After a sermon on Job’s three friends and how they abused their relationship by accusing him of hidden sins that caused his suffering, a member of my congregation shared a joke. “Do you know why Job had such a bad time sleeping at night? It is because he had such miserable comforters.” It took me a second, then it landed like a wet sponge. Job’s friends begin their long speeches on “Retribution Theology” in chapter four, and they manage to continue for about twenty-five chapters, proving that if there were awards for lengthy lectures, all three would have cleared space on the mantel. Their finger-pointing and sharp remarks only deepen Job’s pain. In his first reply, Job addresses their lack of kindness with words that essentially say, “A real friend brings soup… you brought accusations.” He writes, “He who withholds kindness from a friend forsakes the fear of the Almighty.” Their failure was not a lack of knowledge but a lack of compassion.
Like Job, when we suffer, we do not need someone to deliver a ten-point sermon we never requested. We do not need charts, graphs, or a neatly labeled diagram explaining our possible hidden sins. I admit I have sometimes been tempted to offer quick explanations when quiet presence would have been far better. What we need in those moments is comfort, kindness, and compassion, along with someone who knows how to sit without filling every silence. During Queen Victoria’s reign, she visited a grieving mother who had lost her baby. Afterward, neighbors asked what the queen had said. “Nothing,” the woman replied. “She simply put her hands on mine, and we silently wept together.” That quiet presence spoke louder than any speech. It reminds us that love is often best expressed not through explanations but through shared sorrow.
This is where Jesus enters the picture with a clarity that Job’s friends never reached. The New Testament shows us a Savior who does not stand at a distance offering analysis. Instead, He draws near. When faced with grief, “Jesus wept” (John 11:35), not because He lacked power, but because He chose compassion. He also invites the weary, saying, “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest” (Matthew 11:28). Isaiah described Him as “a man of sorrows, well acquainted with grief,” and the Gospels confirm it. Where others offered arguments, Jesus offers Himself. He does not hand us a lecture; He meets us in our pain, and in His presence, even silence begins to carry hope.
