by Baloney » Tue Oct 20, 2020 10:28 am
Please.
Highly educated “theologians” can say whatever they wish, but if they’re not declaring the truth of the word of God, then they’re no better than the scribes and Pharisees that studied it continually and yet did not know Him. They can come up with all kinds of terms and other gobbledygook. Doesn’t matter.
Read through Romans 3 to get a better grasp on righteousness and the law. You’re not understanding the gospel, and it doesn’t matter that Job is from the OT. Job is said to be a righteous man, but even he understands that it is a temporary state, and external to himself — this is why he says, “I put on righteousness like a robe.” He understands it stems from the temporary state of forgiveness from his regular sacrifices he offers for himself and his family. He strives to do what is right in God’s eyes, and yet can’t stop sinning. Isaiah similarly describes righteousness as an outward adornment like the way a bride and groom decorate themselves for their wedding. (Sound familiar? Jesus telling people not properly dressed for the wedding supper they get thrown into outer darkness? How about the robes washed white in his blood?). Jeremiah has a few verses that echo this as well, with the Lord being the righteousness of his people. (Jeremiah 33:16; 23:6)
For sure, the book of Job is NOT about the nature of righteousness, unless you want to consider the imperfect sacrifices Job offered to receive forgiveness for sins.
When they asked Jesus which was the greatest commandment, he had an answer for them. He is to be our first love, all highest devotion and loyalty belong to Him. It is Satan who suggests that the only reason Job fears God is because he has a nice life. It is Satan who posits there is only a transactional nature to Job’s relationship to God.
God in effect tells Satan, “Go ahead. See for yourself if that’s really all there is to it.” At no point ever does “Satan propose that it is counterproductive for God to reward goodness, because it makes us all less-than-good.” Is that your fantasy? Or that of your Mr. Walton? Satan has no part in ever offering wise counsel to God. He never makes proposals about goodness or how to achieve it, or suggests what is productive or counterproductive for God to be doing. In your fantasy about Satan being some watchdog-court prosecutor-entity, you imagine him being an actual advisor to God. This is anathema. He is the evil one, his native language is lying, and he comes only to steal, kill and destroy. The lake of fire is being prepared for him.
The book of Job is not an examination of some “retribution principle, where if we prosper because we’re good, then true righteousness becomes illusory and elusive.” That sentence has zero place in Christendom, never mind as a description of Job. Righteousness is never attainable for us by the law, because we are all lawbreakers. We must attain the righteousness of God, which is possible only through “putting on Jesus,” as Paul said. People prosper when they’re good, and they prosper when they’re bad. All it takes is a cursory reading through the psalms to see the observation of this truism and the effect upon the psalmists. Job is not a trial of God that God set up for himself so we could see that He won’t necessarily reward good people, so we better find a better motivation for seeking out righteousness than getting a cushy career.
Satan doesn’t love God. He essentially accuses Job before God of not loving the LORD either, and falsely says Job only fears him because he gets good stuff in life from God. Rather than telling Satan he can see the truth in Job’s heart and that’s not the case, and then sending Satan packing, God allows Satan to put Job through terrible things so he and the rest of us can actually see for ourselves if Job will “curse God and die” once his wealth, children, and health are taken from him. We are to learn many things from what unfolds. Job gets mad at God for what he allows to happen to him, and as he continues his lament, he increasingly justifies himself, and portrays God as unfair. This is what God addresses, because he is never unfair or unjust, and Job (and the rest of us) must learn that God’s omniscience and wisdom mean that if he decides to allow Satan to afflict Job rather than send him packing, or if he allows Satan to sift the disciples, etc., then that is the most just response, given all the factors we in our humanity are neither privy to nor capable of weighing.
The fact that there is a particle in front of “Satan” does nothing to diminish his personhood, just as the particle “the” does nothing to diminish the personhood of God the Holy Spirit. HaSatan could even be argued to be a reflection of the depths of his iniquity. He no longer is allowed to be referred to with the name he had before iniquity was found in him, but forever after only gets referred to by the personification of a sinful act. The Accuser. The blood of Jesus speaks a better word than the blood of Abel, and the mouth of Satan speaks no good word at all.
Do you really think when Satan went after Jesus in the desert, Satan was just “a watchdog agency”, some obscure entity who goes by “the accuser” and who “isn’t bad”? Do you really think some “watchdog agency” was crippling that woman in the synagogue? Do you really think the boy in Mark 9 was thrown into flames by some “court prosecutor”?
You’re performing a lot of mental gymnastics to avoid the reality of the evil one. This is actually a major “first world problem.” People who suffer greatly in other parts of the world are much more ready to acknowledge the reality of the evil one and evil spirits, even when they have no access to the truth from the word of God. It is an embarrassment when the opportunities of education only result in a pride that attempts to intellectualize away reality revealed to us in Scripture.
