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We
need air to breath, food to eat, water to drink.
We also need encouragement because encouragement
is food for our souls. Without encouragement,
we are like a leaf that has fallen off the tree,
dried up and is blown away.
God knows we need encouragement
and in 2 Cor.1:3 the Father is called the God
of all encouragement.
In 2 Thess. 2:16 Jesus gives
us everlasting encouragement.
And the Holy Spirit is so
closely ID’s with encouragement that 1
of His names is “the encourager”.
In this message, I want to
show you something about encouragement for the
book of Job. First I want to show you how not
to encourage, and then everything after that
will be positive. There is no better place for
us to turn on the subject of “How Not
to Encourage” than in Job 2:11. Job was
a real person who had the worst week any man
has ever had. If you think you’ve had
a bad week, then in the next few moments you
are going to feel a whole lot better because
when you put whatever kind of week you had up
against the week Job had, you will realize you
didn’t have a bad week at all.
The first chapter of Job
tells the story about how it all began. Job
was a righteous and an upright man. One day
Satan was in the presence of God and God said,
“Have you heard of my servant Job? There
is nobody like him in all the earth, he is upright
and he shuns evil.
And Satan said: “Well,
God, that’s understandable, I mean, you
have put a wall of protection around Job. You
have given him all the good things that he has.
Anybody would be upright, and good, and upstanding,
and shun evil if they had everything Job has.”
The thing we should understand
here is that God allowed this not to tempt Job
to do wrong, but to show Satan and to show us
that you can take the worst hits that live can
hit you with and still keep your integrity.
And so, as you know, Satan
went out to touch Job. If you want to read all
about it you can, but let me summarize what
happened. In one day Job lost everything. One
after another, 4 frightened messengers reported
to Job that 500 ox, 500 donkeys, and 3000 camels
were stolen in a raid by enemies. 7000 sheep
were struck by lightening. All 10 of his children…
7 sons and 3 daughters… were killed when
a windstorm blew over a house they were in.
And if you read the story
in Job 1:13 to 20, you will see it happened
suddenly… all on the same day.
Satan was watching
to say, “now he has lost everything, he’s
surely going to curse God and deny his faith”.
If you want to see what happened, read the end
of the 1st chapter, verse 21. “Job arose
and tore his robe, shaved his head, and he fell
to the ground and
He
Worshipped:
He said, “The Lord gives
and the Lord takes away, blessed be the name of
the Lord.” In all this Job did not sin or
charge God with wrong.
Well, Satan came back and said,
“Well, God, let me tell you - I understand
that Job did not give in when everything was lost.
But I need to tell you something God - if you
start touching his physical body, he will deny
you. So God said, “Alright Satan, you can
do everything you want to, to him but you can
not kill him.”
How many of you have been so
sick that you thought you were going to die, and
then you were afraid you wouldn’t? Isn’t
that awful? I’ll tell you something, I don’t
know how sick you have ever been, but you’ve
never been as sick as Job!
I went through all the book
of Job and wrote down all his physical ailments.
Listen to this… the symptoms were like this:
- Severe itching
- Can not sleep
- Running sores and scabs
- Boils over entire body.
- Nightmares… bad dreams
- Weight loss
- His wife said he had bed breath
- Chills and fever
- Diarrhea
- Blackened skin that fell off of his body.
As we shall see, Job was in
such a bad way that when his 3 best friends came
to visit they did not recognize him… and
then there was his wife - I don’t want to
put any thoughts in Job’s mind, but he must
have wondered that when that house blew down why
she was not in it. Because she was not any help
to him. In the 2nd chapter, verse 10, she said,
“Do you still hold onto your integrity?
Why don’t you just curse God and die?”
He said to her, “You
speak like a foolish, Godless woman, shall we
just accept good from God and not accept problems?
“ Through all this Job did not sin with
his lips”.
We see that Job was in such
misery that he went out to the city dump, where
garbage is sent and where the dead bodies of poor
people are thrown away. He has a piece of pottery,
or glass, in his hand and he is scraping his body
to try to relieve the itching. Here he sits out
in the dump and 3 of his friends find out he is
suffering. I want to tell you before we see all
the things they did wrong, they did some things
right. Their names were Elephaz, Zofar, and Bildad.
They had decided to come to encourage him. When
they saw him they wept.
They sat with him for 7 days
and 7 nights without speaking a word, for they
saw that his grief was too great for words.
So let’s give these 3
men credit for coming to visit Job. It’s
easy to feel bad for someone, but it takes effort
to come to them and visit. They also had compassion
for him, because they wept.
I am beginning to understand
that there is no better medicine for a person’s
wounds than the tears that come from your own
eyes.
And they identified with Job
in his misery - they went out and sat in the dump
with him. The smartest thing they did was they
did not say a word for 7 days and 7 nights. They
sat there with Job.
But later when they talked,
they did a lot of damage. So we can learn from
the few things they did right, but they started
doing things wrong in a big way.
The 3 men supposedly came to
encourage Job and they have it sorted out by the
time they get there. 1st of all, let me tell you
they were terrible encouragers. In chapter 16,
Job says they were “miserable” encouragers,
full of hot wind.
