Job 38:1--41:34 · The Lord Speaks
What Is The Question?
Job 38:1--41:34
Sermon
by Charles R. Leary
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I have to tell you, I generally ask myself a lot of questions. And when I have the opportunity, I ask questions of others. But today I am asking, "What is the question?" What is your question? If you were offered one wish that would be granted, one question that would be answered, one priority that would be fulfilled, right now, at this time in your life, what would it be? What is the question?

The untimely death of Michael Landon recently caused me to ask myself, "What would I do...what would I say...with whom would I want to talk...where would I go ” if I were in Landon's boots?" After going through that routine several times, I came to the conclusion that I was asking the wrong questions. The right question is, "What am I doing...what am I saying...with whom am I talking and visiting...where am I going with my life right now?" (1)

After that I could ask some other right questions: "Is my attitude on the upbeat? Do I have a sense of humor? Do I talk and act like I have and want quality in my life? Do I share that quality with others? And are others able to perceive quality in me and to respond to my way of sharing?"

There are a number of alternatives to asking those questions. I could become angry and hostile. I could blame the doctors for not solving my health problems. I could take out my anxiety on my colleagues at work, and my loved ones at home. I could curse God and live an angry-get-even kind of life. But I make things worse when I do such things. Negative emotions ” fear, anger and despair ” are powerful, and they have a way of "dumping" generous amounts of adrenaline, and other behavior-altering fluids, directly into the bloodstream. They cause high blood pressure, heart trouble, anxiety, exhaustion, depression. Think of it this way: God will forgive you for your sins, but your endocrine system won't. Yes, God will forgive you. But you have to live with the consequences that your lifestyle dictates and lays on you. That's the lesson Job was learning!

I am addressing some issues here that I feel come right out of our Old Testament Reading from Job. I don't mean to treat it lightly, but Job had to swallow a bitter pill. Job lost his wealth, his health, his family and his self-respect. Job reacted to all that by challenging God. That is a way of saying, he became angry with God. Job argues with God; Job questioned God: Job bargained with God. Job asked God, "Why? Why me? Why did you do this to ME? Why did YOU do this to me?"

The bitter pill took a long time to do its work with Job. He lived in a guilt-laden, miserable, sorry-for-himself state for some time, until God finally got through to him along another route. Our Reading comes right in the middle of the section where Job began to rediscover his faith in God.

I will touch on three things.

There are right questions and there are wrong questions to ask.

God grants to humankind what we are choosing.

There are some circumstances that are beyond our control.

First, there are right and wrong questions. We all know the wrong questions, don't we? But they come so easily and naturally. Why? Why is this happening to me? What have I done to deserve all this? How many storms of life must I go through until God will say, "You've had enough?"

Charles Dickens wrote a harsh satire once while he gazed at the stars in the sky. He said, "If the stars are angels' eyes, why do they look down here and see good men hurt, and only wink and sparkle all night?"

When you think about it, you can never answer those kinds of questions. They are an off-hand way of saying that God does not care. Try formulating some right questions when you are tempted to ask the wrong ones. When you are tempted to ask, What have I done to deserve this?, teach yourself to say: Can God be helping me to improve my coping skills when life is tough?

Those kinds of questions you can answer. You may never be completely satisfied with the answers, but the results will be better than when you complain. You will be adding quality to your life as you build your faith in God and improve your coping skills.

Twenty-five years ago the Church encountered the "God is Dead" ideology. Now we have another so-called "sophisticated atheism" to encounter. Do you remember the eight-year-old boy and his father who challenged the Cub Scouts about limiting membership to those who believe in God? It's an example of asking the wrong questions in a back-handed way.

Be aware. Don't get hooked on the wrong questions. Be sure you ask the right questions before you seek answers. The message I hear from freed hostages, POWs and ordinary people who continue to advance their coping skills is this: when you believe in the God of Jesus, you don't have to know why; you just know that God is good and that God is love.

While you're sorting out the questions, take a second look and notice that God continues to grant humankind what we are choosing.

Sometime back, Juanita and I were on a real high at our grandson's graduation, seeing him give the Salutatorian address and receive several awards and scholarships, including a four-year scholarship to West Virginia University. But I have another picture in my album. The story is this: one week prior to the end of school, the juniors were dismissed one hour early. Seven young men went in three cars and played lottery on a two-mile stretch of highway. The result, a major crash leaving one young man a quadriplegic for life. He sat to our right in his wheel chair where his body was held artificially erect by the steel rods which topped out in a metal "halo" which was connected to his skull.

God grants to us humans what we are choosing.

How about if we apply that to our environment, or earth's ecology. I don't want to be misleading, but I want to read something which I think is rather alluring. Don Marquis wrote this whimsical piece. In it he has two ants talking to each other. The ant named Archy says, "It won't be long now, it won't be long, man is making deserts on the earth. It won't be long now before man will have used it up so that nothing but ants and centipedes and scorpions can find a living on it. Man has oppressed us for a million years, but he goes on steadily cutting the ground from under his feet, making deserts, deserts, deserts...

"What man calls civilization always results in deserts. Man is never on the square; he uses up the fat and greenery of the earth. Each generation wastes a little more of the future with greed and lust for riches. North Africa was once a garden spot and then came Carthage and Rome and despoiled the storehouse and now you have Sahara; Sahara, ants and centipedes....

"...the deserts of the near east followed Egypt and Babylon and Assyria and Persia and Rome and the Turk...

"America was once a paradise of timberland and stream, but it is dying because of the greed and money lust...One day the Mississippi itself will be a bed of sand ants, and scorpions and centipedes shall inherit the earth.

"Men talk of money and industry, of hard times and recoveries, of finance and economics, but the ants...and...scorpions wait...(2)

I repeat. I don't want to be misunderstood. This is not a scientific document. I use it because it is a good satire on the industrialized world's lifestyle.

So...learn to ask the right questions. Then be choosy about your lifestyle, because God is granting what we humans are choosing.

In the final analysis, however, we have to acknowledge that there are circumstances beyond our control.

Michael Landon was not able to control his cancer, but he was determined to control himself and to be a positive witness.

Arthur Gordon, author of the two books, THROUGH MANY WINDOWS and A TOUCH OF WONDER: A BOOK TO HELP PEOPLE, tells about what prevented him from committing suicide. He had meant to get it right. He gotten drunk and decided to swim out into the ocean past the point from which he could return.

As he walked along the beach, preparing himself to plunge into the water, he noticed a tiny shell gleaming in the sand. Bending down, he picked it up and gently turned it over, admiring its delicate beauty. As continued looking at the shell, he wondered how such a fragile thing could survive the pounding tons of churning water.

The answer, of course, was that the shell did not panic. It never put up a fierce struggle, instead, it yielded to the circumstances that it could not change.

Gordon thought of his own life, and how he had raged against circumstances beyond his control. Filled with anxiety, anger, and hopelessness, he, like the shell, had to learn to accept that some things were beyond his control.

He turned away from the ocean and returned to life. He changed that which he could change ” himself.

Jesus said to the disciples, when they were frightened on the sea, "Get it together, my friends. I mean your faith!"

So wherever you are in life's journey, these challenges will be there:

  • ask the right questions;
  • choose wisely because your lifestyle judges you; and
  • learn to roll with the punches that are beyond your control.

So, what's the question?


TV GUIDE, June 8-14, 1991, Cover - page 7.

THE ENVIRONMENTAL HANDBOOK, ed. Garrett DeBell.

by Charles R. Leary