Insights from Job
By James Tarter
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Insights from Job - James Tarter
Insights from Job
Dr. James M. Tarter
Copyright Page
Tenth Edition
ISBN: 978-1-257-60464-7
Copyright c 2008, 2012, 2018 by James M. Tarter. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. Permission granted to make copies for purposes consistent with furthering the Gospel of Jesus Christ and the Kingdom of God.
Scripture taken from the NEW AMERICAN STANDARD BIBLE® (1995 Updated Edition): c 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by the Lockman Foundation. Used by permission. (www.Lockman.org)
I call the New American Standard Bible the NAS. I add boldface to specific words and phrases in Scriptures to add my emphasis for discussion.
Endnotes are marked with a * or ** in the text and are found at the end of the chapter.
DEDICATION to
OUR ACTIVE GOD
who provides for
each of us in Jesus
in more and better ways
than we can appreciate now
Preface
The book of Job vividly illustrates how God reverses Satan’s most vicious schemes against God’s servant, so that they end up providing exactly what he needs for his life forever. God brings all things together for good to His people who love Him, but we shall also see clearly from Job why sometimes it is literally impossible to see the real good that God will produce out of a terrible event while it is happening.
Chapters 1-7 show specific ways that Job’s experience was truly very good for him, even though he had a season of horrible affliction. We also see how Job received great New Testament promises that God makes to believers in Jesus.
After realizing God’s surprising work for great good for both Job and faithful believers in Jesus, we examine the truth from a different perspective in Chapters 8-11. Instead of focusing on our loving God’s good provision for us, we see that He is doing many things at once, which include making things to work together for good for each one who loves Him and fits into His plans. In Chapters 8-11 we also consider how we should respond to satanic attacks and disasters in the light of this greater perspective from the Bible.
Chapters 1-11 contain as much insight as most believers can digest in a book. If this is true for you, then I recommend that you jump from Chapter 11 to 14 to conclude your book. Chapter 14 shows how God’s work with Jesus’ disciples in two key situations contains many of the same life-giving truths that we see in the book of Job. Chapters 12, 13, and each Appendix can be added individually at good times for you, but the insights from Job into personal ministry in Chapters 15-19 should be added as a unit. God’s Great Good to Job (if you prefer it, see the end of this book) stops after Chapter 9 and may be an easier package to digest.
Understanding what really happened to Job enables us to receive the strong encouragement God provides in Job. I want us to gain a better perspective of God’s eternal purpose for good to each of us, so that we will trust Him more fully and freely. We shall see Satan’s will for evil in the painful situations he devises, and then realize that God has a plan for good which dwarfs the evil goals. By firmly grasping God’s word in the book of Job, we shall be confident of His plans for our good, so that we shall co-operate with Him in circumstances where we cannot see His good purposes for us. Our confidence in Almighty God and His great love, wisdom, and power for us can also free us from fear about possible future situations.
Jim Tarter, 2012
Part I: God’s Great Good to Job
Chapter 1: Decisions in Heaven and Disasters on Earth
People normally have a sense of justice and righteousness. They usually also want to believe in a good and almighty God who loves and reliably provides justice to everyone – including oneself, family, and loved ones. The fact that disasters hit both good and bad people
challenges this belief. Both Christian and non-Christian authors have written books that try to reconcile disasters, justice, and pain with the goodness of Almighty God. Many conclude that God is not good, is not almighty, or does not get involved in some very important issues in our lives on earth.
Christians who realize the authority of the Bible as God’s word can also realize that He provides His answer in the book of Job. But I find that very few really understand what God shows in the book of Job, which is clear and simple when we see it. Indeed, the most common view is something like this: Job began blameless and upright; then had his faith severely tested by personal disasters and torturing illness; and when he passed the test, God restored twice as much as Job previously owned. Another common wrong view is that Job opened himself up to all of this disaster by his fear of it.
All such views completely miss the main point of Job’s experience. As we shall see in Scripture, Job began his tribulation blameless and without doing anything to cause it. But Job had an enormous need for his eternal life: he had a distant relationship with God because of a distorted view in Job’s heart of what God is really like. Satan devised and executed vicious schemes against blameless Job, but God allowed them and even incited them in order to provide the eternal good that Job needed and could not do without. And as soon as Job had received what he needed to move ahead, God moved him out of this terrifying and disastrous season of his life into the beginning of his eternal blessings.
