In an overview of the Book of Job, we quickly learn that Job’s suffering is as layered as a lasagna, except no one wants a bite of this one. First, he loses all his possessions. Then he loses all his children. Then he loses his health. To make matters worse, the wife of his youth, the mother of his children, and the one who shared the heartbreak of their losses, inadvertently adds to his pain by advising him to end it all. As if that were not enough, three friends arrive and greet him with the warmth of a cold shower. They insist that suffering always results from sin, and therefore, since Job is suffering greatly, he must be sinning greatly. They spend much of the book lecturing, accusing, and nitpicking, turning pastoral care into a well-organized exercise in blame. This stands in direct contrast to God’s own commendation of Job as “upright and blameless.” According to his friends, Job belongs in the sinner’s hall of fame. According to God, Job belongs in the faith hall of fame.
Billy Graham once suggested that there are at least six different reasons people suffer, which is six more than Job’s friends ever considered. First, sometimes we bring suffering upon ourselves, a truth that is easy to spot in others and harder to admit in ourselves. Second, God sometimes corrects His children for sin or disobedience. Third, God may permit suffering so that we learn to respond to problems in a way that reflects His truth. We read that Jesus “learned obedience from what he suffered,” which raises the bar for us all. Fourth, God may allow suffering because pain is simply part of life. Everyone suffers; everyone groans at some point, especially when stepping on something sharp in the dark. Fifth, God permits suffering for our well-being, teaching lessons that comfort rarely delivers. Sixth, God may allow suffering so that our lives can encourage others. Job’s story has traveled through centuries, quietly strengthening those who feel as though their own story has taken an unexpected turn.
James adds another reason that gently reframes the entire discussion. God allows suffering so that through it all, His love, compassion, and mercy are revealed. He writes, “You have heard of the steadfastness of Job, and you have seen the purpose of the Lord, how the Lord is compassionate and merciful” (James 5:11). The New Testament shows us that suffering does not have the final word because Jesus Himself entered into it, carried it, and overcame it. As He said, “In this world you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world” (John 16:33). Job’s declaration, “The Lord gives, and the Lord takes away; blessed be the name of the Lord,” finds its fullest meaning in Christ, where even the deepest suffering is met with a mercy that endures beyond it.
