May 26
Job Worships
Then Job
arose, tore his robe, shaved his head, and fell on the ground and
worshiped. He said, “Naked I came from my mother’s womb, and naked shall I
return there; the Lord gave, and the Lord has taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord.”
Job 1:20-22
Job has just had the worst day of his
life with tragedy after tragedy after tragedy falling upon him. All that he has left is his health, which is
about to fail, his wife, who tells him to curse God, and his friends, who tell
him that he must be evil for so many bad things to happen to him. In the midst of heartbreak and chaos, Job
mourns and grieves everything and everyone that he has lost. But he does not lash out in anger. He does not curse God. Instead he worships, acknowledging that God
both gives and takes away. God’s
goodness…His holiness…His worthiness to be worshipped…these are not
conditional. They do not increase or
decrease based upon the circumstances of our lives. God was the same when we were newborn and
helpless. He was the same when we were
at the peak of our physical and intellectual abilities. He was the same when we were rich. He was the same when we were poor. He will be the same when we are helpless at
the end of our life.
Worship and praise of God are not
just thank-you notes that we compose to the Almighty in response to His
blessings. We are to worship God because
of who He is. His power and goodness are
unmatched throughout creation. He is the
one who creates and sustains life out of His love for us.
Compare this to what and whom we
usually worship. We don’t call it
worship…it is just where we spend our time and our money and our
attention. It is the websites that we
visit and the shows that we watch and the fandoms that we join. We worship fame and power and beauty and
money and image and health. We worship
big personalities who are here today and gone tomorrow. We worship athletic teams and denominations
and political parties that give us a sense of winning and being important and
being righteous and being a part of something bigger than ourselves.
All these things pale in comparison
to the Almighty Lord of Creation. There
is no one and no thing that is more deserving of our attention and affection
than He. Job knew that and praised his
God, even when those around him encouraged him to curse God and just die.
It is easy to sit in Job’s seat as an
IDD parent and think about everything that we have lost and all that we have
suffered. God has given us children, but
we have lost jobs or friends or money or houses or identity or our spouse. Some of us have even lost the child that God
gave to us. It is tempting to put
together a list of what God has taken away.
It is tempting to decide that God owes us for what He has taken and that
we deserve more from this life for what we have endured.
It is not easy to adopt Job’s mindset
and character; to acknowledge our loss and grieve while at the same time
remembering God’s goodness and worshipping Him.
We have been given treasure. We
have lost some important and valuable things as well. Those are both true. What is also true is that through all of that
God is good and He deserves our praises and our worship.
Blessed be the name of the Lord.
A moment to reflect:
How could you
worship God today?
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