Jesus as “God”?

In the OT idiom, Elohim is an appropriate title for any man who acts on behalf of God (Psa 82:1,6n). Especially does such an idiom apply to the unique One who sits on God’s throne (cp 1Ch 28:5; 29:23; 2Ch 9:8, 13:8).

Other passages describing Christ as “God”, in the sense of office, authority, and mission: Isa 9:6,7; Joh 14:7-10; 20:28; 2Co 5:19; 1Ti 3:16.

But in another sense, as to the reality of his own person, Christ is one among his fellows and himself has a “God” (v 7; Heb 1:9). The difference between Christ’s nature (which was “not good”: Luk 18:19) and his exalted position (the Name which is above every other name) is explained in Phi 2:5-11.

Furthermore, other men are spoken of as “God” (Elohim) in Exo 21:6; 22:8,28; Psa 138:1; and John 10:34 (citing Psa 82:1,6).

Jesus destroys the devil

PASSAGE SUBJECT ACTION OBJECT LOCATION
1. Rom 8:3 God (Christ) Condemned Sin In the BODY, or in the flesh, of Christ.
2. Heb 2:14 Christ Destroyed Devil (power of death: cp Rom 6:23; Jam 1:13-15). Flesh and blood (HUMANITY).
3. Heb 9:26 Christ Do away with Sin By the sacrifice of HIMSELF.
4. 1Jo 3:5,8; 4:2 Son of God Take away or destroy Our sins, or the works of the devil “Appeared”: where? In the FLESH (1Jo 4:2).

Or, put another way…

  1. Christ was made flesh in order to destroy the devil — ie, sin in the flesh: Heb 2:14; 9:26; Rom 8:3.
  2. Sin is that which has the power of death, and sin comes from within: Rom 6:23; 7:13,20; 1Co 15:56.
  3. The relationship of flesh and blood, sin, and the devil: Heb 2:14 (Christ partook of flesh and blood, in order that through his death, he might destroy the devil); Rom 8:3 (Christ was made in the likeness of sinful flesh, and died as an offering for sin, and so condemned sin in the flesh); Eph 2:15,16 (Christ, in his flesh, reconciled us by his death on the cross, and so slew the enmity which is in our flesh).

Jesus’ death on the cross, how does it save me?

HOW DOES JESUS’ DEATH ON THE CROSS SAVE ME?

The moment we ask that question, we have to address another one: What is Atonement? If we can’t answer this satisfactorily, then Jesus’ death is just an unfortunate incident of 2,000 years ago.

“For if, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved by his life. And not only so, but we also joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom we have now received the atonement” (Rom 5:10,11, KJV).

It’s clear that atonement means reconciliation here. In fact, the Greek words used are the same, two in verb form — ‘reconciled’ — and one in noun form — ‘atonement’. Modern versions use ‘reconciliation’ in place of ‘atonement’ here (Rom 5:11), the only place in the KJV New Testament where the word ‘atonement’ appears. The apostle Paul helps us with our understanding of reconciliation:


“All this is from God, who through Christ reconciled [reconnected, reunited] us to himself and gave us the ministry of reconciliation [reuniting]; that is, in Christ God was reconciling [reuniting] the world to himself, not counting their trespasses against them… We beseech you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled [reunited] to God” (2Co 5:18-20, RSV).

The Companion Bible does a good job of expressing the thought here: “We see here, revealed in simple majesty, the sovereign grace of God in providing by virtue of the precious blood of Christ a means where-by the rebellious creature can be restored to the favor of the Creator. It is not an entreaty [by man asking God] to ‘forgive and forget’ everything on man’s side, but a command [for man] to return to God by means of the new connection, and by that means alone, ie, the new and Living Way which God Himself provided through the death of His Son.”

Restoration

Originally, the English word ‘atonement’ simply meant ‘reconciliation’, and was not a theological word — it was at-one-ment, a restoration of friendly relations between any two parties. There was no idea of reparation, expiation, compensation, or payment. Those ideas were introduced by the orthodox theory of substitution: ‘Christ died in my place, paying the penalty for my sin so that I don’t have to pay for my guilt myself’ (!) [But what happens when someone else has to pay for what I owe? I have no real need to do anything, my conscience is dulled, and my mind turns away from the issue. It’s not just a matter of words. All sorts of things change!] So the term atonement acquired a new flavor, but not a Biblical one.

Atonement is basically an Old Testament word, appearing numerous times in connection with the Levitical sacrifices. The Hebrew is “kaphar”, meaning ‘to cover’, as is apparent in its first Old Testament use:

“Make yourself an ark of gopher wood, make rooms in the ark, and cover [kaphar] it inside and out with pitch” (Gen 6:14).

Figuratively, the word comes to mean cleansing, pardon. Atonement was necessitated by the seriousness of sin and man’s inability to deal with it:

“If they sin against thee — for there is no man who does not sin — and thou art angry with them…” (1Ki 8:46).

“They have all gone astray, they are all alike corrupt; there is none that does good, no, not one” (Psa 14:3).

“… since all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Rom 3:23).

What can be done? Appeasement won’t work. Payoff will not do it. The solution: Atonement [covering] is secured by sacrifice, the divinely appointed way:

“For the life of the flesh is in the blood; and I have given it for you upon the altar to make atonement for your souls; for it is the blood that makes atonement [‘covers over’], by reason of the life” (Lev 17:11).

Note that atonement is made BY God, not simply TO Him:

“Truly no man can ransom himself, or give to God the price of his life, for the ransom of his life is costly, and can never suffice” (Psa 49:7,8).

The sacrifices in the Bible were not to pay for sin, nor were they substitutes to suffer and die, in the place of the sinner. Instead, they were a humble recognition that the only condition acceptable to God is purity and perfection — that sin is uncleanness — and that sinful man can be reconciled to God only by being covered by and washed in the blood of the Lamb. Those who offer are covered (as was Adam! — Gen 3:21) by that which is supplied by God and considered adequate by Him. We do not receive atonement directly; we receive its result, which is reconciliation, cleansing, forgiveness. As we saw in 2 Corinthians 5, what God has done in reconciliation He has done in Christ. The purpose of God is always reconciliation, removing estrangement, restoring fellowship; His work ever since Eden has been aimed toward restoring what was lost there.

A Covering

A word should be said about the ‘mercy seat’ in the tabernacle. The phrase ‘mercy seat’ was first used by William Tyndale, translating a German word used by Martin Luther, which he in turn used to translate the Septuagint “hilasterion”. This Greek word was also a translation from the Hebrew “kapporeth” (a noun form of “kaphar”), “kapporeth” being the name for the lid or cover on the Ark of the Covenant — the place God established (Exo 25:22) where He was pleased to meet with His people, speak with them, and command them. The New International Version expresses it well:


“There, above the cover between the two cherubim that are over the ark of the Testimony, I will meet with you and give you all my commands for the Israelites” (Exo 25:22).

[Note: This is the only place where God specifically says He will meet with His people.]


“…since all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, they are justified [reckoned as righteous] by his grace as a gift, through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus, whom God put forward as an expiation [KJV: ‘propitiation’; NIV: ‘sacrifice of atonement’; FF Bruce: ‘our living mercy seat’; Greek hilasterion = ‘covering’] by his blood, to be received by faith. This was to show God’s righteousness, because in his divine forbearance he had passed over former sins; it was to prove at the present time that he himself is righteous and that he justifies him who has faith in Jesus” (Rom 3:23-26).

It was precisely this wonderful divine forbearance that caused the repentant David to cry out:


“Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered” (Psa 32:1).

It is the blood of Christ, the perfect sacrifice, that covers and cleanses us — not ritually, but practically and gloriously. Jesus lived and died to become the cleansing medium by which our sins are mercifully covered and washed away.

Deliverance from death

The greatest problem in the world ever since Eden has been death. The people of Israel had a graphic demonstration of the problem:


“From Mount Hor they set out by the way to the Red Sea, to go around the land of Edom; and the people became impatient on the way. And the people spoke against God and against Moses, ‘Why have you brought us up out of Egypt to die, in the wilderness? For there is no food and no water, and we loathe this worthless food.’ Then the LORD sent fiery serpents among the people, and they bit the people, so that many people of Israel died. And the people came to Moses, and said, ‘We have sinned, for we have spoken against the LORD and against you; pray to the LORD, that he take away the serpents from us.’ So Moses prayed for the people. And the LORD said to Moses, ‘Make a fiery serpent, and set it on a pole; and every one who is bitten, when he sees it, shall live.’ So Moses made a bronze serpent, and set it on a pole; and if a serpent bit any man, he would look at the bronze serpent and live” (Num 21:4-9).

