Job’s
Loss:
There was once a man in
the land of Uz whose name was Job. That man was blameless and upright, one who
feared God and turned away from evil. There were born to him seven sons
and three daughters. He had seven thousand sheep, three thousand camels, five
hundred yoke of oxen, five hundred donkeys, and very many servants; so that
this man was the greatest of all the people of the east. His sons used to go
and hold feasts in one another's houses in turn; and they would send and invite
their three sisters to eat and drink with them. And when the feast days had run
their course, Job would rise early in the morning and offer burnt offerings for
each of his children, to sanctify them, thinking, “Maybe one of them have
sinned, and cursed God in their hearts.” That is what Job always did. (Jb
1:1-5)
I’m not thinking of “blameless and upright”, nor the “three
thousand camels”; but rather, all those feasts, barbecues, parties that Job
enjoyed, or mostly enjoyed, gathered, from time to time, at each one of his children’s homes. I
thought of it last night. It was towards the end of the barbecue, while
darkness began to set in, at one our children’s homes. I was ready to go. The
last few weeks, with our children and children’s children coming home for a few
days or weeks as schedules allowed, had warn me out. I was partied out and
ready to go home and go to bed. But Linda wanted to stay, “Can’t we stay awhile
longer, I love this.” It’s the “I love this”, that caused me to think of Job,
and Job’s loss.
“When the feast days had run their course, Job would
rise early in the morning and offer burnt offerings for each of his children,
to sanctify them, thinking, ‘Maybe one of them have sinned, and cursed God in
their hearts.’ That is what Job always did” (Jb 1:5).
You can’t have that much partying without the need for some cleansing,
sanctifying―some atonement, some forgiveness. So,
after all the feasting, Job would offer atoning sacrifices. Even though, we did
some hefty partying; and, even though there may have been some crossing the
line—something said that shouldn’t have been said, some hurt, some offence;
nevertheless, sacrifice has been made. We’re okay. Our sin has been dealt with and forgiven.
I suppose if the sin could not be forgiven, the
feasting would come to an end—too much pain, too much offense, too much hurt.
We would eventually drift off into our own little self-righteous cocoons and sulk
away. But sacrifice has been made. We are free for the next round of feasting.
That’s Job’s big gain—the joy of feasting with his
children and his children’s children. So too, it will be his greatest loss. I
thought of that because one of our children missed the party because she was on
the road that night visiting aunt and old friends. When we came home, she was
not there. Where is she? It took us back to old days when she was a teenager
and we spent our share of sleepless nights at the kitchen window looking up the
dark street hoping maybe the next headlights were hers. Why do we still worry? I
suppose, it’s because, like Job of old, to lose our children would be our
greatest loss.
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