Job 38:1--41:34 · The Lord Speaks
Piercing A Hole In The Darkness
Job 38:1--41:34
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Series on the Book of Job, #3

Suggested music: "A Few Questions" (See the forward to this series)

Author Sheila Walsh tells of meeting Debbie Arden. Debbie's husband was the agent for golfer Payne Stewart. He and Stewart died in a freak airplane accident a few years ago. Debbie Arden claims that her husband's death led her to a new place of assurance and faith in God. As she said, "God used the death of my beloved husband to, as Oswald Chambers said, "˜Pierce a hole in the darkness so that I could behold the face of God.' I am a changed woman." Wow! Here is the message of the book of Job in a nutshell. God can use the dark moments in our lives to "pierce a hole in the darkness." (1)

When we left Job last week, he was complaining over the injustice of his situation.

"Even today my complaint is bitter," he says, "his hand is heavy in spite of my groaning. If only I knew where to find him; if only I could go to his dwelling! I would state my case before him and fill my mouth with arguments. I would find out what he would answer me, and consider what he would say. Would he oppose me with great power? No, he would not press charges against me. There an upright man could present his case before him, and I would be delivered forever from my judge . . . God has made my heart faint; the Almighty has terrified me. Yet I am not silenced by the darkness, by the thick darkness that covers my face." (Job 23: 1-9, 16-17)

Has anybody in this room ever complained to God? You don't have to raise your hand. Sometimes our complaining can be justified, sometimes it cannot. There is a scene in the movie Bruce Almighty in which the character played by Jim Carrey is complaining that God is making him late for work because of a traffic accident. As he voices his bitterness, he is oblivious to the pain of a person on a stretcher in the background--the obvious real victim of the accident.

What good does complaining do? Does it help us clear the air? Does it lower our blood pressure? Do we expect anything to come of our complaining? Did Job? Probably not. In his darkest hour, Job cried out to God. And to his surprise, God answered him.

A few years ago, a Hollywood director was making a film attempting to cover the story of the Bible. In his stage directions, he wrote: "Enter God. Begin with an earthquake and work up to a climax." (2)

You've got to admire that director's vision. God is going to make a grand entrance. That's just God's way. How does God enter the story of Job? Let's turn to chapter 38 to find out.

Then the LORD answered Job out of the storm. He said: "Who is this that darkens my counsel with words without knowledge? Brace yourself like a man; I will question you, and you shall answer me.

"Where were you when I laid the earth's foundation? Tell me, if you understand. Who marked off its dimensions? Surely you know! Who stretched a measuring line across it? On what were its footings set, or who laid its cornerstone-while the morning stars sang together and all the angels shouted for joy?

"Can you raise your voice to the clouds and cover yourself with a flood of water? Do you send the lightning bolts on their way? Do they report to you, `Here we are'? Who endowed the heart with wisdom or gave understanding to the mind? Who has the wisdom to count the clouds? Who can tip over the water jars of the heavens when the dust becomes hard and the clods of earth stick together?

"Do you hunt the prey for the lioness and satisfy the hunger of the lions when they crouch in their dens or lie in wait in a thicket? Who provides food for the raven when its young cry out to God and wander about for lack of food?"

God answered Job. Take a moment to reflect on the wonder of that moment. In Job, chapter 19, verses 25-27, Job declares to his friends who are condemning him, "I know that my Redeemer lives, and that in the end he will stand upon the earth. And after my skin has been destroyed, yet in my flesh I will see God; I myself will see him with my own eyes--I, and not another. How my heart yearns within me!"

Job is confident in the fact that he will see God face to face--after his death. On his judgement day, then he will hear the voice of the Almighty. Then will he know the mind of God.

But Job never expects God to answer him while he is still living. And yet, does God explain the reason for Job's suffering? No. Instead, God reminds Job who the Creator is and who the created is:

"Where were you when I laid the earth's foundation? Tell me, if you understand. Who marked off its dimensions? Surely you know!"

As Paul Smith writes in his book God's Plan for Our Good, "There is a problem with standing in judgment of God. He Himself is the standard by which all things are judged. We do not know good apart from God. His actions are the very definition of good. To complain that God has done something that He ought not to have done is rather like complaining that the sun came up too late to start the day. The day is defined by the rising of the sun, even as good is defined by the actions of God. Where could we find another standard by which to judge the actions of God? To presume that we can judge God is to place ourselves over God." (3)

The Catholic author Frank Sheed was speaking before a crowd about the order and majesty God built into His creation. A heckler in the crowd shouted, "I could make a better universe than your God!"

Sheed replied, "I won't ask you to make a universe. But could you make a rabbit--just to establish confidence?"

