JOB: A MAN OF FAITH AMIDST SUFFERING JOB 3: WHAT DID JOB GET RIGHT AND WHERE MAYBE DID HE GO SLIGHTLY WRONG? Read Job 28 So Job has lost all of his possessions, all of his children, and has been covered in sores from head to toe. Job had voiced his complaint to God, had not cursed God, but instead cursed the day of his birth. If that wasn’t enough he had received counsel from his “friends”, which had been less than helpful. Job had debated with them over 3 speech cycles, and now today we reflect on what did Job get right, and where maybe did he overstep the mark? Real wisdom is characterised by Job’s questioning faith – ultimately his belief in God remains unshaken, yet there are questions which have to be voiced. The friends suggest that Job should repent of his sin, and remain silent in the face of his suffering. Job, like the Psalmist, sees that his complaint must be voiced if his dilemma is ever to be resolved. Clearly Job has an expectation, based on the concept of covenant, of a particular type of relationship with God, and his present reality doesn’t match up to his expectation! This is one of the keys to the whole central issue of the book. Covenant relationship means that the tension can and should be resolved in complete honesty – This is Job’s aim. Although on occasion reluctant to do so, Job acknowledges God’s sovereignty. It is interesting to note at this point that Job’s attitude stands in contrast with the friend’s ultimate denial of complete sovereignty. Job openly lays his complaint before God because he expects a different reality, yet he is willing to accept that God is absolutely sovereign. “But he stands alone, and who can oppose him. He does whatever he pleases, He carries out his decrees against me, and many such plans he still has in store.” Job 28: 13 – 14 However, the friend’s desire to defend God’s character inevitably LIMITS God’s ability to work in ways beyond their narrow theology of retributive justice! The complainer Job accepts