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WORDS OF HOPE
Today’s reading is from the Book of Job, that Hebrew Scripture epic poem of suffering, bad advice, and the true nature of God. As you will remember, Job has lost everything dear to him, both material and personal. For most of the Book, he sits in complete despair receiving judgmental advice from some know-it-all “friends” who eloquently explore every reason imaginable about why Job’s inconceivable misfortune is all his fault.
I have had a few friends like that. Have you? -People who seem to take actual pleasure in reciting an inventory of the failures of others; their bad judgements, their acts of thoughtlessness, their repeated habits of showing up late, of forgetting special events, their apathy, their selfishness; whatever fatal flaws that contributed to their current misfortunes.
Often the friends even conclude that our habitual bad behavior has resulted in some sort of judgment and punishment from a frustrated God. We are just plain no good.
Though the Book of Job doesn’t delve into the details of the personalities of his “friends”, I imagine that they were not too different from our judgmental acquaintances today. Usually, people who can easily and immediately list our every fault are projecting on us a list of their own deficiencies. The satisfaction that they receive is an imagined relief from the burdens of the nagging memories of personal failures, especially the ones they have carefully hidden even from themselves.
Today’s reader of this ancient Book is tempted to put it down about halfway through the first friend’s condemnations, but because of the iconic patience of Job, we hear all of them. Finally, God talks directly to Job toward the epic’s end, assuring him that all the bad stuff we must endure are not owed to check marks on the divine judgement list. They just happen. Sometimes terrible or unexpected events for which there are never logical explanations enter our lives.
One thing these occurrences do have in common however is that none of them are beyond the empathy and assurance of the eternal presence of our Holy Comforter. Remembering that truth is not easy sometimes. It takes a lot of faith, but almost always, it takes patience.
PRAYER
Thank you for your patience with each of us, for never forsaking us, and for those in our lives we can assuredly call our friends; the ones on whose honest words we can depend, and whose advice can help us grow.
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Dan Peeler
Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
Cathedral of Hope
Proclaiming Christ Through Faith, Hope and Love
5910 Cedar Springs Road | Dallas, TX | 75235
214-351-1901
info@cathedralofhope.com