We do not need another nice-looking theory or many anecdotes. We need to see this picture clearly in Scripture. This book offers this foundation in Chapters 1-7 and shows how it applies to Christians now. We shall see how Job received the great promises for good that God makes to believers in Jesus Christ in the New Testament.
James 5:11 provides a brief summary of Job that is thoroughly confirmed in this book: "We count those blessed who endured. You have heard of the endurance of Job and have seen the outcome of the Lord’s dealings, that the Lord is full of compassion and is merciful." Most personal views of Job do not lead to the conclusion that God is full of compassion and merciful: they show Job as passing a brutal test that proves how good and faithful he was, or show how he opened himself and his family up to awful brutality.
The insights from Job are most helpful for Christians. They alert us to God’s great work in bleak situations when His word and His promises seem unreal. As we see powerful New Testament themes and promises worked out in amazing ways for Job, we can wonder about the good surprises that our Lord has prepared for us as we walk with Jesus. Our walks include heavy attacks from our evil enemy and tremendous victories and great blessings for eternity.
I have made some bold claims about God’s word in Job and what this book shows about it. I believe that you will find them accurate.
Job’s Initial Blamelessness
Job 1-2 provides the foundation for understanding Job’s whole experience. Job 1:1 begins: "There was a man in the land of Uz whose name was Job, and that man was blameless, upright, fearing God and turning away from evil."
V. 2-3 show Job’s vast possessions, and v. 4-5 give a glimpse into his personal and family life. V. 5 shows how clean he had made his sin account: "...Job would...consecrate them [his ten grown children], rising up early in the morning and offering burnt offerings according to the number of them all; for Job said, ‘Perhaps my sons have sinned and cursed God in their hearts.’ Thus did Job continually." Job was sacrificing for sins his ten sons and daughters perhaps committed. Job was blameless and was doing all that he could to keep his family from having a sin on their records.
One day Satan came among the sons of God when they came to present themselves before the Lord (v. 6). The conversation between the Lord and Satan in Job 1:7-12 shows explicitly how blameless Job was opened up to Satan’s attacks:
⁷The Lord said to Satan, From where do you come?
Then Satan answered the Lord and said, "From roaming about on the earth and walking around on it."
The Lord said to Satan, "Have you considered My servant Job? For there is no one like him on the earth, a blameless and upright man, fearing God and turning away from evil."
Then Satan answered the Lord, Does Job fear God for nothing? Have You not made a hedge about him and his house and all that He has, on every side? You have blessed the work of his hands, and his possessions have increased in the land. But put forth Your hand now and touch all that he has; he will surely curse You to Your face.
Then the Lord said to Satan, Behold, all that he has is in your power, only do not put forth your hand on him.
So Satan departed from the presence of the Lord. (Job 1:7-12)
Notice that Satan was talking about the whole earth when God brought up Job and bragged about him: God stirred Satan’s jealousy when Job was blameless. Notice also that a hedge fully protected him until God gave all that Job had to Satan: he merely used an opening that God freely gave him. It was free
, because he gave no basis to remove the hedge. He merely complained that the hedge was totally effective and wrongly guessed that if God hurt Job deeply, then Job would turn against God. God already knew that this was not true.
Job 1:13-19 shows what Satan did with his opportunity. All of Job’s children and possessions were destroyed, with the reports coming to him in rapid succession. V. 20-21 show that Job responded by worshiping God and blessing His name, and v. 22 evaluates this response: "Through all this Job did not sin nor did he blame God."
Then Satan again came among the sons of God who were presenting themselves before Him. Job 2:2-6 shows what happened:
The Lord said to Satan, Where have you come from?
Then Satan answered the Lord and said, From roaming about on the earth and walking around on it.
³The Lord said to Satan, "Have you considered My servant Job? For there is no one like him on the earth, a blameless and upright man fearing God and turning away from evil. And he still holds fast his integrity, although you incited Me against him to ruin him without cause."
