R
Rach620
Guest
I’m in a college seminar at my Catholic university on the problem of evil, and right now we’re discussing the Book of Job. I had heard from a classmate that our professor had a very ‘misguided’ interpretation of the meaning of Job, and today’s discussion pretty well confirmed that for me.
We spent most of the class responding to her claim that Job had fault worthy of punishment before he was put to the test (ie, he wasn’t the “blameless and upright” man which Scripture claims he is). For some reason, she’s claiming that Job’s three friends, who hold the idea that God rewards the righteous and punishes only sinners, are the ones who are correct. God doesn’t answer their claims, so she says that somehow this means that they may be seen as right. Job’s suffering, she says, is gratuitous. (She holds the same idea of his three friends, it seems–suffering is only explained as punishment from God.) Our task is to try to make sense of why God would have someone suffer ‘gratuitously’.
At least that’s my unclear understanding of her position at this point…those of you familiar with Job will know that the message she is taking from the book is the opposite of what we are supposed to. Like Job, we can’t possibly understand why God might allow man’s innocent suffering, but we can know that our suffering is never pointless, never gratuitous. There is always the possibility of a closer friendship with God, even in our trials. It is the epitome of pride to question the ways God chooses to bring us closer to Him, simply because we don’t understand his mysterious and awesome ways.
So for class, and for my own understanding, I’ve been googling, trying to find good Job commentaries online, but can’t find much besides wikipedia (which I don’t trust) and the Catholic Encyclopedia. I’m considering, if I have time, heading to the library, but I’d appreciate if anyone could either link me to a good Catholic commentary or respond to some of her points.
How do any of you make sense of Job, his suffering, and our lives?
We spent most of the class responding to her claim that Job had fault worthy of punishment before he was put to the test (ie, he wasn’t the “blameless and upright” man which Scripture claims he is). For some reason, she’s claiming that Job’s three friends, who hold the idea that God rewards the righteous and punishes only sinners, are the ones who are correct. God doesn’t answer their claims, so she says that somehow this means that they may be seen as right. Job’s suffering, she says, is gratuitous. (She holds the same idea of his three friends, it seems–suffering is only explained as punishment from God.) Our task is to try to make sense of why God would have someone suffer ‘gratuitously’.
At least that’s my unclear understanding of her position at this point…those of you familiar with Job will know that the message she is taking from the book is the opposite of what we are supposed to. Like Job, we can’t possibly understand why God might allow man’s innocent suffering, but we can know that our suffering is never pointless, never gratuitous. There is always the possibility of a closer friendship with God, even in our trials. It is the epitome of pride to question the ways God chooses to bring us closer to Him, simply because we don’t understand his mysterious and awesome ways.
So for class, and for my own understanding, I’ve been googling, trying to find good Job commentaries online, but can’t find much besides wikipedia (which I don’t trust) and the Catholic Encyclopedia. I’m considering, if I have time, heading to the library, but I’d appreciate if anyone could either link me to a good Catholic commentary or respond to some of her points.
How do any of you make sense of Job, his suffering, and our lives?