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My daily devotional reading recently reminded me that the question, “Why?” is the easiest question to ask and the hardest question to answer. You can read the quote HERE.

We all have asked the questions: Why me? Why now? Why this? And we truly want the answers to those questions, and usually immediately.

When I think of the question, Why?, my thoughts turn to Job. He had every reason to ask every one of those questions. He received the following news:

  • his oxen and donkeys were taken away
  • all of his servants were murdered, except for the one who escaped and brought Job the news
  • a fire came and burned up all of his sheep
  • his camels were also taken
  • all of his sons and daughters were killed in a windstorm when the house fell on them. He lost all ten children in one fell swoop

If ever someone had the right, or reason, to ask “why?”, it was Job. Yet through all of it, he did not blame God (Job 1:22).

If all of that were not enough, he was struck with sores from the sole of his feet to the crown of his head (see Job 2:7).

As we weave our way through the book of Job and his story, his encounters with friends, his conversation with God, we begin to find a man who was quite comfortable to converse with God.

By the end of the book, Job makes a most astonishing admission:

I had heard of You [only] by the hearing of the ear, but now my [spiritual] eye sees You.(Job 42:5, AMPC)

Before his troubles hit, Job had heard of God. He knew about God. He knew the things God had done in the past.

Throughout his troubles, Job knew he had to accept both the good and the bad in his life. He knew God was sovereign and in control.

But when troubles hit, Job knew first hand Who his God was. Job came to experience God for himself. He came to know God was with him in all things.

Many years ago, Chuck Swindoll stated on his radio program:

“God is too kind to do anything cruel …
Too wise to make a mistake …
Too deep to explain Himself.”

Job asked God to instruct him from now on. He repented of his doubt, and of thinking he had all the answers. He came to rely solely upon God.

And so must we.

For the Lord God is a sun and shield; The Lord gives grace and glory; No good thing does He withhold from those who walk uprightly. O Lord of hosts, How blessed is the man who trusts in You.” (Psalm 84:11-12, NASB)



Amnesia – a partial or total loss of memory. None of us want to lose our memory. Yet there are those who are wanting to forget, or rewrite, the events of the past. In this post by Pam Ecrement, she looks at the value of remembering. Be sure to read “Do We Have Amnesia?” HERE.

 

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