Job 23:10
“But he knoweth the way that I take: when he hath tried me, I shall come forth as gold.”
JOB here corrects himself. In the beginning of the chapter, we find him saying, “Even today is my complaint bitter: my
stroke is heavier than my groaning” (23:1-2). Poor Job felt that his lot was unbearable. But he recovers himself. He
checks his hasty outburst and revises his impetuous1
decision. How often we all have to correct ourselves! Only One
has ever walked this earth Who never had occasion to do so.
Job here comforts himself. He could not fathom the mysteries of providence,2
but God knew the way he took. Job had
diligently sought the calming presence of God, but for a time in vain. “Behold, I go forward, but he is not there; and
backward, but I cannot perceive him: On the left hand, where he doth work, but I cannot behold him: he hideth himself
on the right hand, that I cannot see him” (23:8-9). But he consoled himself with this blessed fact: “Though I cannot see
God, what is a thousand times better, He can see me.” “He knoweth” —[the] One above is neither unmindful nor indifferent
to our lot. If He notices the fall of a sparrow, if He counts the hairs of our heads, of course, “He knows” the way
that I take.
Job here enunciates a noble view of life. How splendidly optimistic he was! He did not allow his afflictions to turn
him into a skeptic. He did not permit the sore trials and troubles through which he was passing to overwhelm him. He
looked at the bright side of the dark cloud—God’s side, hidden from sense and reason. He took a long view of life. He
looked beyond the immediate “fiery trials” and said that the outcome would be gold refined.
“But he knoweth the way that I take: when he hath tried me I shall come forth as gold.” Three great truths are expressed
here. Let us briefly consider each separately.
1. DIVINE KNOWLEDGE OF MY LIFE:
“He knoweth the way that I take.”The omniscience3
of God is one of the wondrous
attributes of Deity. “For his eyes are upon the ways of man, and he seeth all his goings” (Job 34:21). “The eyes of
the LORD are in every place, beholding the evil and the good” (Pro 15:3). Spurgeon4
said, “One of the greatest tests of
experimental religion is, What is my relationship to God’s omniscience?” What is your relationship to it, dear reader?
How does it affect you? Does it distress or comfort you? Do you shrink from the thought of God knowing all about your
way—perhaps, a lying, selfish, hypocritical way? To the sinner, this is a terrible thought. He denies it, or if not, he seeks
to forget it. But to the Christian, here is real comfort. How cheering to remember that my Father knows all about my
trials, my difficulties, my sorrows, my efforts to glorify Him. Precious truth for those in Christ, harrowing5
thought for
all out of Christ, that the way I am taking is fully known to and observed by God.
“He knoweth the way that I take.” Men did not know the way that Job took. He was grievously misunderstood, and for
one with a sensitive temperament to be misunderstood is a sore trial. His very friends thought he was a hypocrite. They
believed he was a great sinner and being punished by God. Job knew that he was an unworthy saint, but not a hypocrite.
He appealed against their censorious6
verdict. “He knoweth the way that I take: when he hath tried me I shall come
forth as gold.” Here is instruction for us when [we are] like circumstanced. Fellow believers, your fellow men, yes, and
your fellow Christians, may misunderstand you and misinterpret God’s dealing with you; but console yourself with the
blessed fact that the omniscient One knoweth.
“He knoweth the way that I take.” In the fullest sense of the word, Job himself did not know the way that he took, nor
do any of us. Life is profoundly mysterious, and the passing of the years offers no solution. Nor does philosophizing
help us. Human volition7
is a strange enigma.8
Consciousness bears witness that we are more than automatons.9
We exercise
the power of choice in every move we make. Yet it is plain that our freedom is not absolute. There are forces brought to bear upon us, both good and evil, which are beyond our power to resist. Both heredity and environment exercise
powerful influences upon us. Our surroundings and circumstances are factors that cannot be ignored. And what of
providence, which “shapes our destinies”? Ah, how little do we know the way that we “take.” Said the prophet, “O
LORD, I know that the way of man is not in himself: it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps” (Jer 10:23). Here
we enter the realm of mystery, and it is idle to deny it. Better far to acknowledge with the wise man, “Man’s goings are of
the LORD; how can a man then understand his own way?” (Prov 20:24).
In the narrower sense of the term, Job did know the way that he took. What that “way” was he tells us in the next two
verses. “My foot hath held his steps, his way have I kept, and not declined. Neither have I gone back from the commandment
of his lips; I have esteemed the words of his mouth more than my necessary food” (Job 23:11-12). The way Job
chose was the best way, the scriptural way, God’s way—“his way.”
What do you think of that way, dear reader? Was it not a grand selection? Ah, not only “patient,” but wise Job! Have
you made a similar choice? Can you say, “My foot hath held his steps, his way have I kept, and not declined” (23:11)? If
you can, praise Him for His enabling grace. If you cannot, confess with shame your failure to appropriate His allsufficient
grace. Get down on your knees at once, and unbosom10 yourself to God. Hide and keep back nothing. Remember
it is written, “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness”
(1Jo 1:9). Does not verse 12 explain your failure, my failure, dear reader? Is it not because we have not
trembled before God’s commandments and because we have so lightly esteemed His Word that we have “declined” from
His way? Then let us, even now and daily, seek grace from on high to heed His commandments and hide His Word in
our hearts.