What is the point of this strange episode? The people shook their fists at God. He was the cause of their problems, they declared. The wonders they had experienced, the manna they ate each day, were forgotten in their self-pity and disobedience and faithlessness. Only when they were forced to realize their inadequacies and their dependence upon God did they come to regret and repent of their actions. They recognized that they could do nothing for themselves. So they called upon their mediator to intercede for them, to ask God to restore the relationship that they had broken. God gave them a pictorial ex-ample of the means of their deliverance in the serpent on the pole — a public spectacle displayed before them. And they were given the means to be healed.

[Note: There was nothing magical in the serpent. The power to heal resided in their looking in faith and obedience at the representation of what was killing them.]

It is not often noted that Jesus makes a poignant reference to this very incident in connection with his own mission:

“And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of man be lifted up, that whoever believes in him may have eternal life” (John 3:14,15).

Just as Israel had to repent of their faithlessness and disobedience, face squarely the representation of their problem — sin and death — in the public spectacle lifted up before them, and look in faith and obedience to the God-provided means of their deliverance — just so, all who would be reconciled to God must look to Jesus, the representative man.

Look at the cross. Look at what sin does! Sin is impulsive and cruel. Sin looks away from God and to self. Sin destroys the best that God has to give. And sin is killing us. God might look on sin and just turn away, or He might strike out in wrath, but He does neither; He acts in love — He provides the means for deliverance, as He did for Israel:

“For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life” (v 16).

In what may be a commentary on his own words in John 3, Jesus says (John 6:40):

“For this is the will of my Father, that every one who sees the Son and believes in him should have eternal life; and I will raise him up at the last day.”

And Paul says:

“While we were still weak, at the right time Christ died for the ungodly… But God shows his love for us in that while we were yet sinners Christ died for [on behalf of] us… For if while we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, much more, now that we are reconciled, shall we be saved by his life” (Rom 5:6,8,10).

Jesus consented to a death normally reserved for those guilty of desperately evil crimes, to reveal the terrible character of sin.

Any sin is a violation of God’s holiness. How can God — who is holy, just, and separate from sin — forgive a sin against His holiness, and so reckon a sinner as justified (righteous)?

By overlooking it? No, that’s not forgiveness.

By having Jesus pay off the debt as our substitute? No, that is not just, and sins aren’t transferable.

The correct answer is given by Paul:

“For God has done what the law, weakened by the flesh, could not do: sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin, he condemned sin in the flesh” (Rom 8:3).

FF Bruce puts it: “He passed the death-sentence on sin in the domain of human flesh.” Jesus’ flesh was the arena of the perfect and total victory over sin.

“Since therefore the children share in flesh and blood, he himself likewise partook of the same nature, that through death he might destroy him who has the power of death, that is, the devil, and deliver all those who through fear of death were subject to lifelong bondage” (Heb 2:14,15).

Now that sin has been defeated on its own ground, the way is open for God to forgive sinners on the basis of faith and obedience, without compromising His own holiness.

Summary

Jesus Christ, the bearer of a sin nature like ours, destroyed sin by a life of perfect obedience, finally being obedient to the cross in offering himself as a perfect sacrifice. Sinners, repentant and identifying themselves with Jesus in baptism and a subsequent holy life (like Israel looking upon the bronze serpent), look to Jesus in faith. On that basis, God meets with us at the ‘mercy seat’, the cover of the Ark of the Covenant (Jesus), and forgives our sins. And thus we are justified (made righteous) by his blood. (NZ)

Jesus, paradoxes

“Jesus” (By Gregory of Nazasazus AD 38)

Jesus began his ministry by being hungry… Yet he is the Bread of Life.

Jesus ended his earthly ministry by being thirsty…

Yet he is the Living Water.

Jesus was weary… Yet he is our rest.

Jesus paid tribute… Yet he is the King.

Jesus was accused of having a demon… Yet he cast out demons.

Jesus wept… Yet he wipes away our tears.

Jesus was sold for thirty pieces of silver… Yet he redeemed the world.

Jesus was brought as a lamb to the slaughter… Yet he is the Good Shepherd.

Jesus died… Yet by his death he destroyed the power of death.

Jesus, perfect obedience or faith?

The Law is said to have in fact contained a promise of eternal life in reward for perfect obedience and to have actually conferred it on Jesus because he kept it faultlessly. Such reasoning is false. Three epistles (Hebrews, Romans and Galatians), prove it to be so.

Hebrews. None could dispute that the ministration of righteousness is a better covenant than that of Sinai if only because it is established upon better promises (Heb 8:6). One of the chief of these is the promise of eternal inheritance (Heb 9:15). Eternal life is a prerequisite of such an inheritance: a man, to possess an inheritance for ever, must, as JT logically argues, be made immortal to enable him to possess it everlastingly. There was thus a distinct promise of eternal life in the everlasting covenant which, apart from any other, constituted it a better covenant than the covenant of Sinai, for the latter contained no equivalent promise. This fact is easily verified from the Old Testament itself: we look in vain in the Sinai covenant for any such promise, explicit or implicit, in reward for perfect obedience.

Romans. A man who earns a reward by effort receives it as his due. In the words of Paul, to him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace but of debt (Rom 4:4). Paul therefore concludes logically that if Abraham were justified by works, he hath whereof to glory. But what are the facts? What saith the Scripture? Abraham had faith in God, and that faith was reckoned to him for righteousness (Rom 4:2,3). That is, Abraham did not receive the reward by works. Why? Was it simply because, through the weakness of the flesh, he obviously could not obtain it by merit? By no means: Christ did in fact live sinlessly, and if for that reason the Law had power to confer life on him, then the reward must have been reckoned to him of debt. But Paul shows that the principle which applied in the case of Abraham applied also in that of Christ, his Seed, for the promise that he should be the heir of the world, was not to Abraham, or to his seed, though law, but through the righteousness of faith (Rom 4:13).

Galatians. A human covenant, once ratified, is binding: though it be but a mans covenant, yet if it be confirmed, no man disannulleth or addeth thereto (Gal 3:15). So it is with God’s arrangements: This I say, adds Paul, that the covenant that was confirmed before of God in Christ, the Law which was four hundred and thirty years after cannot disannul that it should make the promise of none effect (Gal 3:17). Such, however, would be the case if the Sinai covenant had contained the same promise: it would have been a modification of the Abrahamic covenant, and have rendered it obsolete, for if the inheritance be of law it is no more of promise (Gal 3:18). Is such a contingency conceivable? Is the Law against the promises of God? God forbid, for if there had been a law given which could have given life, verily righteousness should have been by the law (Gal 3:21). In view of this statement the Law of Moses could not possibly have had the essential power to confer life. The law made nothing perfect. It was but the bringing in of a better hope (Heb 7:19, mg).

Habakkuk. Habakkuk’s words (quoted in all three epistles) settle the matter finally so far as the position of Christ is concerned: The just shall live by faith (Hab 2:4). Variant renderings for Habakkuk’s statement as quoted in Heb 10:38 are helpful: My righteous one shall live by faith (RV): it is by faith that my righteous servant shall live (Weym); and again, My just one by faith shall live (Diag). Stephen tells us that the prophets shewed before of the coming of the Just One (Act 7:52). Jesus was without doubt the Holy One and the Just of whom Habakkuk spoke (Act 3:14). Why was he called the Just One? Because he lived a sinless life, observing the Law perfectly. How then did he, the Holy One and the Just, attain to life eternal? Habakkuk answers, by faith. Why not by works, even in his case? Because God GAVE the inheritance BY PROMISE to Abraham, and if to Abraham then to Jesus also, for, as we have already seen, to Abraham AND HIS SEED were the promises made — to Abraham and Christ, that is, since Christ is the seed (Gal 3:16).

