I’ve told you before that one of these days I was going to tell
you a story where I’m the hero; where I do something great and wonderful and
we’ll all laugh and rejoice and that will be a good day. But that’s not
today. Years ago, I was asked to teach an adult Sunday School class for
the first time at another church I was going to. So, I started doing it
and I rocked along for a few months, I guess, and people seemed to really enjoy
it and were inviting others and I got some compliments along the way. Do
you know what happened?
I started believing it. I started thinking, “Hey, I’m
pretty good at this. I gotta admit I’m really bringing it.”
Well, you can probably guess the moral of this story but let me give you a few
gory details. I got up one Sunday morning just raring to go, teaching on
the passage in Acts 27 where Paul was shipwrecked. I was prepared
and ready to bless this little group with my knowledge and grasp of difficult
spiritual truths.
I remember standing up behind this little podium and I got all my
notes out and I was just as confident as I could be, knowing that God was
really using me. But for some reason I had a hard time getting the words
out. I managed to say something about where the passage was and that Paul
got shipwrecked but that was about as deep as it got. I stuttered and
stammered like I was using the dictionary for text. The dictionary would
have been more beneficial though.
I had notes but they didn’t make sense and I got lost and pretty
soon it wasn’t just Paul that had a shipwreck. I’m looking around for
somebody to throw me a life jacket. Finally somebody did. Somebody
stood up and just said what that passage meant to them. Then somebody
else stood up and did the same and somebody looked up some words and somebody
else testified about it and I remember literally just sitting down behind that
podium and trying to hide until I could finally call on somebody to dismiss us.
I was humiliated. I left the room and went and found a quiet
place and just bowed my head and let God talk. What could I say? “Why
God?” I knew why immediately. The only thing to say was, “I’m
sorry” and “Thank you for showing me.” There are not many
weeks that go by that I don’t remember that situation and I never want to be
there again although it still happens sometimes and I’m sure I need it even
today.
So, I’m preaching today to all of us about how to really know God
and how to hear from Him and how to ask Him the deep questions of life.
Job found out and the situation God put him in makes mine not worth
repeating. I want to ask you to turn to the end of the book of Job; to
chapter 42. As you do I’ll summarize what happened between the first
chapter that we read last week and the end of the book where we are
today. Job is in between the books of Esther and Psalms in
the Old Testament. It’s on page ??? in most of the Bibles in the pews.
We read last week about how even God considered Job to be the most
righteous and upright man on the planet and yet God used Satan to take
everything away from Job, including his family, his health and all his
possessions. Now what you miss by only reading the first and last
chapters is the introduction of Job’s three friends who wax poetically for
chapter after chapter about how Job has obviously sinned and just needs to
repent of that sin and then God would bless him again.
Then over and over, Job answers them by swearing his innocence,
as, in fact, he was innocent. But Job’s three friends just insist on
giving him bad advice. Do you have any friends like that? They mean
well but they are just totally wrong. Another friend comes in at one
point and basically says, “Y’all listen to me. I have perfect
knowledge.” (Chapter 36) His advice is even worse. Do
you have any friends like that? If not, then your friends probably
do. J
Now, listen to how Job answers his buddies when they again make
the assumption that he is being punished for his sins. In chapter 29, he
answers them by saying that not only was he not guilty but, “When I went to the
gate of the city
and took my seat in the public square,
8 the young men saw me and stepped aside
and the old men rose to their feet;
9 the chief men refrained from speaking
and covered their mouths with their hands;
10 the voices of the nobles were hushed,
and their tongues stuck to the roof of their mouths.
11 Whoever heard me spoke well of me,
and those who saw me commended me,
12 because I rescued the poor who cried for help,
and the fatherless who had none to assist them.
13 The one who was dying blessed me;
I made the widow’s heart sing.
14 I put on righteousness as my clothing;
justice was my robe and my turban.
15 I was eyes to the blind
and feet to the lame.
16 I was a father to the needy;
I took up the case of the stranger.
