Day 2

Job’s Lament

from the Job reading plan


Job 3:1-26, Philippians 3:7–11, 2 Timothy 2:8–13

BY Lisa Harper

I once had a surgeon tell me I wasn’t a very good patient because I tried to “gut it out,” instead of being honest about the pain I was experiencing. Apparently, it’s hard on a healer when a patient masks their symptoms; making a diagnosis can become a bit like trying to shoot at a moving target.

My doctor believed my stubborn refusal to admit pain reflected my lack of trust in his competence as a physician. In Job chapter three, we see that Job is honest about his own pain, which is a clear indicator that he truly wants to be healed and trusts in the competence of the Great Physician. It would take me a long time to learn that instead of exacerbating a painful experience, honest tears and the acknowledgment of pain can actually serve as a soothing pressure relief valve.

By contrast, between the amped-up sensation of reality television, the shrieking discord of current political affairs, and the twenty-four/seven barrage of social media that has saturated our culture, it’s entirely possible for real trauma and suffering to go unnoticed and untended. We rush to triage emotional hangnails but completely ignore the people around us who are bleeding out. Silence doesn’t always indicate bravery, but it is a pretty good indicator that we might not notice when someone is truly suffering.

Job’s outburst is a healthy reminder that our Redeemer doesn’t rank our emotions on a scale from good to bad, allowing only “good” emotions like joy and peace while barring “bad” emotions like grief and disappointment. We do not have to censor ourselves before the God who knows our hearts better than we do. Scripture doesn’t instruct us to smile on the outside while we die on the inside—just the opposite, in fact (see 1 Samuel 1). Frankly, I believe one of the biggest fallacies perpetrated in communities of faith is that the closer we get to Jesus, the more we need to keep a lid on it. Stoicism is not a spiritual gift, y’all!

We need to understand there’s a colossal difference between disagreeing with God and denying His existence altogether. Job cursed the day he was born and expressed confusion, frustration, and even anger, at God over allowing tragedy to befall him—but he did not reject God. In fact, the tormented exasperation Job hurls toward God proves that he is anything but an atheist! He knows God holds all things together.

Faith powered by God can stretch us far beyond our own capacity to endure. Still, it’s not our anguish that distances us from God; it’s our apathy. The main takeaway from Job chapter three: we can and should continue to bring all of who we are—including our anger, confusion, and disappointment—before God. We can trust Him with every piece of our hearts.

 

Post Comments (167)

167 thoughts on "Job’s Lament"

  1. Melanie Chandley says:

    The Lord has blessed me immensely with this devotion. This is exactly the message I needed to hear.

  2. Elizabeth Rutland says:

    We recently suffered a miscarriage and this study has been so encouraging. I’m seeing this book in a whole new way.

  3. Allison Vaughn says:

    Beautiful passage and message – we can trust Him with everything…the good and the hard. I’m aching with deep loss and incredible disappointment. God has to be up to something, once again. Thankful he steered me to Job and this study. Thankful for this community.

  4. Tracey Kapitz says:

    I lost my mom very unexpectedly 2 months ago and as my niece put it,”You’re like Harry Potter now. You’re an orphan.” Not where I’d thought I’d be in my 30s. I’ve been wrestling with God and if He’s good and kind. This study has been helpful and make the grieving process feel less lonely.

  5. Cherl McPhearson says:

    I love how Lisa says we don’t need to hide our feelings from God. It doesn’t mean we trust him any less. It only means we know how great He is and how great our suffering is which reminds us how much we need Him.

  6. Ashley Mitchell says:

    I LOVE the lessons to be learned from Job 3. I actually am the opposite and have no trouble keeping my hurt in. However, I tend to beat myself up about it. Our society almost teaches to be private and keep your “drama” to yourself. So I love this study today. Be loud. Cry it out, yell it out. God is there. He wants to heal you.

  7. Jessica Mercer says:

    My father has recently been diagnosed with stage four liver cancer. They said 6-9 months. We are hopeful and prayerful and praying for a miracle. So thankful I found this devotional to do daily.

  8. Alissa Langbehn says:

    Oh Job, thank you for the reminder that in my darkest days I can cry out, literally, to the Lord. He will hear me and not judge me for my confusion and anger. Too often I swallow my feelings in order to “keep a lid on it” but sometimes it’s gotta come out via tears, crying, and the occasional scream into the pillow.

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