We now perceive the twofold weakness of the Law of Moses. Firstly, no one could keep it: as many as are of the works of the law are under the curse, for it is written, cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the law to do them (Gal 3:10). Secondly, even if a man kept it, it lacked the essential power to confer life. We find this illustrated in Christ. He kept the Law perfectly, but that no man is justified by law in the sight of God is evident: for, The just shall live by faith (Gal 3:11). Had it been otherwise — if righteousness came by law — then Christ died needlessly (Gal 3:21). But Christ did not die in vain, but to make good the deficiencies of the Law.

Yet he died a sinless man. Necessarily so, for without perfect obedience on his part to the Law of Moses, righteousness could not justly be imputed to those who could not keep it (and so were unjust). But, by virtue of the fact that he offered himself without spot to God, his blood purges our conscience (Heb 9:14) and by it we are justified (or declared righteous), our faith being counted for righteousness for his sake (Rom 5:9; 4:5).

His sinlessness emphasized by contrast the wickedness of the hands that crucified him. If only because sinners could not be permitted to triumph over the One in whom God was well pleased, it was essential for him to rise. But altogether apart from this, God’s purpose in and through him could not be frustrated, and necessitated his resurrection. So God raised him up, having loosed the pains of death, because it was not possible that he should be holden of it. He is now, in consequence, alive for evermore, having as our forerunner entered into that within the veil, to which the righteousness which is of the Law could never give access. So the Apostle bids us be not slothful, but followers of them who through faith and patience, inherit the promises (Heb 6:12) (RIC).

Jews, God’s witnesses

“Therefore ye are my witnesses, saith the LORD, that I am God” (Isa 43:12).

“Though I make a full end of all nations whither I have scattered thee, yet will I not make a full end of thee” (Jer 30:11).

The Jews, the descendants of Abraham through Isaac and Jacob, have a special place in the purpose of God with mankind. They were recipients of, and custodians of, God’s written revelation. Through them God raised up His Son, their Messiah. In their deliverance from Egypt and their subsequent history they have become witnesses to the truth of God’s promises to them, and thus witnesses to His existence. Their role has not ceased with the first coming of Jesus, for their regathering in the twentieth century, in fulfillment of Bible prophecy, is a witness to the nearness of Jesus’ second coming, and the focus for the revelation of Divine power to save them from international aggression. This will cause God’s Name to be known among all nations, and will establish Jerusalem as the center of the Kingdom of God. Gentile believers are given title to the promises made to the fathers of Israel through belief of the gospel (also described as the Hope of Israel) and baptism into Jesus Christ. If faithful they will be part of the “all Israel [that] shall be saved” (Rom 11:26) when Jesus comes.

Beloved for the fathers’ sakes

The children of Israel were selected as the channel of Divine revelation because they were the descendants of the faithful fathers, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, not for their moral excellence. They were expected to show a similar faith by believing and obeying God’s Law. In this way they would become an example to the surrounding nations, and fulfil their calling as a kingdom of priests and a holy nation (Gen 12:2; 13:15,16; 22:16-18; Exo 19:4-6; Deu 4:5-8; 7:6-11; Joh 8:39).

A covenant people

The descendants of Jacob were forged into a distinct nation in Egypt. Their deliverance was a signal act which showed God as a God of judgement, power and graciousness. This event is commemorated annually when Jews keep the Passover to celebrate their redemption from Egypt. At Sinai their calling was confirmed when they agreed to be obedient to God’s law. This covenant was renewed with the generation that actually entered the Land of Promise, Canaan, and is the basis of God’s treatment of them, as witnessed by their history: “You only have I known of all the families of the earth: therefore I will punish you for all your iniquities” (Amos 3:2; Gen 15:13,14; Exo 1:7; 9:13-16; 12:15,17; 24:7; Deu 4:23,24; Jos 24:21-25; Rom 3:1,2).

Scattering and regathering

Israel were offered prosperity and blessing in return for obedience, but deprivation and cursing if disobedient. Continued disobedience would result in removal from the land and scattering among the nations, where they would be oppressed and become a proverb. Both outcomes have been experienced by the nation. Blessings were abundant in the reigns of David and Solomon and other faithful kings; trouble and captivity came following continued disobedience, culminating in the deportation of the ten tribes to Assyria and the two tribes to Babylon.

Following the national rejection of Jesus as their Messiah, the nation was scattered throughout the world for nearly two millennia, and Jerusalem became subject to Gentile control. Yet their national identity has been preserved, a witness that God keeps His word.

God’s promises also allowed for their return and re-establishment as a nation in the Land of Promise. This became a reality in 1948, and the whole of Jerusalem came under Jewish control in 1967. However, the prophets tell us that this situation will be opposed by other nations, resulting in an international attack that will require the nation to be saved by Divine intervention on Jesus’ return (Deu 28; Lev 26; Joel 3:1,2,9-17,20,21; Zec 14; Luk 21:20-27).

Not cast off

Some contend that Israel’s persistent disobedience, culminating in the murder of their Messiah, means that the nation has been cast off and its place taken by believers in Jesus Christ. Paul specifically refutes this idea. The Jews are still the basis of God’s work of salvation, but Gentiles can, by faith, share the promises, which will be fulfilled at the return of Jesus when “all Israel shall be saved” (Rom 11:26).

Jews and Arabs are cousins

“Jewish and Middle Eastern non-Jewish populations share a common pool of Y-chromosome biallelic haplotypes.” So states the title of an article published by a team of researchers in the Publications of the National Academy of Sciences, May 2000. (On the internet it may be found at: www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.10115997.)

The article describes genetic research and analysis (at a level of sophistication and scientific exactitude impossible until recently) conducted upon cross sections of men in various Jewish communities (both in Israel and elsewhere) and other non-Jewish Middle Eastern communities. Bypassing all the mathematical data and statistical tables published in the article, we may simply note several of the conclusions:

  • The level of genetic divergence among Jewish populations is very low despite their high degree of geographic dispersion. In fact the level of genetic divergence among different Jewish populations is considerably less than that found among other groups in the study. Put in simple terms, the average Jew in London, let us say, shares much more commonality of genetic likeness with the average Jew in North Africa or Israel than he does with his non-Jewish next-door neighbor. (This conclusion provides solid proof of the Biblical assumption that, although scattered among the nations of the earth, the Jews have by and large maintained their racial identity — see, eg, Jer 30:11 — while other ancient peoples have mingled and submerged themselves in one another, until their Bible-era ancestors are largely unidentified and unidentifiable.)

  • The extremely close affinity of Jewish and non-Jewish Middle Eastern populations supports the hypothesis of a common Middle Eastern origin. In other words, the average Jew — wherever he lives — shares a greater degree of genetic commonality (and therefore has a higher proportion of common ancestry) with the average Palestinian or Jordanian or Syrian than with other non-Jewish groups outside of the Middle East.

  • In summary, the combined results suggest that Jews and Arabs may trace a common ancestry to a Middle Eastern source population about 4,000 years ago!

So… despite their intense hatreds for one another, and their religious differences and rivalries, the Jews and the Arabs are demonstrated to be, genetically-speaking, “cousins”!

Just who are the progenitors of the modern-day Arabs? The answer of Genesis is obvious: Terah was the father of Abraham (Gen 11:26), and the grandfather of Lot (Gen 11:27) — who accompanied his uncle Abraham to the Land of Promise. From Abraham were descended Ishmael (Gen 16:15), and the sons of Keturah (Gen 25:1-4), and — through Isaac — Esau (Gen 25:25), the father of the Edomites (Gen 36:9). From Lot were descended Moab and Ammon (Gen 19:37,38). (Most of the nations of Psa 83, as a matter of fact, are of this lineage.)

But what of the other peoples of the Land of Palestine, the nations mentioned in Gen 15:18-21, who were there when Abraham and Lot first set foot upon the Land — the Amorites and Canaanites and Jebusites and so forth? And what about the Philistines, who arrived in the Land a bit later, but made such an impact upon Israel? Where have these peoples gone? Have they completely disappeared? The simple answer is: they are the Arabs also!

What evidently has happened is that, since the beginning, the (Arab) descendants of Abraham and Lot have intermarried with the Canaanitish peoples (something Isaac and Jacob and the nation of Israel were strictly forbidden to do: Gen 24:3; 28:6,7; Deu 7:1-3; etc) so as to create, over time, a mixed or mongrel people. There are in fact Bible examples of just this sort of mingling of “seed”:

“While he [Ishmael] was living in the Desert of Paran, his mother got a wife for him from Egypt” (Gen 21:21).

