Comment - God's Deeper Answer to Job - Part 2
God's Second Speech
(Bible Study - January 2005)
In
his second speech to Job,
God says “I made behemoth when I made you” (Job 40:15
paraphrased). Behemoth, as we have noted, represents the mighty beast
of human rebellion. Asaph echoes this, “When my heart was grieved
and my spirit embittered, I was senseless and ignorant; I was behemoth
before you,” (Psa. 73:21).
In the first part of this
study, we looked at Behemoth, as well as other beast words, Rahab, and
Leviathan. Even without going into Daniel or Revelation, we saw how the
rest of the Bible uses the concept of mighty beasts as a metaphor for
human empires and the arrogant spirit behind them — prideful rebellion
against the authority of God, which shows itself by subjugating other
people.
In this concluding part,
we focus in on God’s second speech to Job. We shall see that God
uses the beast metaphor consistently with its use in the rest of the Bible.
God is not simply talking about another couple of animals, He has a much
deeper answer for Job to appreciate.
Deep
issues of salvation
Some commentators, who do not recognize the metaphorical nature of the
titles Behemoth and Leviathan, criticize God’s second speech, even
going so far as to describe it as the greatest non sequitur of the book.
They comment, “how does God get from talking about pride, judgment
and wickedness (Job 40:14), to talking about two more creatures??”
— or they claim that God’s speeches gradually peter out —
and so they would, if they miss the real meaning behind these beast words.
In contrast, when we understand
the general biblical interpretation of these words, God’s second
address becomes a stunning treatise on salvation and judgment. Job has
already been humbled and ashamed by an awareness of God’s work in
the natural creation. What about God’s greater work of salvation
and judgment? This is what Job must now understand.
Job
had criticized God
God starts His second speech by challenging Job personally and directly:
Would you discredit My justice? Would you condemn me to justify yourself?
(Job 40:8).
As his frustration with
the friends had grown to the bursting point, Job had snapped, coming to
declare that God was punishing him unjustly (Job 19:6). The prevailing
doctrine of the friends is that disaster is God’s punishment for
specific sins, yet Job knows he is blameless of blatant transgression.
He moves in the right direction by rejecting the doctrine, but as the
discussions continue, he finds he has nothing better to replace it with.
God’s challenge now
helps him to see the stark consequences of where he was headed. “Would
you discredit my justice?” asks God. Of course not, not when
God puts it like that. And at the start of Job 42, Job provides his answer
of humility and acceptance.
There is an important principle
here. It is very easy for us to try to pretend that sin isn’t sin,
that destructive behavior is not so bad after all; that God was wrong
when He said that coveting is sin, for example, or failing to honor our
parents. When David confesses his sin in Psalm 51:4, he says: “Against
you, you only, have I sinned and done what is evil in your sight, so that
you are proved right when you speak and justified when you judge.”
In other words, I confess in order to declare that you, O God, are true
and right. Paul quotes this verse and goes on to say, “Let God
be true and every man a liar” (Rom. 3:4). Our protestations
of innocence almost automatically impugn God’s righteousness. In
contrast, our acceptance of God’s standards constitute a declaration
of His righteousness.
Job
can’t save himself
God continues to Job:
Job 40:9-14. Do you
have an arm like God’s, and can your voice thunder like his? Then
adorn yourself with glory and splendor, and clothe yourself in honor
and majesty. Unleash the fury of your wrath, look at every proud man
and bring him low, look at every proud man and humble him, crush the
wicked where they stand. Bury them all in the dust together; shroud
their faces in the grave. Then I myself will admit to you that your
own right hand can save you (NIV).
This isn’t simply
“might is right.” God is saying that someone who has power
to bring righteous judgment on the world also has the power to bring salvation,
and in particular that he could then save himself. But Job cannot, and
this is what he must now appreciate. To paraphrase God’s words:
“Job,” God says, “if you can bring true
justice to the world, then you also have the power to save yourself. But
consider what the challenge is. Just consider what a mighty beast I made
when I made mankind….”
Difficulty
of subjecting human pride
In the creation of mankind, the dragon of human rebellion was formed.
From Eden onwards, the pride of mankind asserts itself in opposition to
God. Free will, by definition, contains the opportunity to choose against
God, so the potential for rebellion is an essential part of what makes
us human. God asks for an amazing thing — the freely-given choice
to serve Him and each other — but He has to confront the beast of
pride in the process. So now God begins to describe the nature of His
struggle with the Pride of Man, the mighty beast, using a masterful collage
of symbols and metaphors later picked up and used throughout Scripture.
Here are some of the highlights.
Behemoth feeds on grass
like an ox (Job 40:15). Grass is a symbol of people (Isa. 40:6-8), especially
the wicked (Psa. 37:2, 90:5). The mighty beast lives and grows by feeding
on the people. Nebuchadnezzar learned this lesson very personally. In
his madness, he lived with the beasts of the field, and ate grass, until
he finally understood that the Most High rules in the kingdom of men (Dan.
4:25).
His tail sways like a cedar
(Job 40:17). This image is picked up in Revelation, where the dragon’s
tail sweeps a third of the stars out of the sky (Rev. 12:4).
