THE SEDUCTION OF JOB: Twenty Years Later
A Dramatic Poem
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Job accepts suffering as God's will.
ELIPHAZ:
My dear
Job, again on trial and in suffering‑‑
Elihu told
me the story of your affliction
And how
the king's verdict holds you in silent agony.
I came
to counsel you, not to condemn,
For I
know many men, high and low,
Here in
Uz and elsewhere on earth,
Who
wallow in sin much greater than yours‑‑
Avarice,
debauchery, cruelty, corruption, murder‑‑
Who go
unpunished; no, even prosper for all that.
Your
trial is out of proportion, it seems,
With
the sin that you have committed,
At
worst a man's indiscretion that passes
And is
resolved between the man and his spouse.
Why,
then, accept the king's decision without a fight?
JOB:
Eliphaz, my friend, time has changed
our views.
Granted,
some sins bigger than mine go unpunished.
But
what has that got to do with me and my sin?
I stand
trial to receive my own retribution
For the
sins of my whole life: pride and
arrogance,
As well
as those committed against the king's law
And the
women of innocence and goodness,
Causing
them their unspeakable sorrow and lamentation.
Other
sins you mentioned are perhaps greater,
But
does God go by our human standards
In
judging the merit and punishment of man?
ELIPHAZ:
You
speak of the maid in unflinching terms
Whereas
she is the cause of your present misery.
Who is
she and why is she bent on your destruction?
JOB:
Say
anything you will about Bashana,
But she
is an angel in disguise to me,
With
the message of my sinning ways,
Committed
and accumulated long before she came,
To
which I was blind in my own self‑assurance
and in
public adulation and in my considerable wealth.
How
else could I have recognized my follies,
Continually
basking in my falsehood?
Without
her wreaking havoc in my complacency,
How
else could I know God's ways with man,
The
sweetness of His grace given to prayers
In the
darkest hour of affliction?
What
could she be but an angel in disguise?
Besides,
the blame is all mine to bear,
For
youth and ignorance were her companions
And she
only sought wisdom and piety from me.
I was
her master, was I not?
I was
her mentor, was I not?
Were
age and knowledge not on my side?
I stand
accused in the king's court,
But the
king is a mere instrument
That
delivers the message of God's judgment.
ELIPHAZ:
But why
such severe suffering for a penitent,
The
torment of your soul being greater than your sin?
JOB:
Eliphaz,
you did not see what I saw.
In the
agony of the two women,
I
tasted the full terror of God's wrath
And my
heart shook in profound fear of Him.
The
terror and fear were so great upon me,
My
whole being broke down in sheer trepidation,
And I
prayed for His grace and forgiveness.
Why
does God withhold punishment from greater sins?
God
punishes those He truly loves--does He not?--
So that
through our suffering we are redeemed.
In the
mysterious way He does His heavenly work
Some
are favored by His grace and some are not.
But to
lift us up from our own follies
He
reserves the severest measure of atonement
For
those He favors the most, does He not?
How
does a sinner know his sinning ways
Unless
he suffers, and suffers terribly?
In the
great pain of my tortured soul,
I asked
to be relieved of the pain and sorrow,
But the
Almighty refused to grant it;
And
when He ignored my desperate plea
I knew
in my heart that He heard me,
Because
it was in my unremitting agony
That I
found my relief from terror and fear.
It was
His refusal to grant me the deliverance
That
drew me closer to His grace and mercy.
I found
Him when He rejected me;
And I
was saved when He punished me.
My dear
Eliphaz, how sweet is penance‑‑
Why cry
to heaven for relief when you have sinned,
And
demand justice when you are guilty.
Must we
not hear ourselves before God hears us?
-- William Blake
’Elipaz, ("El [God] is pure gold") was a Temanite; Teman was an important city of Edom; the Edomites were renowned for their wisdom. According to the updated final verse of “The Book of Job” in the Septuagint, he was the king of the Thaemanites and “of the children of Esau,” therefore one of Job’s close relatives. (Esau’s son was the father of Theman.) At first he praised Job: "Behold you have admonished many, and you have strengthened weak hands. Your words have helped the tottering to stand, and you have strengthened feeble knees. But now it has come to you, and you are impatient; it touches you, and you are dismayed. Is not your fear of God your confidence, and the integrity of your ways your hope?" But he argued that those who are truly good are never entirely forsaken by God, though the punishment may justly be inflicted for secret sins, and that the wicked may escape punishment because God is so distant he cannot see everythig. "Can mankind be just before God? Can a man be pure before his Maker? He puts no trust even in His servants; And against His angels He charges error. How much more those who dwell in houses of clay." He denied that anyone is innocent and censured Job for asserting his freedom from guilt. However, later he accused Job of oppressing widows and orphans. Elihu, on the other hand, observed that the innocent can indeed suffer. In the “Testament of Job,” however, Elihu turned against Job, “For from the beginning did I continue crying over him, remembering his former happiness. But now he speaks boastfully and in overbearing pride he says that he has his throne in the heavens.” In the end God told Eliphaz that he had sinned “in that ye have not spoken the truth concerning my servant Job. Therefore rise up and make him bring a sin-offering for you in order that your sins may be forgiven; for were it not for him, I would have destroyed you.” Then God forgave Eliphaz but not Elihu. Eliphaz responded with a hymn: "Taken off is the sin and our injustice gone; but Elihu, the evil one, shall have no remembrance among the living; his luminary is extinguished and has lost its light. The glory of his lamp will announce itself for him, for he is the son of darkness and not of light. The doorkeepers of the place of darkness shall give him their glory and beauty as share; His Kingdom hath vanished, his throne hath moldered, and the honor of his stature is in (Sheol) Hades…. For he did not own himself unto the Lord nor did he fear him, but he hated those whom He hath chosen. Thus God forgot him, and ‘the holy ones’ forsook him, his wrath and anger shall be unto him desolation and he will have no mercy in his heart nor peace, because he had the venom of an adder on his tongue. Righteous is the Lord, and His judgments are true, with him there is no preference of person, for He judgeth all alike. Behold, the Lord cometh! Behold, the ‘holy ones’ have been prepared: The crowns and the prizes of the victors precede them! Let the saints rejoice, and let their hearts exult in gladness; for they shall receive the glory which is in store for them. Our sins are forgiven, our injustice has been cleansed, but Elihu hath no remembrance among the living."
ReplyDelete