"There was a man in the land of Uz and his name was Job. . . ."
Thus begins one of the most famous of Biblical stories, the tale of a good
and pious man, who, even when beset by calamity and tragedy, never falters in
his allegiance to God.
As the narrative opens, Satan doubts Job's faith, telling God that Job's devotion
is only due to his blessings. Job is healthy, wealthy and happy, but if his
fortunes were to be reversed, Satan slyly suggests, his faith would not stand
up to the trial. In response, God permits Satan to test Job, and he does so
most cruelly. Job becomes penniless. His children die. He is afflicted with
a terribly painful disease. And yet he refuses to curse God. Instead, he declares,
"The Lord has given, and the Lord has taken away. Blessed be the name
of the Lord."
Friends admonish Job to repent for his sins, insisting that his tragedies
must be divine punishment for wrongs he committed. Why else, they declare, could
he be suffering this way? "Think now, what innocent man ever perished?"
they ask him. "Where have the upright been destroyed?" But Job knows
he has done no wrong and refuses to repent. He pleads with God to explain why
this evil has befallen him.
In the end, God rewards Job for his steadfastness by restoring his wealth
in double measure, his family and his health. Job's friends are chastised for
adding to Job's grief, and the story ends happily with Job living in contentment
to the age of 140.
But Job never gets an answer. God's sole explanation for the suffering Job
had to endure is a string of questions: "Where were you when I laid the
Earth's foundations? . . . Can you send up an order to the clouds for an abundance
of water to cover you? ... Can you hunt prey for the lion and satisfy the appetite
of the king of beasts? . . . Is it by your wisdom that the hawk grows pinions,
spreads his wings to the south?"4 In other words, God seems to be saying
to Job, "I run this vast and complicated world, and you cannot possibly
grasp the multitude of reasons why I do what I do."
And yet we continue to try. And it is Job's name that inevitably comes up
when we struggle to understand why God allows evil in the world, when we ask
the age-old question: Why do bad things happen to good people?
Surprisingly enough, the story may very well be fiction. Job never existed,
according to many of the sages of the Talmud.5 So why is he in the Bible?
Although Job is perhaps the only imaginary hero of Biblical personalities,
he is at the same time the most universal of all of them. He is the father who
has inexplicably lost his job and has no means of supporting his family. He
is the mother who has just been told her child has terminal cancer. He is the
Holocaust survivor who still wakes up screaming in the middle of the night.
He is me, and he is you.
That's why the book of Job is not really the story of a tragic figure of old.
The book of Job is about twenty-first-century men and women who try to make
sense out of the unfair circumstances of their lives even as they struggle to
hold onto their beliefs. Most of all, the book of Job is about a dilemma which,
sooner or later, every one of us must resolve in our lives. This dilemma is
the apparent contradiction between three basic assumptions:
- God is just. He judges all of us with impartial fairness. He rewards the
good, and He punishes the wicked.
- God is all-powerful. He can do anything. Nothing happens in the world without
His willing it. Indeed, everything that happens is part of His plan.
- Job is a good man.
Now as long as everything is going well with Job—he is healthy and wealthy—we
can believe all three of these statements at the same time with no difficulty.
But when Job's suffering begins, when he loses his possessions, his family and
his health, we have a problem. We can no longer make sense of all three propositions
simultaneously. We can now affirm any two only by denying the third.
If God is both just and all-powerful, then it must be that the third statement
is wrong—Job is not a good man; he is a sinner, and he deserves what is
happening to him. But if Job is good and God causes his suffering nonetheless,
then God cannot be just. Or if Job is good and God is not responsible for his
suffering, then God cannot be all-powerful.
For all three to be true appears to be impossible. So which one is wrong?
Which one of these three assumptions are we going to sacrifice on the altar
of reality? That is the question.
2003. All rights reserved. Reprinted from If God Is Good,
Why Is The World So Bad? by Bejamin Blech. No part of this publication
may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or
by any means, without the written permission of the publisher. Publisher: Health
Communications, Inc., 3201 SW 15th Street, Deerfield Beach, FL 33442.
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