He ranks first among the
works of God yet his Maker can approach him with his sword (Job 40:19).
The kings of Babylon (Isa. 14) and Tyre (Ezek. 28) are described in similar
grand language, yet one day God will call the nations to account. Here’s
what Isaiah says about it: In that day, the LORD will punish with his
sword, his fierce, great and powerful sword, Leviathan the gliding serpent,
Leviathan the coiling serpent; he will slay the monster of the sea (Isa.
26:21-27:1). God is not going fishing. At least not for fish!
The hills bring him
their produce, and all the wild animals play nearby (Job 40:20).
Knox translates this: “whole mountainsides — the playground
of his fellow beasts — will he lay under tribute.” It
is a very descriptive picture of empires, and the way they gather wealth
from other countries.
Under the lotus plants
he lies, hidden among the reeds in the marsh (Job 40:21). He looks
so peaceful, so comforting, but he’s lying in wait. The same image
is used in the Psalms: Rebuke the beast among the reeds, the herd
of bulls among the calves of the nations… Scatter the nations who
delight in war (Psa. 68:30).
When the river rages,
he is not alarmed (Job 40: 23). Floodwater is used earlier in
Job as a symbol of armies coming to destroy (Job 20:27-28). Isaiah,
again picking up on the symbols used in Job, says, Therefore the Lord
is about to bring against them the mighty floodwaters of the River —
the king of Assyria with all his pomp (Isa. 8:7).
We could go on but the
point is made. The symbols God uses so powerfully here in his second speech
are used again and again by later writers to describe the interplay between
empires and especially God’s ultimate judgment upon them.
Leviathan
continues the point
In Job 41, God uses the name Leviathan. Traditionally Behemoth and Leviathan
are seen as distinct creatures, but the text doesn’t require it.
As we saw in Part 1, Behemoth isn’t a name per se — it is
more of a description: the mighty beast. The link established above between
Job 40:19 and Isaiah 27:1 shows that the mighty beast is none other than
Leviathan. Ultimately, there is only one serpent, the same predisposition
to rebellion against God’s love.
Through Job 40, God has
been describing the mighty beast. Now he makes it personal to Job himself,
“Can you, Job, draw out leviathan?” (Job 41:1). The
challenge to Job — and us — asks whether we can really hope
to have control over sin and its effects? We struggle to control ourselves!
How much less are we able to domesticate the power of the mob. But God
can:
Isa. 37:24-29. By
your messengers you have heaped insults on the LORD. And you have said,
‘... I have cut down [Lebanon’s] tallest cedars, the choicest
of its pines. I have reached its remotest heights, the finest of its
forests’… Because you rage against me and because your insolence
has reached my ears, I will put my hook in your nose and my bit in your
mouth, and I will make you return by the way you came.
Knox’s translation
of Job 41:9-11 is powerful in this regard: It is in mercy that I
forbear to make [Leviathan] a plague for mankind. But indeed there is
no resisting me, nor can any deserve my thanks for lending me the aid
I lacked; Everything on earth is at my disposal. I give him no quarter,
for all his boastful, all his flattering words.
The
solution is coming
Throughout his ordeal, Job hadn’t been able to understand why he
had faced terrible suffering even though he had been a good man. He seems
to have been starting to grasp the truth, but hadn’t gone far enough.
He knew that terrible things happened to righteous people, but he couldn’t
understand why.
God gives insight into the reason. He cannot both allow and suppress sin
at the same moment. Not even God can sustain a logical contradiction.
To give us free will, God has to permit sin, and because He has permitted
it, it affects other people also. Job, like so many others through history,
bore the consequences of the sinful envy of the satan (Job 1-2).
He bore the sin of his enemy.
This creation has been bound
over to frustration, in the hope that we will look up and see our need.
But it won’t always be like this. A time is coming, says God in
Malachi, when you will again see the distinction between the righteous
and the wicked, between those who serve God and those who do not (Mal.
3:18).
Developing
Job’s character
But there is more for Job. Even though he was blameless (Job 1:1), Job
wasn’t complete. He had not been perfected. Knox again:
He [Leviathan] has
not his like among the strong things of earth, that fearless nature,
that heaven-confronting eye. Over all the pride of earth he reigns supreme
(Job 41:33-34).
The spirit of rebellion
in the world was there in Job too. The marvel of God’s work was
that He was able to use the sinfulness of Job’s enemy as a means
of developing Job’s character. Job would look back on his suffering
as a terrible and painful ordeal, but also one of great personal growth.
The same tendency to rebel
was present even in Jesus, who likewise shared in [our] humanity so
that by his death he might destroy him who holds the power of death—that
is, the devil (Heb. 2:14). When Jesus allowed himself to be murdered,
he explicitly rejected flesh. He destroyed the Leviathan tendency within
himself. I will obey my Father, he says. And so God was able to use the
sinfulness of sinful mankind for the perfecting of His son.
Now perfected, our captain
and leader encourages us to recognize the Behemoth spirit within ourselves.
He guides and leads us, calling on us to reject arrogant rebellion. He
calls us to take up our cross, and to follow him.
John Launchbury
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