The book of Job teaches us that trials should be expected to be a part of people’s lives who have placed their faith in Jesus Christ. “The purpose of the book is to show the unfathomable wisdom of God’s providence, and the benevolence of God even in the trials brought upon his children. It also explains why God allows righteous people to suffer: to expose their frailty and sinfulness, to strengthen their faith, and to purify them. The spiritual perspective of the account and the fact that God exercised total control over Satan promotes complete trust in God. Throughout the book, Job’s friends relentlessly accused him of committing some great sin. Although he questioned God’s actions in the midst of these onslaughts, it should not be assumed that his queries were motivated by a resentful self-seeking attitude. On the contrary, they confirm his determination to hold on to his faith in God despite the circumstances that providence had brought upon him” (Introduction to Job).
Job reached a point in his suffering when he seemed to have lost all hope (Job 7:6). Job said, “Therefore, I will not restrain my mouth; I will speak in the anguish of my spirit; I will complain in the bitterness of my soul” (Job 7:11). The Hebrew word that is translated complain, siyach (seeˊ-akh) is “a verb meaning to ponder, to converse, to utter, to complain, to meditate, to pray, to speak…In Job, the word denotes the action that Job took against the bitterness in his soul, that is, his complaints (Job 7:11)” (H7878). Job’s complaints were intended to keep him from becoming bitter toward God.
In the midst of his misery, Job asked some honest questions of God (note on Job 7:17-21). Job asked in verses 7:17-21:
“What is man, that you make so much of him,
and that you set your heart on him,
visit him every morning
and test him every moment?
How long will you not look away from me,
nor leave me alone till I swallow my spit?
If I sin, what do I do to you, you watcher of mankind?
Why have you made me your mark?
Why have I become a burden to you?
Why do you not pardon my transgression
and take away my iniquity?
For now I shall lie in the earth;
you will seek me, but I shall not be.”
Job wondered why his redemption was not having the same effect as it had before. Job asked, “Why do you not pardon my transgressions and take away my iniquity?” (Job 7:21). The phrase take away my iniquity has to do with Jesus’ substitutionary death on the cross (H5374). Job understood this to be the only way a person’s sins could be forgiven (Job 19:25).
Psalm 77 provides a similar glimpse into the heart of a suffering believer. The psalmist said of God, “You hold my eyelids open; I am so troubled that I cannot speak” (Psalm 77:4) and then, continued, “I consider the days of old, the years long ago. I said, ’Let me remember my song in the night; let me meditate in my heart.’ Then my spirit made a diligent search: ‘Will the Lord spurn forever, and never again be favorable? Has his steadfast love forever ceased? Are his promises at an end for all time? Has God forgotten to be gracious? Has his anger shut up his compassion?” (Psalm 77:5-9). Asaph thought about his circumstances in the context of what he knew to be true about God’s character and concluded that he needed to take his complaint to God. Asaph said, “I will appeal to this; to the years of the right hand of the Most High” (Psalm 77:10). Asaph was grieved because God wasn’t treating him the way he had in the past.
Jeremiah’s complaint in Lamentations 2 was that the Lord had destroyed without pity. Jeremiah said:
How the Lord in his anger
has set the daughter of Zion under a cloud!
He has cast down from heaven to earth
the splendor of Israel;
he has not remembered his footstool
in the day of his anger.The Lord has swallowed up without mercy
all the habitations of Jacob;
in his wrath he has broken down
the strongholds of the daughter of Judah;
he has brought down to the ground in dishonor
the kingdom and its rulers.He has cut down in fierce anger
all the might of Israel;
he has withdrawn from them his right hand
in the face of the enemy;
he has burned like a flaming fire in Jacob,
consuming all around. (Lamentations 2:1-3)
Jeremiah was having a hard time seeing the point of God’s wrath being poured out against his people. “God in his providence, permitted foreign invaders to destroy his temple so that the people could no longer offer their vain sacrifices and worship false gods there” (note on Lamentations 2:4, 6).
God’s mercy involves much more than just taking pity on those who are suffering. The Hebrew word cheçed (khehˊ-sed) “is one of the most important in the vocabulary of Old Testament theology and ethics. In general, one may identify three basic meanings of the word, which always interact: ‘strength,’ ‘steadfastness,’ and ‘love.’ Any understanding of the word that fails to suggest all three inevitably loses some of its richness. ‘Love’ by itself easily becomes sentimentalized or universalized apart from the covenant. Yet ‘strength’ or ‘steadfastness’ suggests only the fulfillment of a legal or other obligation. The word refers primarily to the mutual and reciprocal rights and obligations between the parties of a relationship (especially Yahweh and Israel). But checed is not only a matter of obligation; it is also of generosity. It is not only a matter of loyalty, but also of mercy. The weaker party seeks protection and blessing of the patron and protector, but he may not lay absolute claim to it. The stronger party remains committed to his promise, but retains his freedom, especially with respect to the manner in which he will implement those promises” (H2617).
God told the people of Judah that he would bring them back to their land after being in captivity in Babylon for 70 years (Jeremiah 29:10-11) and said their mourning would be turned into joy (Jeremiah 31:8-12). God’s plan was to establish a new covenant in which he would forgive the people’s sin and remember it no more (Jeremiah 31:31-34). The new covenant would result in God’s chosen people not being plucked up from their land or overthrown anymore forever (Jeremiah 31:38-40), but that did not prevent God from judging the Jews for their idolatry (Jeremiah 44:1-6). “It took seventy years in exile to finally cure Israel of idolatry. The Jews had problems with legalism and Pharisaism after the exile, but never again did idolatry become prevalent” (note on Jeremiah 44:8). After Jeremiah recounted the fall of Jerusalem (Jeremiah 52:1-11); complaining to God, he stated, “The LORD has done what he purposed; he has carried out his word, which he commanded long ago; he has thrown down without pity; he has made the enemy rejoice over you and exalted the might of your foes” (Lamentations 2:17).