
Then the LORD said to Job, "Do you still want
to argue with the Almighty? You are God's critic, but do you have the answers?"
(Job 40:1-2 NLT).
So the LORD blessed Job in the second half of
his life even more than in the beginning. For now he had fourteen thousand
sheep, six thousand camels, one thousand teams of oxen, and one thousand female
donkeys. (Job 42:12 NLT).
The book of Job is the
premier discussion about good and evil. The central question is why bad things
happen to good people. On February 15, 1947 Glenn Chambers boarded a plane bound
for Quito, Ecuador, to begin his ministry in missionary broadcasting. But he
never arrived. In a horrible moment, the plane carrying Chambers crashed into a
mountain peak and spiraled downward. Later it was learned that before leaving
the Miami airport, Chambers wanted to write his mother a letter. All he could
find for stationery was a page of advertising on which was written the single
word “WHY?” Around that word he hastily scribbled a final note. After Chambers’
mother learned of her son’s death, his letter arrived. She opened the envelope,
took out the paper, and unfolded it. Staring her in the face was the question
“WHY?”
In the three chapters
revolving around our reading this morning (Job 40-42) Job discovers the answer
to this question. Like the disciples of Jesus, he came to understand that faith
is the answer. This was the question Jesus’ disciples asked when He was
arrested, tried, and crucified. And it was probably the question Joseph of
Arimathea asked himself as he approached Pilate and requested the Lord’s body.
It must have nagged at him as he wrapped the body in a linen cloth, carried it
to his own freshly hewn tomb, and rolled the massive stone into its groove over
the tomb’s mouth. In the face of his grief, Joseph carried on. He did what he
knew he had to do. None of Jesus’ relatives were in a position to claim His body
for burial, for they were all Galileans and none of them possessed a tomb in
Jerusalem. The disciples weren’t around to help either.
But there was another reason
for Joseph’s act of love. In Isaiah 53:9, God directed the prophet to record an
important detail about the death of His Messiah. The One who had no place to lay
His head would be buried in a rich man’s tomb. Joseph probably didn’t realize
that his act fulfilled prophecy. The full answer to the why of Jesus’ death was
also several days away for Joseph and the others. All he knew was that he was
now a disciple of Jesus, and that was enough to motivate his gift of love. God’s
reasons for allowing evil to continue are not always apparent to us in the midst
of our trial. However, when we can come to a faith that God knows best and we
are always in the best of care when we trust him, good always triumphs. Perhaps
you’re in such a place now. Trust God for the next step. Take the one he has
shown you and rest in the assurance you are in the best of care! His love for
you will prove true.
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