Oxymoronic Living


Job 5:7 – “For man is born for trouble, as sure as the wild birds fly.”  George Lamsa Translation Aramaic to English)

As I read, prayed, and contemplated the Word and the voice of the Spirit in my heart, I was moved to consider things from Job and 1 Corinthians.

There are two views expressed in Job – “Fatalism and Optimism.”  Unfortunately, some Christians try to live an oxymoronic life of Optimistic Fatalism or Fatalistic Optimism.   Those two words are incompatible!

In Job 4 and 5, Eliphaz expressed a legalistic, fatalistic mindset.  In Job 4:5-8, we see that legalism is detailed prolifically.  Job 5:7 shows even more fatalism: “For man is born for trouble, as sure as the wild birds fly.”   Most translations render it as ‘sparks fly upward.’

Job recognized the finiteness of man with a hint of fatalism in Job 7:1, 6.  By the time we reach Job 13, we see Job’s hope rising.   In Job 13:15, he declares, “Though He slay me, yet will I look for Him; because my ways are before Him.”

I encourage everyone to consider the two things Job asked for in Job 13:20-28.   “Only two things do not let depart from me; then I will not turn aside from thee: 21 Do not withdraw thy help from me; and let not thy dread terrify me.”  

In Job 14:14, Job asked a relevant question, “If a man die, shall he live again.”  That was an expression of hope for the saved and a fatalistic question from the lost.  Paul addressed that question in 1 Corinthians 15 in his teaching about the resurrection.

Fatalism would prevail if what we have now is all there is.  That would place us in a hopeless mess.  If only what we see and experience in the now were all there is, what a hopeless mess we are in.  But that is not all there is, as 1 Corinthians 15:51-58 powerfully portrays.

The reality is that we will rise in a glorified body and never know corruption again eternally!    We must never lose sight of the fact that trouble comes to the just and unjust.  But we should consider it a mark of ownership and let it inspire hope.  This present time of trial cannot compare to the coming glory. 

So, if a person dies, will they live again?  The answer is an emphatic Yes if they are in Christ.  Yes, Yes, Yes!  Always look heavenward.  Always remember that we are not forgotten or forsaken no matter what comes.   Let us live in eager anticipation of the fruit of Christ in us.  Let us live with no sense of lack because the work of Christ is finished, and in that work, we are fully supplied.   There is no need that is unsupplied in Jesus!

Enjoy this day; it is a day of Victory in Jesus!

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