“He [Esau] married Judith daughter of Beeri the Hittite [cp Exo 23:23; Jos 1:4], and also Basemath daughter of Elon the Hittite. They were a source of grief to Isaac and Rebekah” (Gen 26:34,35).

Other instances of the Hebrew word “ereb” — signifying “mixed” or “mingled” — related to peoples are:

  1. 1Ki 10:15: “all the Arabian kings”.
  2. Jer 25:20,24: “the foreign (or ‘mingled’: AV) peoples… the Philistines… all the kings of Arabia, and all the kings of the foreign (mingled) peoples… in the desert”.

  3. Jer 50:37: “all the foreigners (or ‘mingled people’: AV) that are in the midst of her [Babylon]…”

  4. Eze 30:5: “Ethiopia, and Libya, and Lydia, and all Arabia (or ‘the mingled people’: AV)”.

  5. Neh 13:1,3: “Ammonite and Moabite…all who were of foreign descent (or ‘the mixed multitude’: AV)”.

So the “mixed peoples” of the Middle East are the “Arabs” — with blood ties to the original Canaanitish peoples (the ten nations of Gen 15) as well as the corrupted descendants of Abraham (the majority of the nations enumerated in Psa 83).

It stands to reason, therefore, that — whereas the Jews are still a distinct ethnic group, as the genetic study suggests — the other Middle East natives are truly an altogether “mixed” bag, being at the same time the descendants of the Biblical Ishmaelites, Moabites, Ammonites, and Edomites, as well as the Biblical Canaanites, Philistines, Amorites, etc, etc!

It may be impossible today to find a single people who can be conclusively linked with the Edomites, for example [see Appendix], or with the Philistines, or with any other of the ancient Middle Eastern national enemies of Israel. But these ancient bloodlines did not just disappear, and these nations did not simple “evaporate”; instead, they were blended, and blended again, until there emerged a truly “mixed” (or “Arab”) peoples across the whole of the Land of Promise — the “melting pot” descendants of all the tribes and nations of Gen 15 and Psa 83.

So, when the Bible presents us with evidently “Last Days” prophecies that refer to the nations of Genesis (such as Ammon or Moab or Edom or Philistia), we may not be able to identify any single modern nation in the Middle East as the exclusive and pure descendants of that particular ancient nation. But nevertheless we may assume that either: (1) the prophecy refers particularly to the portion of the whole Arab “mixed” race that occupies the same territory as the ancient nation, or (2) the prophecy refers to the whole of the Arab “world”, because the blood of ancient Edomites or Moabites or whoever flows in all their veins, or (3) both!

Both these groups of peoples (the primarily “Hamite” peoples of Gen 15, and the primarily “Semitic” peoples of Psa 83) have demonstrated, historically, intense hatred for the Jews — fulfilling the Old Testament “types”: Ishmael versus Isaac, and Esau versus Jacob, and Canaanite and Philistine versus Israelite. Now, with the admixture of a unifying religion — Islam — these Arabs… whether they live in Jordan, or Lebanon, or Syria, or Saudi Arabia, or the West Bank, or Gaza… all view the Jews as great “infidels”, who have no real claim to the Land of Palestine.

And the stage is set for the final act in a 4,000-year-old drama: the climactic struggle between Jew and Arab, between the modern “Goliath” and the modern “David”, as it were, on the mountains of Israel.

Appendix: Edomites and Nabataeans

It has sometimes been suggested that Old Testament prophecies about Edom, for example, cannot be fulfilled by any modern nation or nations — because there are simply no surviving descendants of the ancient Edomites today. But a scholarly study suggests very much the opposite. J.R. Bartlett, writing in the Palestine Exploration Quarterly 111 (1979), (“From Edomites to Nabataeans: A Study in Continuity”), does not believe that the Edomites became extinct, as some assert. Rather, he offers considerable evidence — archaeological, cultural, and linguistic, as well as historical — to the effect that the ancient Edomites, being overrun and dominated by the Nabataeans (the descendants of the Biblical Nebaioth: Gen 25:13), simply survived by intermarrying with their conquerors to produce a new people: a mixture of Nabataean and Edomite which survives to this day in the Bedouin Arabs.

Job in brief

The book of Job contains such long and involved speeches that it is often hard to see the overall development of the book. In this summary, written as a play, each chapter of Job is distilled down to a paragraph or so. It helps to be able to see the structure and development of thought in the book, and then to go back to better appreciate the full text of Scripture. (Chapters are in parentheses.)


  Narrator: Long ago, Job was one of the richest men alive, yet he was blameless and honest, and a priest to his family. But one day in the assembly, the accuser challenged God. He claimed that Job was righteous only because God had blessed him so much. To prove otherwise, God stripped Job of everything: his possessions, his servants, even his children. Suddenly all was gone. Job was devastated, but he remained faithful and humble. “The Lord gave,” he said, “and now the Lord has taken away. Praise be to his name.” (1)   The accuser was not convinced. “You never hurt Job himself,” he accused God. “Do so, and he will certainly curse you!”   So Job was afflicted with disease. Covered in festering sores from head to foot, he wasted away. But even when his wife scorned him saying, “Curse God and die, Job,” his attitude remained, “Shall we accept good from God, and not trouble?”   And so Job did not sin.   Job had three friends, Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar, who heard about his troubles. They came to comfort him, but when they arrived, they found him so disfigured they hardly recognized him! They sat in silence, grieving for him for the ritual week of mourning until, finally, Job broke the silence. (2)   Job: I curse the day I was born! If only I had died at birth! Then at least I would be at rest. Even captives and slaves find release in death, yet my life still goes on! I long for death, but it doesn’t come. Oh why does life continue for those in misery?   This is my worst nightmare! I’ve always been afraid that something like this might happen! I have no peace, no rest, only turmoil. (3)   Eliphaz: Job, I really must respond. Don’t be offended at me. You used to be blameless. That at least should give you some hope. Whatever God is punishing you for, there’s no need to despair.   I learnt in a vision that no one is truly righteous before God, so don’t become resentful now. God certainly punishes the fool and destroys his family, but if it were me, I would appeal to God. Even though he punishes wickedness, he also heals those who accept his discipline. Who knows, before long you’ll be laughing, secure in a new household, living out the fullness of your life. Just apply the lesson to yourself. (4,5)   Job: My words were rash, but I am suffering unimaginable terrors from God. I wish he would finish me off, then at least I would know I had been faithful to the end. As for you: a man should be able to rely on his friends. But you see something dreadful and you speak from your fear. Your words are useless to me.   If you can teach me then I’ll listen, but you must accept that I never departed from my righteous ways. God has appointed a time of misery for me, so now my body is clothed in worms and scabs, and my skin is festering.