How many of you have ever had
a meeting with Elephaz, Zofar, or Bildad? Let’s
meet them one at a time.
ELEPHAZ. He bases all his comments
on his own observations. Over and over again he
says, “I have seen, I have seen” do
you get the picture? “Now, Job, here is
what I have learned.” He comes up with his
analysis of what is wrong with Job. Look at 4:7,
this is what Elephaz says to Job who has lost
everything, is sitting in the garbage dump, and
is near death. You can read this later, but what
Elephaz is saying is “Job, nobody who is
upright ever goes through trouble like this -
God never punishes a righteous person. So, Job,
what have you done that is so bad that you deserve
this?’
One of the things that is very
painful to people who are in trouble is the false
guilt put on them by well-meaning Christians.
Remember that Job was not going through this because
he was bad, he was going through this because
he was GOOD! In fact, he was the good person in
the whole world. So we know from this situation
that Elephaz was totally wrong in his evaluation
of Job.
Job must not have felt encouraged
by these words from Elephaz.
Next, here comes Bildad. His
little speech is over in the 8th chapter, verse
20. “Job, you are in this mess because of
your sins”. He even says in verse 4 that
Job’s sons were killed because they were
big sinners. Can you believe this guy, Bildad?
Do you call that encouragement? I don’t
think so.
Well, Bildad heaves and here comes Zofar. He is
an interesting study and your Pastor can go into
all the scriptures about him at some other time.
He is like the young preacher that has never preached
a sermon in his life, but has all the answers.
He is the youngest of the 3
visitors and has a habit of starting everything
he says with a little phrase.
“Know this” | Isn’t
that annoying? | “Know this, Job”.
You almost don’t want
to hear what else he says because this is such
a discouraging way to start.
Now, Zofar goes on to say the
most discouraging thing anyone can ever say. He
says to Job, “God is punishing you far less
than you deserve”. “Job, if you are
hurting now, just think how bad it would be if
you got what you deserve.”
Now remember, Job has lost
everything. His life is in ruins. He has nothing
left and Zofar says he deserves worse punishment,
so he should not be angry.
These 3 visitors should have
known better. They should have known that what
they were saying could not possible be right.
But Job had to sit there and take it.
I pray, “God, please
keep the Eliphaz's, the Zofar’s, and the
Bildad's away from me if I ever have a Job day.”
What is there to learn
from this story that will help us be encouragers?
Here are 4 things you can write in your heart
that you can learn from what these men did.
They responded with
words only, and did not understand Job’s
pain.
What
we are to people is often more important
than what we say. For example, they sat
with Job quietly for 7 days and 7 nights.
This was a good thing.
Joseph
Bailey lost 3 of his sons to death. In one
of his books he says this:
“I
was sitting torn by grief when someone came
and talked to me about God’s dealings,
of why it happened, of hope beyond the grave.
Hew said things I knew were true. I only
wished he would go away… He finally
did. Another person came. He just sat beside
me for an hour; listened when I said something;
answered briefly; prayed simply; and left.
I was encouraged and I hated to see him
go.”
Encouragement
is not so much what we say, but our willingness
to be there in the moment of pain and hear
the hurt in the life.
The 2nd mistake
they made was they refused to recognize
suffering as a part of God’s plan
for Job.
That thought really opened my eyes and deserves
more discussion than we have time for now.
Nowhere do these 3 men see that God has
a good, and positive, and perfecting plan
for Job that included difficulty. They believed
there could be no Godly purpose in suffering
and pain. But God was at work in Job’s
life and He had a purpose in it. It was
a good purpose and a good plan. In the end
Job is a much better man than he was at
the beginning. God was perfecting him.
We see
that Christians do suffer, they do hurt,
they do cry and they do grieve. Sometimes
there is a contest between good and evil
that is centered in someone’s life.
Much of the Bible is devoted to encouraging
believers who are suffering and are in some
kind of pain. The most important thing for
the person who is suffering is to know that
God is in their situation with them.
Isn’t
it true that most of our prayers are for
release from the pain instead of saying,
“God, show me what you are doing in
this situation and help me to be an encouragement
to this person as they are going through
it.” Be careful when you think you
know what God is doing, none of us can possibly
know that.
They related
all suffering to sin in Job’s life.
Let me say this more
clearly. All suffering is due to sin. There
would not be any suffering if Adam had not
done what he did in the garden. But, get
this, not all suffering in a person’s
life is due to one particular sin that they
did.
Elephaz, Zofar, and Bildad
assumed that Job’s suffering was a
direct result of some particular sin in
his life… Not true.
They used
over-simplified, packaged answers that did
not fit Job’s situation.
I have come to understand
that every person’s suffering is unique
to them, and that there is NO POSSIBLE WAY
that I can know how they are feeling.
I can tell them that
I care for them in their time of pain and
I can sit with them and pray with them.
When I had my leg operation last year. I
thought if there was even 1 more person
who came up to me and said, “I know
how you are feeling, and I know what you
are going through”… if one more
person said that to me I would scream!
What does this
story teach us?
Sit
with your friends in their times of trouble.
Pray with them.
Listen to them.
Bring them food and water if they need it.
You can ask them if they want you to read
the Bible to them.
Only read it if they want you to.
Show them that you care for them.
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