“He knoweth the way that I take.” Which way are you taking—the narrow way that leadeth unto life or the broad road
that leadeth to destruction? Make certain on this point, dear friend. Scripture declares, “So every one of us shall give
account of himself to God” (Rom 14:12). But you need not be deceived or uncertain. The Lord declared, “I am the way”
(Joh 14:6).
2. DIVINE TESTING:
“When he hath tried me.” :“The fining pot is for silver, and the furnace for gold: but the LORD
trieth the hearts” (Pro 17:3). This was God’s way with Israel of old, and it is His way with Christians now. Just before
Israel entered Canaan, as Moses reviewed their history since leaving Egypt, he said, “And thou shalt remember all the
way which the LORD thy God led thee these forty years in the wilderness, to humble thee, and to prove thee, to know
what was in thine heart, whether thou wouldest keep his commandments, or no” (Deu 8:2). In the same way, God tries,
tests, proves, humbles us.
“When he hath tried me.” If we realized this more, we should bear up better in the hour of affliction and be more patient
under suffering. The daily irritations of life, the things that annoy so much—what is their meaning? Why are they
permitted? Here is the answer: God is “trying” you! That is the explanation (in part, at least) of that disappointment,
that crushing of your earthly hopes, that great loss—God was, is, testing you. God is trying your temper, your courage,
your faith, your patience, your love, your fidelity.11
“When he hath tried me.” How frequently God’s saints see only Satan as the cause of their troubles. They regard the
great enemy as responsible for much of their sufferings. But there is no comfort for the heart in this. We do not deny
that the devil does bring about much that harasses us. But above Satan is the Lord Almighty! The devil cannot touch a
hair of our heads without God’s permission; and when he is allowed to disturb and distract us, even then it is only God
using him to “try” us. Let us learn then, to look beyond all secondary causes and instruments to that One Who worketh
all things after the counsel of His own will (Eph 1:11). This is what Job did.
In the opening chapter of the book that bears [Job’s] name, we find Satan obtaining permission to afflict God’s servant.
He used the Sabeans to destroy Job’s herds (Job 1:15); he sent the Chaldeans to slay his servants (1:17); he caused a
great wind to kill his children (1:19). And what was Job’s response? This: he exclaimed, “The LORD gave, and the
LORD hath taken away; blessed be the name of the LORD” (1:21). Job looked beyond the human agents, beyond Satan
who employed them, to the Lord Who controlleth all. He realized that it was the Lord trying him. We get the same
thing in the New Testament. To the suffering saints at Smyrna John wrote, “Fear none of those things which thou shalt
suffer; behold, the devil shall cast some of you into prison, that ye may be tried” (Rev 2:10). Their being cast into prison
was simply God “trying” them.
How much we lose by forgetting this! What a stay for the trouble-tossed heart to know that no matter what form the
testing may take, no matter what the agent that annoys, it is God Who is “trying” His children. What a perfect example
the Savior sets us! When He was approached in the garden, and Peter drew his sword and cut off the ear of Malchus, the
Savior said, “The cup which my Father hath given me, shall I not drink it?” (Joh 18:11). Men were about to vent their
awful rage upon Him, the serpent would bruise His heel, but He looks above and beyond them. Dear reader, no matter
how bitter its contents (infinitely less than that which the Savior drained), let us accept the cup as from the Father’s
hand.
In some moods, we are apt to question the wisdom and right of God to try us. So often we murmur at His dispensations.12
Why should God lay such an intolerable burden upon me? Why should others be spared their loved ones, and
mine taken? Why should health and strength, perhaps the gift of sight, be denied me? The first answer to all such questions
is, “O man, who art thou that repliest against God?” (Rom 9:20)! It is wicked insubordination for any creature to
call into question the dealings of the great Creator. “Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou
made me thus?” (Rom 9:20). How earnestly each of us needs to cry unto God that His grace may silence our rebellious
lips and still the tempest within our desperately wicked hearts!
Again, in 1 Peter 4:12-13, we are told, “Beloved, think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you, as
though some strange thing happened unto you: But rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ’s sufferings: that,
when his glory shall be revealed, ye may be glad also with exceeding joy.” The same thoughts are expressed here as in
the previous passage. There is a needs-be13 for our “trials,” and therefore we are to think them not strange—we should
expect them. And, too, there is again the blessed outlook of being richly recompensed at Christ’s return. Then, there is
the added word that not only should we meet these trials with faith’s fortitude, but we should rejoice in them also, inasmuch
as we are permitted to have fellowship in “the sufferings of Christ” (2Co 1:5). He, too, suffered: sufficient then,
“for the disciple [to] be as his master” (Mat 10:24-25).