17 I broke the fangs of the wicked
and snatched the victims from their teeth.
and took my seat in the public square,
8 the young men saw me and stepped aside
and the old men rose to their feet;
9 the chief men refrained from speaking
and covered their mouths with their hands;
10 the voices of the nobles were hushed,
and their tongues stuck to the roof of their mouths.
11 Whoever heard me spoke well of me,
and those who saw me commended me,
12 because I rescued the poor who cried for help,
and the fatherless who had none to assist them.
13 The one who was dying blessed me;
I made the widow’s heart sing.
14 I put on righteousness as my clothing;
justice was my robe and my turban.
15 I was eyes to the blind
and feet to the lame.
16 I was a father to the needy;
I took up the case of the stranger.
17 I broke the fangs of the wicked
and snatched the victims from their teeth.
I hope you can get the whole picture here and see what is really
going on. Job, as he is saying this, is sitting in dust and ashes,
wearing torn robes with a shameful lack of hair on his head and face for the
time, owning nothing and covered head to toe with sores and boils…and he is
proud. Do you see it? I, I, I…me, me, me…look at who I am and what
I have done…as I sit here king of the dung heap.
It would be laughable if I were not just like him. The
problem of the sin of pride is that it is so easy to be proud…even of your
humility. In “The Screwtape Letters”, C.S. Lewis wrote about a senior
demon instructing a lesser demon who was having a hard time getting his assigned
human to sin. The older demon advised the younger that if he couldn’t
convince the man to sin then just let the man be proud of that fact.
Either way, Satan wins we give in to the sin of pride.
God says in Proverbs that pride goes before destruction. He
says in Psalms that men are so consumed with themselves that their thoughts are
far from God. This is proved in the book of Job in that even while Job
was so afflicted, he was still proud and from chapter 2 all the way to chapter
38 Job and his buddies talk about the situation and what they wished would
happen and Job actually says to God at one point in chapter 13, “Then summon me and I will answer, or let me
speak, and you reply to me.” (Verse 22)
Now, I am a big proponent of learning
scripture and then praying back to God what He has written in His Word but I do
not recommend ever saying this to God. Don’t even memorize it. I
say that because in chapter 38 Job gets this wish. I know I told you to
find chapter 42 and I will get there in just a minute but you need to see what
God says to Job in chapter 38. He starts out with the question, “Who is this that obscures my plans with words without
knowledge?” Then He says, “3 Brace
yourself like a man; I will question you, and you shall answer me.”
Then for the next couple of chapters Job goes three rounds with
the Creator of the universe…and it’s not pretty. God asks him something
like 150 different questions that are completely unanswerable. Where were
you when I laid the earth’s foundation? Have you seen the gates of
death? Where is the rain stored? Have you seen the storehouses of
snow? Do the lightning bolts take orders from you? Did you give the
horse its strength? On and on and on He goes humiliating Job with
question after question.
He ends by talking about how small and powerless man is compared
even to some of the animals God has created. He says at the end for Job
to consider the alligator (or Leviathan). “He looks down on all that are
haughty. It is king over all that are proud.” (Verse 34)
Do you remember that iconic picture of Mohammed Ali standing over
Sonny Liston who is on his back in the middle of the ring? I have a
picture in my mind of God standing over Job something like that. Job is
done. Stick a fork in him. It’s over for him. He finally gets to
the point where he can say to God – and here is where we pick up in chapter 42
– “I know that you can do all things; no purpose of yours can be thwarted.
3 You asked, ‘Who is this that obscures my plans without knowledge?’ Surely I spoke of things I did not understand, things too wonderful for me to know. 4 “You said, ‘Listen now, and I will speak;
I will question you, and you shall answer me.’ My ears had heard of you but now my eyes have seen you.
6 Therefore I despise myself and repent in dust and ashes.”
3 You asked, ‘Who is this that obscures my plans without knowledge?’ Surely I spoke of things I did not understand, things too wonderful for me to know. 4 “You said, ‘Listen now, and I will speak;
I will question you, and you shall answer me.’ My ears had heard of you but now my eyes have seen you.
