Friday, July 26, 2013

Jobie Jamie

There are 42 chapters in the book of Job.

Within the first chapter, Job is stripped of everything.  The next forty chapters share with us his sufferings.

We are more privileged than we know, God having shared with us not simply this suffering, but, arguably more important, Job’s obedience through it.

Oh, obedience.  Only the strong keep this key, dressed in gold, weighted heavily in God’s eyes.  Is our trust in Him enough to carry us through obediently to His will, withstanding forty chapters of painstaking loss?

Job's trust in the Lord and obedience carried him through his time in Satan's testing.  And, lovingly, God ended forty-one chapters of anguish with these words:

And the Lord gave Job twice as much as he had before...and the Lord blessed the latter days of Job more than his beginning...and after this Job lived 140 years, and saw his sons, and his sons' sons, four generations. And Job died, an old man, and full of days.

I've hesitated to write this post, because I think my words will fail me.  Or, more appropriately, fail to praise God in a way that truly explains the blessings He has bestowed upon me.  I can't create a way to describe even adequately the joy I've received from being obedient to God.

If anyone has followed along with my story, you most likely know that it hasn't been easy.  Sacrifice, obedience, and trust.  Unfortunately, I wasn't always gushing with gratefulness.  Sanctification is rarely a walk in the park. 

I did my fair share of whining during the One Year Challenge.
I questioned the opportunity of a new career.
I cried about being single months after the Challenge.

Though while my trust may have admittedly waivered, my obedience rarely did.

Trust and obey, for there’s no other way to be happy in Jesus, but to trust and obey.

This hymn was written in 1887, and 126 years later there remains the utmost truth in its lyrics.  Like water to a malnourished plant, witnessing God’s faithfulness draws us to be obedience.  Provision and love received and felt from being in His will, will open the doors to desiring to be obedient.

Which brings me to today.

Last night I just sobbed at the handiwork of the Lord, Abba Father.  How could he bless such a treacherous person?  And not just miniscule dew drops of blessings, but a storm, where each blessing reverberates with the strength of hail against tin rooftops—a love undeniable.

There are so many details I could share and want to share, and maybe one day soon I will, but suffice to say—as ends the story of Job—that after several chapters, several seasons of my life spent in sadness and despair, and as a have-not, I now have so much.

I hope to make it clear that obedience born out of expectations of deserved blessings is much different than obedience filtered through the trusting that God loves you, adores you, and wants to bless you.  Let obedience come from trusting that His path is trustworthy and good, and having heart to know that He who giveth can taketh away—but He who taketh also giveth much more.  Blessed be the name of the Lord.