Author Patsy Clairmont makes the point that God asks an awful lot of questions throughout the Scriptures. He asked Eve, "What is this you have done?" He asked Ezekiel, "Can these dry bones live?" He asked Peter, "Who do you say that I am?" And here God asks Job, "Where were you when I laid the earth's foundation . . ." God is the Creator of the Universe, the Author of all Life. Doesn't He have all the answers? So why is He asking all these questions? As Clairmont says, "I think He questions us so we might think--think through our choices, our responsibilities, our beliefs." (4)

Isn't this what God is saying to Job? Could you make a better universe than I can? Do you understand the great care and order and complexity that abound in creation? Do you have the power to control wind and waves and stars and planets? Do you provide a balanced ecosystem for each one of your beloved creatures, even the most weak and finite ones? And finally, do you understand every thought and emotion that has ever entered the human mind?

If you answered yes to any one of these questions, then--then you are lying! No human being can even begin to comprehend the mind of God.

So is God being cruel by challenging Job's knowledge in this way? No. Before we can truly learn something, we must realize that we are ignorant. Job thought he knew God's modus operandi. He thought he had the rules of the universe memorized and quantified and working in his favor. Before God could get through to Job, God had to remind Job of all he did not know.

There is a story about a wise man who had attained a reputation for spiritual maturity. A disciple asked the wise man to describe how his thinking had changed along his spiritual journey. Taking pen and paper, the wise man wrote:

"I know."

Then he added the line, "I may not know."

And then another line, "I do not know."

And then, "I would like to know."

Then, "I will try to know."

And finally he wrote, "I know." (5)

What did Job know before this moment in time? He knew that he was in pain. He knew that he had spent his life trying to honor God.

What did Job know after the moment that God spoke to him? He knew that God is God. God is sovereign, ultimate, all-powerful, all-knowing, and holy, holy, holy. Though we cannot explain God, most of us say with Christopher Morley: "I had a thousand questions to ask God: but when I met Him, they all fled and didn't seem to matter." Does Job know any of the answers to his questions? No. Does he know that the Almighty God is intimately aware of and involved in his life? Yes. Now he can cope with his situation. He knows God is in control.

At age 32, William Cowper had a nervous breakdown. He attempted suicide several times. He spent time in an insane asylum. Cowper searched his whole life for some sense of peace and the assurance of God's love. On those rare occasions when Cowper's depression lifted, he wrote numerous hymns of faith. His faith almost always commingled with a desperate sense of despair. Yet witnesses claim that on his deathbed, William Cowper found great peace and joy as he exclaimed, "I am not shut out of Heaven after all." (6)

This is the assurance Job found in the presence of God. He is not shut out of God's grace and mercy after all. God knows him. God hears his prayers. God has a plan for the universe and all created things. God is and God knows. And in this, Job finds what he is looking for.

In his book Powerful Prayers, Larry King interviews people from all walks of life on their concept of prayer. Actor Kirk Douglas shared an amusing story in his interview.

A poor, blind, childless man spent his days praying at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem for some good fortune from God. Imagine his surprise when God spoke to him and offered to fulfill one of his prayers. So what should the man pray for? He could pray for wealth, but he had no children to pass it on to. He could pray for sight, but then he'd be able to see his incredible poverty. He could pray for children, but he was too poor to support them. Suddenly, the man knew what to do. He bowed his head and fervently prayed, "Dear God, grant me just one thing--the joy of seeing my children eating off of gold plates." (7)

The man gave God a clever answer. In a subtle way, he asked for sight, wealth and children. Job had no such answer to give. When God asked, "Where were you when I laid the earth's foundation?" Job is forced to acknowledge that God's ways are beyond his understanding--and he is left with a choice all of us must make: Do we trust God or not? Ultimately that is the answer to all of life--through good times and bad. Do we trust God? If we trust God, all of the rest of life will fall in place. We may walk through the valley, as did Job. But we know we do not walk alone.


1. Sheila Walsh. The Desert Experience (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 2001), pp. 182-183.

2. Dr. William P. Barker, Tarbell's (Elgin, Illinois: David C. Cook Church Ministries, 1994).

3. Paul Smith. God's Plan For Our Good (Chicago: Moody Press, 2000).

4. Patsy Clairmont. Normal Is Just a Setting on Your Dryer (Colorado Springs, CO: Focus on the Family Publishers, 1993), pp. 87-90.

5. Vernon Howard, Inspire Yourself (Grants Pass, OR: Four Star Books, Inc., 1975).

6. Robert Strand. Especially for the Hurting Heart (Green Forest, AR: New Leaf Press, 1997), #25 and liner notes in the album "Press On" by Selah on Curb Records, 2001.

7. Powerful Prayers by Larry King with Rabbi Irwon Katsof, Renaissance Books, Los Angeles, 1998.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan