Job 37 Commentary

Job 37 Commentary

Chapter 37 looks like a praise song, but Elihu is making his point here. God speaks through creation. The lightning and thunder are a message. They are a directive to either snow or shower; the results are marvelous! The results are either a blessing to the people or a punishment. All of it is intentional!

But how can we understand all of this? Elihu wants Job to see the perfect knowledge of God. Against such perfection, what hope do we have? Can any argument be good enough?

Of course, all of this is true about God. But importantly for the saint, it is also true that this perfection was reduced into a man that we could talk to. He spoke our language and understood our slang.

The LORD Jesus Christ was born under slave conditions to a poor couple in order to perfectly simulate the sad condition of humanity. It was for our sake. Humanity could join this God in spreading out the skies, hard as a mirror of cast bronze.

The Almighty is beyond our reach and exalted in power; in his justice and great righteousness, he does not oppress. Verse 23. Our pick from here could be that the righteous saint’s suffering isn’t at all injustice or oppression.

The saint’s suffering, therefore, doesn’t deserve the same treatment as punishment. And in the question, “Can you join Him in spreading the skies,” Elihu reveals another very important fact. The answer is yes. Job’s suffering is actually a participation in a divine strategy being hatched way beyond human hearing. The LORD is fixing satan and confining him to failure. Job is the main tool in this operation.

Won’t the saints see their own suffering as a tool in the LORD’s hands?  If the saint can see correctly, their suffering could be a strategy and not suffering; it could be the means to a glorious end and not the end itself.

The New Testament gives us the picture of persecution for Jesus’ sake as obedience and worship. And when grace allowed God’s children to face it in total peace and love, then you know this suffering can have a different definition! When you see the apostles rejoice after a heavy physical beating at the hands of Jerusalem’s leaders, then you know there is something cooking in Heaven!

But there is also the ‘otherness,’ and Elihu has superbly balanced his thoughts on suffering. This chapter ends Elihu’s argument. Up next is the long-awaited response from the LORD.

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Published by Joseph Malekani

Joseph Malekani is a born-again Christian with a strong PAOG/Baptist background. He is heavily involved in student ministry with ZAFES – an IFES movement with focus on student ministry in Zambia. He is married to Audrey and they have two lovely children.

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