  Oh God, life is so short that I must speak out. I would prefer strangling and death to this body of mine! Why do you examine a man so closely? Why do you never give me a moment’s rest? If I have sinned then tell me now, for my life will soon be gone! (6,7)   Bildad: You’re being ridiculous, Job! God is just! When your children sinned, God handed out their penalty. And if you are so pure then God will restore you, but listen to what the fathers have told us. It is those who reject God that are cut down in their prime! God does not reject a blameless man! (8)   Job: I know that no one is truly righteous before God. The wisdom and power of the Creator are so vast, so utterly beyond us. No one can call him to explain himself. He controls the sun and the stars. He performs innumerable miracles and wonders. None of us could possibly stand up in his courtroom and dispute with him. If I tried I could only plead for mercy. This is why I say that God destroys both the blameless and the wicked.   And now, even if I dropped my complaint, I would still dread my sufferings because you have already condemned me! If only there were someone who was able to speak to God on my behalf, to remove his terror from me. Then I could stand up to God, and I would challenge him.   O God, what charges do you have against me? Do you enjoy seeing me suffer? You know my heart. You shaped me from the dust. Are you going to return me to the dust again? I cannot lift up my head because of what you’ve done to me. Leave me alone, and let me die in peace! (9,10)   [pause]   Zophar: Is no one going to respond? Job, you claim to be innocent, but I reckon that God has even forgotten some of your sins! God is greater than you can conceive, so when God chastises you, you cannot challenge him. He reacts to the evil he has witnessed. If only you would put away your sin you could lift up your head without shame. Then God would rescue you. He would protect you for the rest of your life. But the hope of the wicked is nothing more than a dying gasp. (11)   Job: Oh, you’re all so wise! But I have a mind as well! Previously God used to answer me when I called, yet now I suffer your contempt! Men at ease have contempt for misfortune. And the wicked? They live in comfort! Yes, and it is God who makes it so!   However great we are, God is greater. He is able to tear down anyone he has established, whether kings or priests or judges, elders or nobles. I’ve seen all this with my own eyes. And yet, you smear me with lies, you useless healers! I wish you would remain silent rather than distort God’s work. How will you fare when his dread falls on you? Your words are proverbs made from ashes.   [Eliphaz tries to interrupt]   No! Let me finish.   Even if God slays me I will still hope in him, and still defend myself before him. Can anyone honestly condemn me? If so I will be silent and die.   Oh God, let me have a little rest, and then I will answer you. Show me my offence. Show me my sin, because I’m rotting away to nothing. You know that man is a fleeting shadow. Cut him down and he does not rise again. To the end of creation he lies in the dust.   Oh if only you would hide me in the grave, hide me until your anger has passed, until a time comes to remember me.. Yes, I will wait. I will wait for my renewal. You will call and I will answer you. You will see the steps I’ve taken. And you will throw away my sins like a bag of rubbish. Oh, but you’re wearing me down. You’re destroying this man’s hope through the pain of his body… (12-14)   [Pause, to be sure Job has finished]   Eliphaz: You windbag! Your own mouth condemns you, and your words undermine devotion to God. How come you know so much about him? Do you sit in his council?   Oh Job. How come your heart has carried you away so that your eyes flash with anger at God? Even the heavens are not pure enough for God, much less man. Ask any wise man, or any of the fathers. It is a wicked man that God takes from comfort and security to plunge into distress and anguish. His strength is useless because God will pay him in full before his time. (15)   Job: I’ve heard all this before, you miserable comforters! Why don’t you cease? If we changed places then I would encourage and comfort you. Instead, not only do I suffer at the hand of God, but you jeer and sneer at me. God has devastated my family and destroyed my flesh. My face is red with weeping, even though my hands are free from violence, and my prayers pure. My blood cries out from the ground. Even now my account is in heaven. If only there were someone to plead with God on my behalf, as a man pleads for his friend. Instead, I’m about to die and I’m surrounded by mockers, bearing the brunt of your hostility. (16)   O God, you are the only one who can save me!   But God has made me a byword, a man in whose face people spit, a man to shock the upright. So come on then. Try again. But I’ll get no wisdom from you. Death is my best option now. (17)   Bildad: Be sensible, Job. Why do you call us stupid? You’re just tearing yourself to pieces in your anger. It is the lamp of the wicked that is snuffed out. Calamity overcomes him, eats away at his skin, and strips him of his children so that his memory is lost from the land. This is the fate of an evil man. (18)   Job: How long will you torment me with words? If indeed you would exalt yourselves above me, then let me tell you that God has wronged me! God caught me in his net and alienated me from my relatives, from my friends, and even from my wife. Those I love have turned away from me. My breath is sour and I am nothing but skin and bones. Have pity on me, my friends, and stop hounding me.   How I wish my words were written down. I know that my redeemer lives, and that in the end he will stand on the earth. Then I will awake. I will see God with my own eyes — I and not another.   But you. You should fear the sword yourselves. Then you will know that there is judgment. (19)   Zophar: Again I must speak. You disturb and dishonor me by your rebuke. You must know that, from the beginning, the joy of the wicked is brief. In his pride he reaches for the heavens, but he is banished like a dream and his children must make up for his evil. Though he revels in oppression, terrors will overcome him. The heavens will expose his guilt and God’s wrath will consume him. (20)   Job: Let me try once more, then you can continue to mock me. Despite openly rejecting God, the wicked enjoy prosperity. Their children still grow up and sing to the music of tambourine and harp. Be honest. How often is the lamp of the wicked snuffed out? Instead, two men lie down in the dust of death, side by side, one lived in security and plenty, while the other died in bitterness, never having enjoyed anything good.   I know what you’re thinking, that I bear all the marks of punishment for sin. But just travel a little and you will see that evil men are spared calamity. So how can you console me with your nonsense? (21)   Eliphaz: So God is punishing you for your righteousness! Job, the list of your sins is endless! You stripped your own brothers naked, you gave no water to the weary, no food to the hungry. You sent widows away empty handed, and you worked orphans into the ground. You wonder whether God sees you, but he does. Why continue in wickedness? Even now, Job, submit to God, and you will be restored and light will shine on your ways. You will then be able to save others likewise. (22)   Job: Look, if only I knew where to find God I would state my case before him, and he would listen! But I can’t find him anywhere, even though I treasured his words more than my daily bread. He remains aloof and unreachable. (23)   I wish that God would indeed set times for judgment. Terrible injustices occur, but God charges no one with wrongdoing. Men prey on the needy and the destitute. They murder, they creep around in adultery. You say that God is bound to bring them low, but he does not. You cannot contradict that. (24)   Bildad: God is a God of order, and of power, and of righteousness! But man? He is a maggot! (25)   Job: How you have helped me! What great wisdom! God is so far above our understanding. How can any of us explain his acts? (26)   As long as I live I will not speak wickedness, and neither will I deny my integrity. Hypocrisy would completely cut me off from God. (27)   You have seen God’s ways, so why do you speak such rubbish. Why do you say that suffering is allotted only to the wicked, that only the children of the wicked die by the sword or go hungry, that it is only the wicked that are blown away? Where can true wisdom be found? You can’t mine it out of the ground, or purchase it with gold. God alone knows where it is, and so He tells man, “Fear the Lord — that is wisdom.” (28)   I long for the days when God’s intimate friendship blessed my house. I was respected in the city. I helped the poor. I rescued orphans. I acted as eyes to the blind, and as feet to the lame. I helped the needy, and broke the fangs of their exploiters. I expected to live peaceful to a ripe old age. But now? Instead of hanging on my every word, they mock me, mere youths! They detest me and spit in my face. (29)   I am frightened. My life ebbs away. Pains gnaw at my bones and God throws me in the mud. Even though I cry out to him he tosses me into the storm. I used to weep for those in trouble, but when it was my turn to hope for good, evil came. (30)   I kept myself from sin because I know God watches my every step. If I am guilty — and if God would weigh me honestly he would know I am not — then indeed let others eat my food. If I am an adulterer then let them take my wife from me; if I have denied any charity then indeed let my body be broken. But how could I have denied justice to others when I know that God is the Judge who formed us all?   If I had trusted in wealth, that would be sin; or if I gloated over my enemy or cursed him; or if I had not shown hospitality; or if I had hidden sin in my heart — whatever it is let my accuser declare it so that I can answer him — or if I had devoured land without payment then, certainly, let briers come up instead of barley. (31)   That’s all I have to say.   [A young man, Elihu, has been listening. After realizing that no one is going to respond to Job, he bursts out]   Elihu: I’m younger than you elders so I kept quiet, but age doesn’t give wisdom, God does. You have utterly failed to answer Job, so now let me speak before I burst! And I can assure you I have no intention of flattering anyone! Job, I ask you to listen to me. I’m a man just like yourself. I heard you claim to be sinless, and accuse God for faulting you. You have no right to say such things. Why do you strive against God? He uses visions and events, even chastenings, to turn a man from his pride, providing a messenger to teach him. And not just once, he will do so again and again. (32)   Listen to me, Job! If you have anything to say, then say it, but otherwise let me teach you wisdom. Listen to me all of you, and let us discern together what is right. Job claims that God denies him justice, and even claims that there is no value in serving God! But it is unthinkable that God would do wrong. It is he who gives men their very breath, and is able to take it away in an instant, however great and noble they are. Would you really condemn God in his justice? He can judge without trial because he watches men even in secret, but whether he punishes or remains silent is for him to decide. Wise men say that Job speaks out of ignorance, and now he adds rebellion to his sin. (33)   Job, you claim that God will clear your name. But at the same time you also imply you get no benefit by avoiding sin! It’s actually the other way around! How can you possibly affect the Great Creator by either your righteousness or your sin? It is only other people who would suffer your wickedness. If God is prepared to close his ears to the cries of the wicked, how much more will he ignore your self-righteous indignation. Job is an ignorant babbler. (34,35)   Bear with me a little longer. There’s more to be said on God’s behalf, and through his inspiration I will speak. Even though God is mighty, he doesn’t despise men, but he does use suffering to turn people from evil. The godless resent this, and refuse to respond. Now that you are laden with the judgment of the wicked, beware of turning to evil as a means of escaping affliction.   [The sky begins to darken with an approaching storm]

