Job’s Wife – A
Witness to Pain and Suffering
Job 28-30
Job’s wife has a very brief appearance on the stage of this
drama. She has two lines of script that can be interpreted in a variety of
ways. In the midst of seeing her beloved husband in pain and agony, she says,
“Do you still hold fast your integrity?
Curse God and die.” (Job 2:9)
It’s easy to criticize the words of Job’s wife, sitting here
in my climate controlled office, sipping my premium brewed coffee, with cash
and credit cards in my wallet, looking at a picture of my wife who is in good
health and thinking of how I am going to enjoy my next vacation to visit my
family back east. The words of this ‘foolish’ woman can really trigger my
pious, self-righteous and holier-than-thou nature. How dare she even consider
this early form of euthanasia? Doesn’t she know that it is wrong to curse God?
Doesn’t she know that this is only a test from God? Doesn’t she realize in the
end, God will restore Job to a greater position in life with more land and possessions?
Nope!
She is in the midst of the storm of her life. Hopelessness
rules her day. All she has known is gone, and the one person whom she has
devoted her life to is sitting in ashes, covered with boils and cursing the day
of his
birth. Imagine yourself in her shoes. Take a look at the world
through her eyes. I would love to say that I would be strong in the face of
such calamity, but I know how weak I am with my own pain. I also know that my
weakness increases when I see someone I love enduring pain.
While in seminary, I wrote a scathing indictment against
euthanasia. I was young and opinionated, and I was inexperienced with caring
for people as a pastor through their pain and suffering. I was an academic
pastor, not a practitioner. That all changed when my mother began her decline
in health with Alzheimer’s, strokes, diabetes, heart disease and had to be fed
through a feeding tube. Though I didn’t want to loose my mother, I could not
bear to see her suffering. I could identify with Job’s wife during this time.
Only through the lens of the Gospel could I find hope for tomorrow and peace
for today even in the midst of the storm.
From her perspective, if Job died, he’d be free of pain and
this whole nightmare would be over. Death seemed to be the only rational
option. But Job knows that his redeemer lives and has a hope that is far
greater than the pain. Compared to all of the dialogue he has with the three
friends, Job gives a very brief response to her words: “You speak as one of the
foolish women would speak. Shall we receive [only] good from God, and shall we
not receive evil?” (Job 2:10). Later in the book he shows great respect for his
wife (Job 31:1-12) whom he does not condemn, but merely instructs.
So, when it comes to suffering or caring for those in pain,
are you academic in your approach, or are you a practitioner? Which outlook do
you think Jesus held?
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