⁴Satan answered the Lord and said, Skin for skin! Yes, all that a man has he will give for his life. However, put forth Your hand now, and touch his bone and his flesh; he will curse You to Your face.
So the Lord said to Satan, "Behold, he is in your power, only spare his life." (Job 2:2-6)
God again brought up Job and praised him to Satan, which again helped his jealous pride to come out against Job. V. 3 states clearly that Job was still blameless and upright and did not cause the first attacks. Then with only another wrong guess by Satan, God gave him even more freedom to choose ways to get Job to curse God.
God again gave Satan his opportunity to afflict Job with no valid reason from Satan. We can see this now and shall understand it later as we see God’s good to Job. But the ease with which God gave Satan everything that Job had can surprise and perplex us now.
The rest of Job 2 shows the awful pain that Job suffered as Satan tried the most extreme tortures that he could devise to get Job to curse God. This is not surprising: Satan’s name means the Adversary
, which describes his nature. Knowing the end from the beginning, God fully anticipated all that Satan would do.
Satan’s efforts extended beyond his direct assaults on Job. In the midst of his great pain, Job’s wife exhorted him toward Satan’s goal for him: Do you still hold fast your integrity? Curse God and die
(Job 2:9). Satan did not let Job sleep (Job 7:3-4). And Job’s three friends came to sympathize with him and comfort him
(Job 2:11), but Satan was using them – especially with their good intentions toward Job – to complete this goal against Job by means of emotional torture.
Job’s Fear Did Not Cause the Attacks on Him
Rom. 14:23b says that whatever is not from faith is sin
. Many people are taught that fear replaces faith, so that Satan could attack Job because of his fear: ...what I fear comes upon me...
(Job 3:25). This teaching claims that Job’s fear left him in sin, thereby removing his hedge of protection and opening him up to Satan’s attacks.
But consider God’s statements: Job’s sin record was clean. After Satan destroyed all, Scripture says clearly: Through all this Job did not sin
(Job 1:22a). Then in Job 2:3 God calls Job blameless after the hedge had been removed without cause.
Rev. 12:9 shows that another name of Satan is the Devil
. This means the Accuser
and reveals another key feature of his nature. Even the Accuser could find no unresolved sin to accuse Job before God. If Satan could have provided a legal basis to get an opening instead of having God give it to him, then he would have. The Accuser and proud rebel would have loved saying to God: Look at Job’s fear. He is sinning! You should not continue protecting him like You are.
Therefore Satan did not get to attack Job by his sin of fear or any other sin. Satan got this because God chose to remove almost all of His protection of Job and to give Satan an almost unlimited freedom to choose ways to get Job to curse God to His face.
Why did God do this to His blameless servant? Because God loved Job and wanted the best for him. We shall understand later.
Job’s Phenomenal Righteousness and Horrid Torture
What is a perfect life on earth like? Many people, including Christians, would describe Job’s life before his tribulation began. He did all he could to be a good father to his children. He prospered exceedingly without cheating or defrauding. He was blameless before God. The Accuser could find nothing against Job. No person found a sin when people looked for any sin that Job might have committed.
Yes, Job’s righteousness was truly exceptional. God said that there was no one like him on earth in both Job 1 and 2. In Ezekiel 14 God picked three of the most righteous people of all time up to 600 B.C., and He chose Noah, Job, and Daniel (God did not limit Himself to Jews here: Noah and Job were Gentiles).
Consider further Job’s righteousness in his extraordinary situation. God placed no limit on what Satan could do to Job except to leave him alive. Satan uses utter poverty to destroy some people, excessive riches to destroy others, and so forth; but he chose to destroy Job by the most extreme pain, hopelessness, and subtle grinding down that he could devise against a person. And Job responded admirably: he did not let these enormous external and internal pressures cause him to let go of his great integrity and his faith in God and His justice. Although we shall soon see that Job stumbled later in his distress, even then he was being as righteous as he was able.
How can we relate to such righteousness? My righteousness might compare with many believers, but not with Job’s. When I look at my sins and responses in distresses far milder than Job’s, I need to improve very much. But comparing my righteousness and suffering with Job’s is a distraction that can keep us from the heart of God’s message to us