  God is the ultimate teacher, with powers and abilities far beyond our understanding. He forms the rain, the clouds, and thunder. Look! See how his lightning flashes around. This is the power he uses to govern the nations! (36)   [Thunder crashes. Elihu shouts to be heard as the noise continues to increase]   Listen to the roar of his voice! It makes my heart pound! God works throughout the whole world; he does great things beyond our understanding. He sends rain and snow, stopping men from their labor, and sending the animals to their dens. He brings clouds both to punish, and to water the earth in love. Listen Job! Stop and consider God’s wonders. Can you match his power? Can you really expect to call him to account? We can’t even stare at the sun in its brightness. (37)   And now! Here is God coming! God who is beyond our reach, and is full of justice and righteousness! This is why men revere him. And in turn he cares for those who are wise in heart.   [The storm is upon them. God speaks from the whirling cloud]

  The Lord: Who is this who darkens my counsel with ignorant words? Brace yourself, Job. I’m calling you to account!   Where were you when I laid the foundation of the earth? Who marked off its dimensions? Surely you know! Who shut up the sea behind doors, and wrapped the sky in clouds? Have you given orders to the morning, or walked on the bed of the sea? Have the gates of death been shown to you, or even the storehouses of hail and snow? But you are so wise! You have lived so many years!

  What about the stars, great Orion and the Bear and other constellations? Can you guide them in season? You can’t even count them! Can you control the clouds and the lightning? Perhaps you feed the lioness or the raven, or maybe you help the mountain goats give birth? Perhaps you know why the ostrich is so foolish, or the horse so strong? Is it your wisdom that allows the hawk to fly and to hunt, or the eagle to soar? You wanted to wrestle with me, Job, so now I want an answer from you. (38,39)   Job: I am unworthy. I cannot answer you.   The Lord: Brace yourself, Job. I want an answer. Would you discredit my justice, or condemn me in order to justify yourself? If you have power like mine then use it. Bring the proud man down! Bury him in the dust with the wicked! If you can do this, then I will admit that you can save yourself.   I made a mighty beast when I made you. His great bones are brass and iron. He exercises dominion over the works of God, demanding tribute from the other beasts. The raging flood is nothing to him. Can anyone take him with hooks, or trap him in a snare? What about it, Job? Can you tie him down? Will he make a lasting covenant with you? Will you make him your plaything when he terrifies you?   It is in my mercy that I allow him to plague mankind, but I limit him, despite all his boasting about his teeth, his armor, his breath setting coals ablaze. The mighty are terrified before him, and neither sword nor spear has any effect on him. He makes the deep sea boil, and he is a beast without fear. With his heaven-confronting eyes, he is king of the proud. (40,41)   Job: I know that you can do all things. No one can oppose you. I did not really understand before. Now that I have seen you I despise myself. I repent in dust and ashes.   [God turns to Eliphaz]   The Lord: Eliphaz, I am furious with you and your two friends because you spoke lies about me. But if you bring sacrifices, my servant Job will pray for you, and I will listen to him and not deal with you according to your foolish ideas.   Narrator: So Job prayed for his friends, and the Lord accepted his prayer. Afterwards, the Lord made Job prosperous again, giving him twice as much as he had before. Everyone who knew him came to him and gave him gifts. He also had seven sons and three beautiful daughters. Job lived long enough to see his great grandchildren. And when he finally died, he was old and full of years. (42) (JL)

Job’s satan

Job’s “satan”: an angel of evil? (but not, of course, a “wicked” angel!):

  • Job’s “satan” comes into the presence of God, and is in conversation with Him, among the “sons of God” (Job 1:6). Elsewhere in Job the sons of God are plainly His angels (Job 38:4-7). True, “sons of God” can refer to human believers (as in 1Jo 3:2), but Job should interpret Job first!
  • Job’s affliction is consistently attributed to God (Job 4:9; 5:17; 6:4; 7:20; 11:6; 19:21; and esp Job 42:11).

Difficulties?

  • Why is an angel of God called “Satan” (or “satan”)? Because this designation well described his actions here — he was Job’s “adversary” (cp also Num 22:22).
  • Isn’t there a wicked or sinful mind behind his words (Job 1:9-11; 2:5)? Answer: The words CAN be read that way, but they do not HAVE to be read that way. Although “angels of God” are immortal, they can be limited both in their personal knowledge and in their personal powers. (Consider Mat 24:36; 1Pe 1:12; Dan 10:13; 8:13; Gen 22:12; 32:24-28; Exo 31:1,7 compared with Exo 23:12). So it is possible to read the words of this angelic “satan” as expressing his assessment of the life of Job… distorted a bit by his own limited knowledge.

I would suggest that in all that this “satan” says of Job there is no sign of wickedness, only limited understanding seeking clarification. He declares his unwillingness to believe that Job’s “righteousness” is anything but self-serving:

“Then Satan answered the LORD, Does Job fear God for nought? Hast thou not put a hedge about him and his house and all that he has, on every side? Thou hast blessed the work of his hands, and his possessions have increased in the land. But put forth thy hand now, and touch all that he has, and he will curse thee to thy face” (Job 1:9-11).

As if to say, ‘All my experience of this race of humans tells me that when they serve God they do so only for selfish reasons. Let us see how he reacts to severe trials.’

And so God gives over to this “angel” the testing of Job:

“Behold, all that he has is in your power; only upon himself do not put forth your hand” (v 12).

Now compare this v 12 with v 21: “The LORD gave, and the LORD has taken away; blessed be the name of the LORD.” Who was it that took away Job’s health, wealth, and family?

And with Job 2:10: “Shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil?”

And also with Job 19:21, where Job says: “Have pity on me, have pity on me, O you my friends, for the hand of God has touched me!” Doesn’t this equate the “satan” with “the hand of God”?

And so, all through Job 2, “Satan” continues to hold out for his own assessment of things, while God agrees to bring more and yet more trial upon Job… until, eventually, it may be assumed, “Satan” is finally satisfied with the integrity of Job.

Is this fair? Is this the way God acts? Of course. The NT is filled with discussions of the trials brought by God on His faithful ones, to perfect or purify their faith.

And from his trials, extreme though they were, Job emerges as a man of tested and perfected faith… a fitting type of the Lord Jesus Christ, who was to come, and who would himself suffer “unfairly” and “unjustly” as a way of showing (to men… and to angels?) the way into the most holy place of the Father.

Also, please note 1Pe 1:6-12:

“In this you rejoice, though now for a little while you may have to suffer various trials, so that the genuineness of your faith, more precious than gold which though perishable is tested by fire, may redound to praise and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ. Without having seen him you love him; though you do not now see him you believe in him and rejoice with unutterable and exalted joy. As the outcome of your faith you obtain the salvation of your souls. The prophets who prophesied of the grace that was to be yours searched and inquired about this salvation; they inquired what person or time was indicated by the Spirit of Christ within them when predicting the sufferings of Christ and the subsequent glory. It was revealed to them that they were serving not themselves but you, in the things which have now been announced to you by those who preached the good news to you through the Holy Spirit sent from heaven, things into which angels long to look.”

In this passage (and, compared with Job) we see:

  • severe trials by which the faith of the believer is purified.
  • the prophets (OT writers?) who saw, faintly perhaps, the sufferings of Christ mirrored in the lives of OT men (like Job?).
  • the sufferings were followed by subsequent glory.
  • … AND… “into these things (sufferings, trials, perfecting of faith, of righteous men who pointed forward to the Messiah) ANGELS LONGED TO LOOK!”

Job, exhortation (GVG)

“I have uttered that I understood not; things too wonderful for me, which I knew not… Wherefore I abhor myse!f, and repent in dust and ashes” (Job 42:3-6).

We are once again reading together the marvelous book of Job. It is the only non-Jewish book of the Bible, and it is in all probability the oldest book of the Bible. Many eminent men — both religious and non-religious — have called it the supreme literary production in all the world’s history. It is, from any point of view, a most remarkable piece of writing.

