with anguish and suffering. But Job’s life gives us a powerful example worth paying attention to.

We’re told Job was blameless and upright, a man who feared God and turned away from evil. He had a wife, many children, enormous wealth, servants, and great influence. Scripture even says he was the greatest man among all the people of the East.

Yet, God allowed Job to be tested by Satan. In a short period of time, Job lost nearly everything—his wealth, his children, and even his health and reputation.

For much of the book, we read Job’s cries of sorrow and lament, along with the mostly unhelpful responses from his friends. They assumed his suffering must be punishment for some hidden sin. What they did not know was the conversation that had taken place between God and Satan at the beginning of the story. God had allowed this testing for a purpose.

The apostle Peter later writes that trials test the genuineness of our faith so that it may result in praise, glory, and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed. There is purpose, even when we cannot see it.

Eventually, God spoke to Job. And when Job demanded answers, God reminded him he alone is God. And Job finally learned when nothing else was left, he still had God. And that was enough. The deeper relationship with God is great joy. In the end, Job’s wealth was restored and he was blessed again. But in our own lives, we do not always receive the kind of ending Job did. And still, we are called to trust God.

Knowing God is better than knowing all the answers. Do you believe that? Do you live that way? We all want explanations for why certain things happen or why they do not happen. Yet, many times those answers never come. What do we do with unanswered questions, with hopes and expectations that seem to be slipping away? We turn toward knowing God more deeply.

Job ultimately says, though he slay me, yet will I hope in him (Job 13:15). What a statement of faith.

Could you say that? Could I? Could we honestly say, “Even if God does not give me this particular hope or blessing, I will still trust him”? Or “Even when life is painful, disappointing, and heartbreaking, I will continue to hope in God”?

If you are in a difficult season right now, I encourage you to spend time in Psalms. They give voice to deep grief, fear, frustration, and sorrow, while continually turning our eyes back to the living God and the hope we have in him.