Thursday, August 14, 2025

Have You Considered my People? (Job 1-3)

 


Everything in life—both what we call good and what we call bad—can be a blessing when placed in God’s hands. The Lord desires to bless His people, and His blessings are always aimed toward our ultimate good. A life that pleases God often experiences such blessings, but our service to Him is never meant to be a mere transaction for material gain. When we serve Him with pure hearts, we may indeed receive material provision, but it is the spiritual reward that endures. Rabbi Eliezer Parkoff, in his book Fine Lines of Faith, observed,

“For you will never find the existence of material beings without the previously assumed concept of deterioration, constantly throwing off one form and taking on another.”
(p. 22, Feldheim Publishers, 1994)

The angels marvel at those who choose to love the Lord, for such love stands firm against every trial. The Adversary—once an angel of light—now seeks only to accuse, to sift, and to undermine. C. H. Spurgeon, in his 1865 sermon Satan Considering the Saints, described the wonder with which Satan beholds the faithful:

“When Satan looks at the Christian, and finds him faithful to God and to His truth, he considers him as we should consider a phenomenon—perhaps despising him for his folly, but yet marveling at him, and wondering how he can act thus. ‘I,’ he seems to say, ‘a prince, a peer of God’s parliament, would not submit my will to Jehovah.’”

Satan’s tactics are predictable: strip away possessions, health, and comfort under the pretense of testing love’s sincerity. His hope is to expose faith as self-interest. But true love for God endures even when blessings are withdrawn. Job expressed this truth with timeless conviction:

“Naked I came from my mother’s womb, and naked I shall return there. The LORD gave, and the LORD has taken away; blessed be the name of the LORD.” (Job 1:21, NASB)

Flesh is flesh, and every human has limits. Our bodies and souls can only bear so much pain before they reach breaking points. Yet, even in moments of collapse, God’s mercy covers His children. The affliction of the present moment is nothing compared to the joy of eternity. However, in the midst of suffering, the cruelest wounds are often inflicted not by enemies, but by friends who come to “help” with judgment and suspicion rather than compassion. In such moments, the truest ministry is found in silent presence, not in endless speeches.

The faithful must also guard their hearts against the allure of pagan mysticism, empty superstitions, and the chaotic darkness that seeks to replace the Creator’s light. Faith cannot be divided—our trust must be in God alone. Human achievements, however impressive, will crumble into dust. The grandest monuments to self will stand as ruins in time, a silent testimony that our days are numbered.

Yet God, in His mercy, still reveals light to the poor and to the innocent. His justice is not blind; His compassion is not absent. Job’s story is not merely about enduring hardship—it is about the cosmic reality that faith is tested in the crucible of suffering. And when that faith emerges refined, it speaks louder than any sermon. It tells the watching world—and even the heavenly hosts—that God is worthy of worship, not because of what He gives, but because of who He is.

In our own lives, the trials may not come as dramatically as Job’s, yet the principle remains: faith that only thrives in comfort is not faith at all. When the bottom falls out—when loss, illness, or betrayal strike—our response becomes the true measure of our devotion. Will we cling to God when the blessings are stripped away, or will we accuse Him of neglect? The call of Job’s life is to worship not for what we gain, but for who God is. This means resisting the temptation to explain away another’s suffering, and instead becoming a quiet, steady presence that reflects God’s compassion. It means rejecting the false lights of worldly wisdom and standing firmly in the unshakable truth of God’s Word. Today, choose to serve Him in the valley as you do on the mountaintop, declaring with unshaken conviction: “Blessed be the name of the LORD.”

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