The place and time

From the names of the characters and their ancestors, and the place names, the location of the story is the area between the Dead Sea and the desert, or somewhat to the north or south of that: the area of the descendants of Abraham other than through Jacob — generally speaking, the Arabs. Job was one of the “Men of the East,” a term applied to the Arabs: Ishmaelites, Edomites, etc. And the time seems most likely to be during the two hundred or so years Israel was in Egypt. All the background and customs and genealogy point to this place and time.

As to how the book of Job got into an otherwise wholly Jewish Bible, there is a strong and ancient Jewish tradition that Moses wrote it, or at least made it part of the Scriptures — by the guidance of the Spirit of course. Moses would have been the logical one to do so. He may well have known Job himself, or Job’s early descendants, during the forty years he was in Midian. Job was the greatest (and therefore best known) of the “Men of the East” (Job 1:3), and Midian would be included in that area. The history of Job would be well-known there.

It is remarkable that the great typical and exemplary patient sufferer of the Old Testament is not a Jew, but rather is of a race which — though closely related — was always, and still is, in deep antagonism to the Jews. He was a Gentile — a non-Jew, that is — of the seed of Abraham, adding to the beauty and fitness of the typical picture.

A non-Jewish model of excellence

Here, in the midst of an otherwise Jewish book, is a perfect model of excellence for all time: a man who is not a Jew, not under the Law, who had nothing to do with the Law, nothing to do with Israel. He is referred to by Ezekiel (Eze 14:14), with Noah and Daniel, as three outstanding examples of righteousness. He is referred to by James (Jam 5:11) as the ultimate example of patient, faithful suffering.

The story opens with the… picture of [sons] of God coming together before Him, and among them [an]… adversary… Orthodoxy represents its Devil as having free access to God’s heaven, and being God’s agent and accomplice. One respectable modern commentary, the “New Bible Commentary,” says concerning this scene that the Devil is a “divine agent,” and is the supreme cynic of the heavenly court.” What a debased, pagan conception of God’s holy dwelling-place! — in perfect harmony with the crude gods and heavens of Greece and Rome, but certainly not with the Scriptures of Truth.

“Doth Job fear God for nought?” He DID: and so must we. Our motive must be love alone, and not self-benefit, though self-benefit will inevitably follow, for goodness can lead only at last to goodness, in a world ruled by the goodness of God. But our motivation must be pure love of God and of goodness.

Why do the righteous suffer?

The great question of the book of Job is: Why do the righteous suffer? And the great lesson is: We must totally and unquestioningly trust God, and have implicit faith in His love, mercy and justice, regardless of any appearances or circumstances. He has a reason and a purpose in the suffering of His people: different reasons at different times, but all working toward their ultimate glorification — often a reason (as here) that would be impossible for man ever to guess without knowing what was in God’s mind.

The sufferings of Christ point to the same problem: Why? We can dimly perceive how he was “made perfect through suffering,” and how his perfect submission to that suffering laid the eternal foundation for the world’s redemption from all suffering.

But, above all, we must unhesitatingly accept the ways of God because He is God; because He manifestly has made all things, and knows the reason for all. He has manifested His infinite power and wisdom in all the beauties and glories of Creation. He proclaims His love and justice in His Word. He overwhelmingly manifests His divinity in that Word.

We must accept the whole picture, or reject the whole picture. To reject it in the light of its overpowering evidence is stupidity. To question God’s ways in the light of His overpowering greatness is obviously equal stupidity. This is the lesson of Job. The final outcome manifested God’s wisdom and love and compassion. We must have implicit trust that it always will if we do our part faithfully.

It was a high honor and privilege for Job to be used by God to demonstrate for all ages what true righteousness and faith really is, and to give an example of patient integrity in the face of what appeared to everyone, including Job himself, a deliberate divine effort to afflict and torment him to the uttermost.

Job and Christ: striking parallels

We see throughout, a very striking, broad parallel between Job and Christ, although there are necessarily differences and contrasts.

Both were the outstandingly righteous men of their age.

Both suffered more intensely and grievously than is recorded of any other man. Christ suffered more greatly, and more extendedly, for he lived his whole life in the shadow of the inevitable cross, under the constant burden of required perfection, or all Creation would have been betrayed. And in his deep and superhuman empathy, he suffered all the sufferings of his people of all ages. Infinitely more even than Paul he could say: “Who is weak, and I am not weak? Who is offended, and I burn not?” He was pre-eminently a Man of Sorrows (Isa 53:3), though at the same time a Man of incomparable Joy (Joh 15:11; 17:13).

With both, God knew from the beginning that they would hold fast to the end, regardless of the intensity of the trial: and God built His purpose upon that assurance. What a glorious role for men to play! If Job had failed… God would have been put to shame; His whole dispensation of love exposed as mere self-serving.

Both were reduced in shame from the highest position to the lowest, though in different ways. Christ, as the only begotten Son of God, was the potential heir of the universe. As Paul explains to the Philippians (Phi 2:6-8), Jesus — though finding himself the one special man above all men, even the “Fellow” of God (Zec 13:7), entitled to the homage of the angels (Heb 1) — nevertheless humbled himself, and accepted the position of a slave, even to the most ignominious of deaths.

Both were utterly despised and rejected. Both were assumed by their own people and generation to be under the special curse of God, at the very time they were suffering for the sake of others. For we must recognize that Job’s sufferings went far beyond himself, and were for universal instruction and comfort and guidance. It was not an aimless wager, when God staked all on Job’s integrity, but an essential manifestation of the noble, vital, spiritual principle of faithful integrity for its own sake alone, under the most extreme of testings: the key to salvation. We must do good simply because we love the good and hate the evil.

Made perfect by suffering

Both were “made perfect by suffering.” This is a deep and important aspect in both cases. Christ, though of unblemished righteousness, was not “perfect” until he had, in loving and all-trusting obedience, passed through the required suffering and sacrificial death.

Job was the most righteous man of his day: a giant of faith and endurance — “perfect and upright,” “none like him in all the earth,” according to the testimony of God Himself (Job 1:8). Still, Job has something to learn, something in which to be developed and brought to beautiful fruition, as he at last freely and humbly confesses (Job 40:4; 42:6).

Unquestionably, Job was a better, wiser, greater, more understanding man, much closer to God, after his terrible trial than before. And he had attained to a far higher position in the Divine Purpose and Manifestation. As a prosperous and honored sheik, he never would have fully known God. He never would have become an inspiration and example for all ages. He never would have been granted the unique and inestimable privilege of the direct Divine revelation he received.

God’s unique self-manifestation to Job

Was ever a man the subject of so full and personal and searching a Divine address to himself? God did not deign to explain, for that would have been utterly inappropriate, and would not have accomplished the desired result. We must first accept God and all His ways fully and unquestioningly, before we can hope for any explanation of their mysteries.

But God condescended to take the time and trouble to fully and in detail manifest Himself and His majesty to Job, as He did to none other we know of but Christ himself. God’s address to Job is unique in all Scripture.

Job at last received that which he had so passionately pleaded for: a direct divine manifestation. It would be well worth all the scorn and abuse and terrible suffering he had endured. Indeed, its value and power would be greatly heightened by that dark background. What a joyful, glorious, inspiring, comforting memory for the last one hundred and forty years of his life! — a life which he thought was already over. How much closer he would now be to God for that long period of recompense for his trials! How much more at peace — for there are hints that for all his religious efforts and prosperity, he was not before truly at peace. In the anguish of his suffering, he makes such revelations as this:

“That which I GREATLY FEARED is come upon me” (Job 3:25).

But never again would he fear anything. Now his peace was deep and strong. The ordeal was dreadful, but we see its wholesome benefits.

Job’s crushing avalanche of affliction

Job’s afflictions were many and cumulative. They would quickly have destroyed a lesser man. In evaluating Job and what he at times says, we must strive to comprehend the almost incomprehensible extent to which he was tortured and tried in so many ways at once.

First, he lost all his possessions and livelihood. In swift succession, calamity upon calamity fell crushingly upon him. And with it, he lost his whole family of ten beloved children in what was obviously a direct divine blow, unexplained and unprovoked: his cherished family for which he had constantly prayed and offered sacrifice.

His reaction was perfect, unhesitating, total acceptance and worship —

“The Lord gave, the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord.”

