Why Good People Suffer (Job 1:8)

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My Sunday school class has been studying one book of the Bible each week. Beginning with Genesis, we are looking at the theme, structure, and uniqueness of each. Little did I realize that two women in my class were eager to get to the book of Job. They are nurses who daily confront the problem of human suffering, and they are often asked hard questions about God’s role in it.

All too often the explanation for suffering is similar to that expressed by Job’s three friends who came to sit with him. One after another, Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar told Job that he deserved the suffering because of his sin. The young observer Elihu came along and told Job the same thing.

The real reason Job was suffering what that Satan, the leader of the fallen angels, was trying to get him to turn from God. Because Satan cannot dethrone the Lord, he opposes Him by attacking His followers (1 Peter 5:8). He strikes at God by tempting us to sin.

One reason for suffering, therefore, is that it’s part of a larger, cosmic struggle. During hard times, we face the choice to trust God or turn from Him. If we endure suffering with our trust in the Lord unshaken, we will thwart Satan’s efforts and glorify our God. – David C. Egner

How oft in the conflict, when pressed by the foe,

I have fled to my Refuge and breathed out my woe;

How often, when trials like sea billows roll,

Have I hidden in Thee, O Thou Rock of my soul. – Cushing

When your world is sharing, run to the Rock.

July 21, Vol. 7