Today, I am reading and commenting on Job 29-33.
I am always struck by Job’s friend Elihu. He is not mentioned earlier in the Book, when the other three were first introduced, and he is not mentioned at the end when God tells the other three to ask Job to pray for them. In today’s passage we are told that Elihu was angry with Job for justifying himself rather than God, and that he was angry with the other three friends because they condemned Job, but could not refute his arguments. Now I want to consider what Elihu had to say. He acknowledges that it was right that he wait and listen while the others, his elders, spoke, but now that they have had their say (and failed to prove Job wrong), he would speak. In his speech Elihu makes two statements which show greater wisdom than anything said by Job’s other friends. Elihu declares that he is no better than Job. He is as much of a flawed, limited mortal as Job. Then he challenges Job’s complaint that God does not respond when mortals cry out to Him. Elihu contends that God does indeed speak to us, but we, all too often, fail to hear when He does so. Elihu makes the claim that God’s apparent silence is our fault for not listening, not God’s fault for failing to speak. This should remind us of the still, small voice with which God spoke to Elijah, but Elihu does go on to list some of the ways in which God speaks to some of us.
I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.