Then, in seeming heartless response by God to this loving and godly reaction, he was smitten from head to foot — again obviously by the hand of God — with the most painful, loathsome and abhorred disease known to man, inevitably fatal in terrible suffering in the natural course of events: a particularly repulsive form of consuming, deforming leprosy, universally regarded as a manifestation of God’s especial wrath.

Then his wife turned against him — and all his friends and acquaintances. And he found himself a universally abandoned pariah, cast out of the city, consigned to the refuse heap to die a lingering death: the butt of ridicule and abuse by the vilest class of the people, who tormented him for their depraved amusement.

Job was totally rejected, and driven “without the gate” by those who considered themselves the “Holy City.”

In the raw meanness of ordinary human nature, everyone was gratified to see this mighty man, this presumed paragon of righteousness, crushed and humbled in the mire, and eager to add their own miserable quota to his overflowing misery. They spit in his face, he says. Exactly the same thing is said of Christ (Mat 26:67): the deepest degradation and insult. “Crucify him! Crucify him! He pretended to be so good!” It was his very God-attested goodness that so enraged the blind evil fury of the flesh against him.

The friends come

And so time dragged on wearily, with Job lying in misery in the ashes (Job 2:8) (the Septuagint says “dung-heap,” which is probably the meaning), until his three special friends heard of his calamities, and assembled to comfort him. They were so struck with his misery and dreadful appearance that they sat around him in silence for seven days. Then, when he repeatedly implored their comfort and sympathy, they more and more heatedly condemned him and accused him of the vilest crimes and hypocrisies.

This is the background against which we must consider him. Truly, like Moses, under tremendous stress he “spake unadvisedly with his lips.”

Job is throughout wrestling tremendously with this problem. Upon the shame and misery of his condition is heaped the smug and self-righteous condemnation of his closest friends. His friends’ rejection aroused an over-reaction in what he said, but threw him more and more on God. He had sought their support and sympathy against the hand of God. They railed on him, thinking they were thereby earning God’s favor. This added to his bitterness, but it showed him there was nowhere to turn for comfort and understanding but to God Himself.

The friends’ condemnation was an essential part of the trial, and of the final result. Though it added immeasurably to his grief, it was probably more helpful to him (in a way opposite what they intended) than their sympathy would have been.

Job’s greatest agony: God’s seeming rejection

All forsook him in his extremity. But his greatest agony was not in his sufferings, nor in his rejection by all mankind, but God’s apparent rejection and forsaking and enmity. Again and again he implores God for but one word of hope or comfort or recognition, but is met with total silence, and increased oppression. Even when he seeks brief, exhausted surcease in sleep, he is terrified with awful dreams (Job 7:14).

To judge what he says, we must consider all he said, and the order in which he said it; just as we must consider the whole of Psa 22, and not just the first few words from it that Christ quoted on the cross. It is all too easy to get his cries of anguish out of proportion, as if they were the studied and final conclusions reached coolly and theoretically in ease and comfort.

The fundamental fact is that Job held fast his trust in God, and would not deviate from his dedication to righteousness (which has no meaning outside of faith in God); and he was confident throughout of final resurrection, and of God’s open manifestation to him at last.

There is no more triumphant victory of faith than is expressed in his memorable words, wrung from him In the depth of present despair —

“Though he slay me, yet will I trust him… He also shall be my salvation!”

“If a man die, shall he live again? All the days of my appointed time will I wait, till my change come. Thou shalt call, and I will answer Thee. Thou wilt have a desire (kasaph: longing) to the work of Thine hands.”

“I KNOW that my redeemer liveth, and that He shall stand at the latter day UPON THE EARTH… Whom I shall see for myself, and mine eyes shall behold” (Job 13:15-16; 14:14-15; 19:25-27).

Why such dreadful affliction?

His complaints are not against God’s overall justice, but against His seeming injustice in the affairs of this life — especially that one who tried so hard to obey should be picked out for the most terrible of afflictions, while all men gloated, and the wicked were at ease. Job knew that at last all would be righted, but why this special, dreadful, unprovoked affliction of a righteous and faithful man?

The friends fall silent. Job restates his case at length (Job 26-31) with great power and beauty: conceding that the wicked are finally punished; conceding God’s infinite might and understanding; conceding that man’s whole wisdom is to fear God and depart from evil — but again long and stoutly declaring his own righteousness, and crying for the opportunity of debating his case with God, confident of victory.

Then a new figure enters, the young Elihu, who prepares Job for the final revelation from God. He introduces the idea that suffering is not only for punishment, as the friends contended, but has many uses in the love and wisdom of God: constructive loving discipline, directional chastisement of a Father, strengthening by training and rigor, manifestation and deepening of faith, purification — especially purification, making perfect. Suffering can and must lead to fuller understanding, and thus be a blessing. Job makes no attempt to answer Elihu.

God speaks

Then God speaks. It is notable that Job was given just what he asked: an opportunity to stand up to God and argue with Him, to show Him how He must be mistaken. But how swiftly Job’s bold self-assurance fled before the mighty manifestation of God’s infinite wisdom and power!

That God should deign to speak to man at all — especially to one calling His ways in question — is a tremendous condescension in itself, a tremendous and unique honor, and manifestation of love for Job.

As God spoke of the endless marvels of His Creation, Job shrank to nothing. Crushed in shame, he learned to rest totally and unreservedly in God, devastated by the sudden realization of the stupidity and presumption of daring to challenge God and question His ways.

When God brought Job to the comfort and peace of unquestioning love and trust, He thereby solved all Job’s problems, even before He removed Job’s afflictions. Their removal came later, after Job had waived all his complaints, and prostrated himself in loving worship.

God banished Job’s questions, not by answering them, but by totally removing them from his concern. Job was wholly satisfied that whatever God did must be right, and must be rooted in love and wisdom.

God’s answer was to give no answer, but to manifest a God so great that no answer was needed. To need an explanation and justification of anything God does is to have a degraded and unacceptable conception of God. He is infinitely above all question and accountability.

Man dare not question God

Job was faithful and righteous above all his contemporaries, and completely, actively dedicated to good works, and to service to God and man. He demonstrated his firm and unshakable endurance, and that he unselfishly loved goodness for goodness’ sake alone. But he did not have the necessary total self-abasing humility and recognition of self-nothingness until he was crushed by the divine revelation. The learning of this was the supreme blessing of his entire experience.

The whole lesson of God’s self-manifestation to Job is the limitless greatness of God, and the utter littleness of man. If God had stooped to explain Himself to Job before totally humbling him in the recognition of his nothingness, then God would have been conceding man’s right to judge God and demand an answer for His ways. And man must be made to realize that he just does not have this right. It is absurd and unthinkable that puny little ignorant created man should for one moment question God, Who effortlessly maintains the numberless stars and galaxies in their myriad courses throughout the universe. What is weak, brief-lived, earth-crawling man to question his Creator?

But when Job humbled himself, and cast away all self-importance, God graciously went much further to set Job’s mind at perfect rest, and doubly compensated him for all his faithfully-borne suffering and shame. He totally vindicated and honored him before his self-righteous friends, and gave Job the joyful, forgiving privilege of being their mediator.

Restoration

And then He justified Job before his whole community, and made him twice as rich as he had been before. After what Job had bitterly learned of the fickle respect and fellowship of men (who fled when he needed them, and came back shamelessly seeking his favor when he was restored), and had gloriously learned of the companionship of God, the riches and honor would mean little to him, except as an even greater opportunity to resume his former course of goodness and guidance and charity to others, succoring the needy and defending the oppressed.

Some have felt that the restoration of the temporal riches and honor detracts from the spiritual force of the story, which is otherwise played out on a wholly spiritual plane. Such think incorrectly, again unwisely judging God’s ways. It was fitting and necessary — for the instruction of all Job’s associates, and all since — to complete the picture by the double restoration of all he had lost.

And it brings the closing picture fully into harmony with the antitype. Job, in well-deserved riches and honor — after passing triumphantly through all his trials for the inspirational and instructional benefit of the race — rejoiced to see his sons and his sons’ sons, in peace and prosperity.

So Christ, in eternal riches and honor, shall see his redeemed Seed: a holy, perfected “generation of the race” —

“HE SHALL SEE OF THE TRAVAIL OF HIS SOUL, AND BE SATISFIED.”

“How unsearchable are God’s judgments and His ways past finding out!”

(GVG)