6 Therefore I despise myself and repent in dust and ashes.”
W.A. Criswell said, “Before God can remake us, He must unmake
us. And before God can bring us to life, we must die.” He’s not
talking about physical death. He’s talking about dying to one’s self;
dying to one’s own will, plans, dreams and hopes and honestly saying to God, “I
see Who You are and I see who I am and I despise myself in comparison.”
My friend Scott Parrish always says that Jesus didn’t come to make
bad people good. He came to make dead people alive. But we are only
really alive spiritually when we die to ourselves by allowing God to have
control over our lives. It’s not optional to be a disciple of Jesus and
it is exactly what God was teaching Job. We talked last week about how
God is the source of all things and I believe that is important to learn but I
also believe that having the knowledge about the proper term for what God does
– does he allow it or cause it – is not the whole lesson God wants us to learn.
The lesson He really wants us to learn is that no matter what He
does – cause or allow, good or bad, bless or curse – our job is just to trust
Him; to trust His character that is love and His judgment that is true.
This life isn’t about us! Quit trying to be comfortable in this wisp of
smoke that is this life and seek first His Kingdom and His righteousness.
You have heard it said that it’s not about thinking less of
yourself. It’s about thinking of yourself less. Abraham – the great
Abraham, father of Israel – said in Genesis, “Behold, behold, I have taken
upon me to speak to the great High God, I who am but dust and ashes” [Genesis 18:27].
Do you remember what the tax collector said in Luke 18?
“God, have mercy on me, a sinner.” When King David came to God in Psalm
51 he said he had a broken and contrite heart. Do you know what
these people all have in common? Do you know what David and Abraham and
Job and throw in the thief on the cross and the prodigal son and Paul when he
said he was spiritually crucified with Christ – do you know what all these
people had in common?
They heard from God. They knew God in a new and real
way. They were able to come before the Creator of the universe, the One
who keeps the stars, tells the ocean where to stop and clothes Himself in glory
and splendor and truly have a relationship. They were able to talk to Him
and hear from Him, receive blessings from Him and trust Him in the tragedies
because they knew Him and He knew them.
Andrew Murray said, "The humble man feels no jealousy or
envy. He can praise God when others are preferred and blessed before him. He
can bear to hear others praised while he is forgotten because ... he has
received the spirit of Jesus, who pleased not Himself, and who sought not His
own honor.”
He also said this: “Humility is perfect quietness of heart. It
is for me to have no trouble; never to be fretted or vexed or irritated or sore
or disappointed. It is to expect nothing, to wonder at nothing that is done to
me, to feel nothing done against me. It is to be at rest when nobody praises me
and when I am blamed or despised. It is to have a blessed home in the Lord
where I can go in and shut the door and kneel to my Father in secret and be at
peace as in a deep sea of calmness when all around is trouble. It is the fruit
of the Lord Jesus Christ's redemptive work on Calvary's cross, manifested in
those of His own who are definitely subject to the Holy Spirit.”
I believe the book of Job should at least teach us two
things. It should teach us that God is sovereign and will do whatever He
wants with or without our opinions on the matter and when we understand that
God is love that should bring us great peace.
The other thing is that sovereign God will not put up with
pride. If you want to truly know God and fellowship with Him you better
see yourself as you truly are and humble yourself or He will do it for
you. Truly knowing God is at the same time a one-time thing and a
life-long process. We have been talking about the process of humbling
ourselves and coming to the realization of who we really are compared to
Almighty God.
But it starts with a first step. That first step also
involves humbling ourselves but it begins with repenting of our sin and
trusting Jesus as our Savior. That is lived out in a life that is
obedient to what God wants. Just as Jesus Himself said in the garden
before His death, “Not my will but yours be done, Father.”
Can you honestly say that? Jesus is the Way, the Truth and
the Life and no man comes to the Father except through Him. (John 14:6)
You too can have a relationship with the Father of all creation through His Son
Jesus Christ. There is no other way. Today is the day of
salvation. Do it today.
Invitation
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