“When he hath tried me.” Dear Christian reader, there are no exceptions. God had only one Son without sin, but never
one without sorrow. Sooner or later, in one form or another, trial—sore and heavy—will be our lot. “And sent Timotheus,
our brother…to establish you, and to comfort you concerning your faith: That no man should be moved by these
afflictions: for yourselves know that we are appointed thereunto” (1Th 3:2-3). Again, it is written, “We must through
much tribulation enter into the kingdom of God” (Act 14:22). It has been so in every age. Abram was “tried,” tried severely.
So, too, were Joseph, Jacob, Moses, David, Daniel, the Apostles, etc.
3. THE ULTIMATE ISSUE:
“I shall come forth as gold.” Observe the tense here. Job did not imagine that he was pure
gold already. “I shall come forth as gold,” he declared. He knew full well that there was yet much dross14 in him. He did
not boast that he was already perfect. Far from it. In the final chapter of his book, we find him saying, “I abhor myself”
(42:6). And well he might; and well may we. As we discover that in our flesh there dwelleth “no good thing,” as we examine
ourselves and our ways in the light of God’s Word and behold our innumerable failures, as we think of our countless
sins, both of omission and commission—good reason have we for abhorring ourselves. Ah, Christian reader, there is
much dross about us. But it will not ever be thus.
“I shall come forth as gold.” Job did not say, “When he hath tried me I may come forth as gold,” or “I hope to come
forth as gold,” but with full confidence and positive assurance he declared, “I shall come forth as gold.” But how did he
know this? How can we be sure of the happy issue? Because the divine purpose cannot fail. He that hath begun a good
work in us “will finish it” (Phi 1:6). How can we be sure of the happy issue? Because the divine promise is sure: “The
LORD will perfect that which concerneth me” (Psa 138:8). Then, be of good cheer, tried and troubled one! The process
may be unpleasant and painful, but the issue is charming and sure.
“I shall come forth as gold.” This was said by one who knew affliction and sorrow as few among the sons of men have
known them. Yet despite his fiery trials, he was optimistic. Let, then, this triumphant language be ours. “I shall come
forth as gold” is not the language of carnal boasting, but the confidence of one whose mind was stayed upon God. There
will be no credit to our account—the glory will all belong to the divine Refiner (Jam 1:12).
For the present, there remain two things: first, love is the divine thermometer while we are in the crucible of testing—“And
he shall sit [the patience of divine grace] as a refiner and purifier of silver…” (Mal 3:3). Second, the Lord
Himself is with us in the fiery furnace, as He was with the three young Hebrews (Dan 3:25). For the future this is sure:
the most wonderful thing in heaven will not be the golden street or the golden harps, but golden souls on which is stamped the image of God—predestinated “to be conformed to the image of his Son” (Rom 8:29)! Praise God for such a
glorious prospect, such a victorious issue, such a marvelous goal!
~0~
Christian! Your present afflictions are not great if compared with the afflictions and torments of many of the damned, who, when they were
in this world, never sinned at so high a rate as you have done! There are many now in hell who never sinned against such clear light as you
have done, nor against such special love as you have done, nor against such precious mercies as you have done! Certainly, there are many
now a-roaring in everlasting burnings who never sinned as you have done!
Whose pains are without intermission of mitigation;15 who have weeping served for the first course, gnashing of teeth for the second course,
the gnawing worm for the third course, and intolerable pain for the fourth course!
Yet the pain of the body is the least part of pain. The very soul of sorrow and pain is the soul’s sorrow and pain! The everlasting alienation
and separation from God is served for the fifth course!
Ah, Christian! How can you seriously think on these things and not lay your hand upon your mouth,
even when you are under the greatest temporal16 sufferings? Your sins have been far greater than
many of those who are now in hell, and your “great” afflictions are but a fleabite
compared to theirs! Therefore, hush your murmuring
and be silent before the Lord! —Thomas Brooks
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1 impetuous – acting without thought or care; acting in an impulsive manner.
2 providence – “What are God’s works of providence? A: God’s works of providence are His most holy, wise, and powerful preserving and governing all His creatures and all their actions.” (Spurgeon’s Catechism, Q. 11)
3 omniscience – the state of possessing all knowledge.
4 Charles H. Spurgeon (1834-1892) – influential Baptist preacher.
5 harrowing – extremely distressing.
6 censorious – severely or harshly critical.
7 volition – the ability to make conscious choices or decisions.
8 enigma – something that is mysterious or difficult to understand.
9 automatons – robots that, without thinking, mechanically perform the will of another.
10 unbosom – bring out from the heart; give vent to; reveal one’s thoughts or secrets.
11 fidelity – faithfulness.
12 dispensations – divine acts and dealings.
13 needs-be – a necessary cause; the cause behind a resulting effect.
14 dross – a scum formed from impurities on the surface of molten metal; thus, something worthless.
15 mitigation – the action of making something milder.
16 temporal – of man’s present life in time as distinguished from a future eternal existence.
15 mitigation – the action of making something milder.
16 temporal – of man’s present life in time as distinguished from a future eternal existence.
From "Comfort for Christians"
http://www.chapellibrary.org/
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