We do not agree brother. Many of us suffer without cause. It is par for the course as a follower, as evidenced by the many martyrs throughout history. Perhaps what is most hurtful however, is to be misunderstood in the midst of that suffering. That is a specially cutting kind of pain and deals a more deadly blow than the enemy's blows combined. It is in those moments that one feels the most alone (even as Jesus Himself felt it, as He hung on the cross asking why His God had forsaken Him)
Suffering is misunderstood by many, but it is especially wounding when it is so misunderstood by a fellow believer.
Thoughts on Job.
The more i read about Job, the more he, and other men of God become endearing to me and I can get a better picture of their actual journey with God. I see, in their obedience, in each step they take, glimpses of God rejoicing over them with singing. I also see the necessity of prayer for each other, and for those out in the trenches risking ev'rything for the God they love. And getting back to Job.....recently i have heard several preachers and teachers pick him apart, immune it seems to the horror he was experiencing, and "in the dark" about it, without a shred of indication why it was happening. Yet, he NEVER cursed God, nor rejected Him nor turned his back on God. He never sinned during any of it. he merely, in his agonies, questioned why God allowed all of this to assault him in too many ways to count. He KNEW that God controlled EVERYTHING. He was questioning the One Who was able to control all that was continually coming against him.
My question to the preachers and teachers who pick apart Job is, "what would you do if you were in Job's place.?"
As a believer, we learn...to ALWAYS pray for our brothers and sisters, especially in their troubles, suffering, sickness. And if one has ever suffered, and/or been in the fiery furnace of affliction, one NEVER wishes suffering or hardship or inexplicable, inconsolable pain on another, including our enemies. We never ever put the sufferer under a microscope and pick them to pieces. Compassion comes into play, and a mooooving of one's heart and mind and spirit on their behalf.
We are the "Body" of Christ. Jesus Christ meant it when He defined us as the bonafide Body of Christ. We cannot be "disconnected" from a brother or sister going through inexplicable agonies. Job wasn't able to explain why this was happening. So his friends filled in the blanks with accusations, badgering Job in the midst of his travails of unbelieveable suffering, to admit his sins. Not ONE of them put theirself in Job's place or even offered "prayer" or any consolation or response that meant Job well. It reminds me of a phrase i heard a while back (or was it a book?) It was called "Why Do Christians Shoot Their Wounded?".
Job's wife and his friends were hard hearted, leaving him in even more misery in the ashes and dust. Not one of them put theirself in his place. Not one of them prayed for him.
What is so wounding is that Job's friends and his wife pierced him at his lowest and added misery upon misery. THAT is not of God. And THAT is the piece that is sorely missing here. And THAT is one of the pieces, the "keys" to understanding Job, the Book of Job, and God's mind and heart in all of this.
Furnace of Affliction.
"Behold, I have refined thee, but not with silver; I have chosen thee in the furnace of affliction." ~Isaiah 48:10
EXPOSITION BY C. H. SPURGEON:
JOB 23; 24.
Always remember, dear Friends, that one of the great lessons of the Book of Job is this—that we may never judge a
man’s character by his condition. The best of men may have the most of suffering and of poverty, while the worst of men
may prosper in everything. Do not imagine because a man suddenly becomes very poor or a great sufferer, that therefore
he must be a great sinner—otherwise, you will often condemn the innocent, and you will, at the same time, be guilty of
flattering the wicked. Job’s friends had cruelly told him that he must be a hypocrite, or else he would not have lost his
property and have been smitten with such a remarkable sickness. So he appeals to God against their unrighteous judgment.
Job 23:1, 2. Then Job answered and said, Even today is my complaint bitter: my stroke is heavier than my groaning.
“Although my groaning is heavy, yet it is not so burdensome as my griefs might warrant.”
3. Oh that I knew where I might find Him! That I might come even to His seat! “To His Judgment Seat, that I might
plead my cause and vindicate my character even there.”
4-6. I would order my cause before Him, and fill my mouth with arguments. I would know the words which He
would answer me, and understand what He would say unto me. Will He plead against me with His great power? “Being
the great God, will He silence me by a display of His Omnipotence? Oh, no! He is too just to do that.”
http://www.spurgeongems.org/vols46-48/chs2732.pdf
Job 23:3-Evening-Spurgeon - YouTube