Theological Commentary: Click Here
Job responds
to Zophar about the only way that you can respond to a person who uncompromisingly
sees the world in black-and-white instead of shades of gray. There is no discussion with such people, you
are either right or wrong. There is no give and take, it is either correct or
incorrect. In this light, Job goes on
the offensive. He sticks up for himself
and fights. He comes after Zophar.
Job calls
Zophar on his attitude. Job tells him
that he is considered a laughingstock. He
tells Zophar, rightly so, that he is a righteous man in God’s eyes. Again, he repeats that he is a laughingstock. In other words, Job is telling Zophar that he’s
right, Zophar is ignorant, and Job will be proven in the end.
Furthermore,
Job accuses Zophar of cherry picking. Job
is an easy target. He’s clearly own and
experiencing hardship. Job asks Zophar
how difficult it is for a person to judge the victim when they sit in the ease
of their own life. Job is telling Zophar
that his black-and-white perspective is just a synonym for lazy theology. Rather than take the time to listen, discover
the true details, and discern Zophar takes the easy route and simply judges.
I truly have
to respect Job here. He stands up for himself. He fights for his position. He is willing to experience the conflict for
the sake of truth. Job doesn’t roll
over; he doesn’t walk away.
There is a
time and place for this. I tend to not
behave like Job in this instance and find myself wishing I occasionally
did. Sometimes the easier route is to
walk away from a challenge instead of fight.
But as we see in the last few chapters, sometimes the easy way has more
in common with Zophar than with Job. There
is a time and place for walking away.
There is a time and place for standing up and fighting. Knowing the difference is where true wisdom resides.
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