Please.
Highly educated “theologians” can say whatever they wish, but if they’re not declaring the truth of the word of God, then they’re no better than the scribes and Pharisees that studied it continually and yet did not know Him. They can come up with all kinds of terms and other gobbledygook. Doesn’t matter.
Read through Romans 3 to get a better grasp on righteousness and the law. You’re not understanding the gospel, and it doesn’t matter that Job is from the OT. Job is said to be a righteous man, but even he understands that it is a temporary state, and external to himself — this is why he says, “I put on righteousness like a robe.” He understands it stems from the temporary state of forgiveness from his regular sacrifices he offers for himself and his family. He strives to do what is right in God’s eyes, and yet can’t stop sinning. Isaiah similarly describes righteousness as an outward adornment like the way a bride and groom decorate themselves for their wedding. (Sound familiar? Jesus telling people not properly dressed for the wedding supper they get thrown into outer darkness? How about the robes washed white in his blood?). Jeremiah has a few verses that echo this as well, with the Lord being the righteousness of his people. (Jeremiah 33:16; 23:6)
For sure, the book of Job is NOT about the nature of righteousness, unless you want to consider the imperfect sacrifices Job offered to receive forgiveness for sins.
When they asked Jesus which was the greatest commandment, he had an answer for them. He is to be our first love, all highest devotion and loyalty belong to Him. It is Satan who suggests that the only reason Job fears God is because he has a nice life. It is Satan who posits there is only a transactional nature to Job’s relationship to God.
God in effect tells Satan, “Go ahead. See for yourself if that’s really all there is to it.” At no point ever does “Satan propose that it is counterproductive for God to reward goodness, because it makes us all less-than-good.” Is that your fantasy? Or that of your Mr. Walton? Satan has no part in ever offering wise counsel to God. He never makes proposals about goodness or how to achieve it, or suggests what is productive or counterproductive for God to be doing. In your fantasy about Satan being some watchdog-court prosecutor-entity, you imagine him being an actual advisor to God. This is anathema. He is the evil one, his native language is lying, and he comes only to steal, kill and destroy. The lake of fire is being prepared for him.
The book of Job is not an examination of some “retribution principle, where if we prosper because we’re good, then true righteousness becomes illusory and elusive.” That sentence has zero place in Christendom, never mind as a description of Job. Righteousness is never attainable for us by the law, because we are all lawbreakers. We must attain the righteousness of God, which is possible only through “putting on Jesus,” as Paul said. People prosper when they’re good, and they prosper when they’re bad. All it takes is a cursory reading through the psalms to see the observation of this truism and the effect upon the psalmists. Job is not a trial of God that God set up for himself so we could see that He won’t necessarily reward good people, so we better find a better motivation for seeking out righteousness than getting a cushy career.
Satan doesn’t love God. He essentially accuses Job before God of not loving the LORD either, and falsely says Job only fears him because he gets good stuff in life from God. Rather than telling Satan he can see the truth in Job’s heart and that’s not the case, and then sending Satan packing, God allows Satan to put Job through terrible things so he and the rest of us can actually see for ourselves if Job will “curse God and die” once his wealth, children, and health are taken from him. We are to learn many things from what unfolds. Job gets mad at God for what he allows to happen to him, and as he continues his lament, he increasingly justifies himself, and portrays God as unfair. This is what God addresses, because he is never unfair or unjust, and Job (and the rest of us) must learn that God’s omniscience and wisdom mean that if he decides to allow Satan to afflict Job rather than send him packing, or if he allows Satan to sift the disciples, etc., then that is the most just response, given all the factors we in our humanity are neither privy to nor capable of weighing.
The fact that there is a particle in front of “Satan” does nothing to diminish his personhood, just as the particle “the” does nothing to diminish the personhood of God the Holy Spirit. HaSatan could even be argued to be a reflection of the depths of his iniquity. He no longer is allowed to be referred to with the name he had before iniquity was found in him, but forever after only gets referred to by the personification of a sinful act. The Accuser. The blood of Jesus speaks a better word than the blood of Abel, and the mouth of Satan speaks no good word at all.
Do you really think when Satan went after Jesus in the desert, Satan was just “a watchdog agency”, some obscure entity who goes by “the accuser” and who “isn’t bad”? Do you really think some “watchdog agency” was crippling that woman in the synagogue? Do you really think the boy in Mark 9 was thrown into flames by some “court prosecutor”?
You’re performing a lot of mental gymnastics to avoid the reality of the evil one. This is actually a major “first world problem.” People who suffer greatly in other parts of the world are much more ready to acknowledge the reality of the evil one and evil spirits, even when they have no access to the truth from the word of God. It is an embarrassment when the opportunities of education only result in a pride that attempts to intellectualize away reality revealed to us in Scripture.