P1662:3, 148:6.1
It was this same evening at Bethsaida that John also asked Jesus why so many
apparently innocent people suffered from so many diseases and experienced
so many afflictions. In answering John's questions, among many other things,
the Master said:
P1662:4, 148:6.2
"My son, you do not comprehend the meaning of adversity or the mission of
suffering. Have you not read that masterpiece of Semitic literature -- the
Scripture story of the afflictions of Job? Do you not recall how this wonderful
parable begins with the recital of the material prosperity of the Lord's servant?
You well remember that Job was blessed with children, wealth, dignity, position,
health, and everything else which men value in this temporal life. According
to the time-honored teachings of the children of Abraham such material prosperity
was all-sufficient evidence of divine favor. But such material possessions
and such temporal prosperity do not indicate God's favor. My Father in heaven
loves the poor just as much as the rich; he is no respecter of persons.
P1663:1, 148:6.3
"Although transgression of divine law is sooner or later followed by the harvest
of punishment, while men certainly eventually do reap what they sow, still
you should know that human suffering is not always a punishment for antecedent
sin. Both Job and his friends failed to find the true answer for their perplexities.
And with the light you now enjoy you would hardly assign to either Satan or
God the parts they play in this unique parable. While Job did not, through
suffering, find the resolution of his intellectual troubles or the solution
of his philosophical difficulties, he did achieve great victories; even in
the very face of the breakdown of his theological defenses he ascended to
those spiritual heights where he could sincerely say, `I abhor myself'; then
was there granted him the salvation of a vision of God. So even through
misunderstood suffering, Job ascended to the superhuman plane of moral understanding
and spiritual insight. When the suffering servant obtains a vision of God,
there follows a soul peace which passes all human understanding.
P1663:2, 148:6.4
"The first of Job's friends, Eliphaz, exhorted the sufferer to exhibit in
his afflictions the same fortitude he had
prescribed for others during the
days of his prosperity. Said this false comforter: `Trust in your religion,
Job; remember that it is the wicked and not the righteous who suffer. You
must deserve this punishment, else you would not be afflicted. You well know
that no man can be righteous in God's sight. You know that the wicked never
really prosper. Anyway, man seems
predestined to trouble, and perhaps the
Lord is only
chastising you for your own good.' No wonder poor Job failed
to get much comfort from such an interpretation of the problem of human suffering.
P1663:3, 148:6.5
"But the counsel of his second friend, Bildad, was even more depressing, notwithstanding
its soundness from the standpoint of the then accepted theology. Said Bildad:
`God cannot be unjust. Your children must have been sinners since they perished;
you must be in error, else you would not be so afflicted. And if you are really
righteous, God will certainly deliver you from your afflictions. You should
learn from the history of God's dealings with man that the Almighty destroys
only the wicked.'
P1663:4, 148:6.6
"And then you remember how Job replied to his friends, saying: `I well know
that God does not hear my cry for help. How can God be just and at the same
time so utterly disregard my innocence? I am learning that I can get no satisfaction
from appealing to the Almighty. Cannot you discern that God tolerates the
persecution of the good by the wicked? And since man is so weak, what chance
has he for consideration at the hands of an omnipotent God? God has made me
as I am, and when he thus turns upon me, I am defenseless. And why did God
ever create me just to suffer in this miserable fashion?'
P1663:5, 148:6.7
"And who can challenge the attitude of Job in view of the counsel of his friends
and the erroneous ideas of God which occupied his own mind? Do you not see
that Job longed for a human God, that he hungered to commune with a
divine Being who knows man's mortal estate and understands that the just must
often suffer in innocence as a part of this first life of the long Paradise
ascent? Wherefore has the Son of Man come forth from the Father to live such
a life in the flesh that he will be able to comfort and succor all those who
must henceforth be called upon to endure the afflictions of Job.
P1663:6, 148:6.8
"Job's third friend, Zophar, then spoke still less comforting words when he
said: `You are foolish to claim to be righteous, seeing that you are thus
afflicted. But I admit that it is impossible to comprehend God's ways. Perhaps
there is some hidden purpose in all your miseries.' And when Job had listened
to all three of his friends, he appealed directly to God for help, pleading
the fact that `man, born of woman, is few of days and full of trouble.'
P1664:1, 148:6.9
"Then began the second session with his friends. Eliphaz grew more stern,
accusing, and
sarcastic. Bildad became indignant at Job's contempt for his
friends. Zophar reiterated his
melancholy advice. Job by this time had become
disgusted with his friends and appealed again to God, and now he appealed
to a just God against the God of injustice embodied in the philosophy of his
friends and enshrined even in his own religious attitude. Next Job took refuge
in the consolation of a future life in which the inequities of mortal existence
may be more justly rectified. Failure to receive help from man drives Job
to God. Then ensues the great struggle in his heart between faith and doubt.
Finally, the human sufferer begins to see the light of life; his tortured
soul ascends to new heights of hope and courage; he may suffer on and even
die, but his enlightened soul now utters that cry of triumph, `My Vindicator
lives!'
P1664:2, 148:6.10
"Job was altogether right when he challenged the doctrine that God afflicts
children in order to punish their parents. Job was ever ready to admit that
God is righteous, but he longed for some soul-satisfying revelation of the
personal character of the Eternal. And that is our mission on earth. No more
shall suffering mortals be denied the comfort of knowing the love of God and
understanding the mercy of the Father in heaven. While the speech of God spoken
from the whirlwind was a majestic concept for the day of its utterance, you
have already learned that the Father does not thus reveal himself, but rather
that he speaks within the human heart as a still, small voice, saying, `This
is the way; walk therein.' Do you not comprehend that God dwells within you,
that he has become what you are that he may make you what he is!"
P1664:3, 148:6.11
Then Jesus made this final statement: "The Father in heaven does not willingly
afflict the children of men. Man suffers, first, from the accidents of time
and the imperfections of the evil of an immature physical existence. Next,
he suffers the inexorable consequences of sin -- the transgression of the
laws of life and light. And finally, man reaps the harvest of his own iniquitous
persistence in rebellion against the righteous rule of heaven on earth. But
man's miseries are not a personal visitation of divine judgment. Man
can, and will, do much to lessen his temporal sufferings. But once and for
all be delivered from the superstition that God afflicts man at the behest
of the evil one. Study the Book of Job just to discover how many wrong ideas
of God even good men may honestly entertain; and then note how even the painfully
afflicted Job found the God of comfort and salvation in spite of such erroneous
teachings. At last his faith pierced the clouds of suffering to discern the
light of life pouring forth from the Father as healing mercy and everlasting
righteousness."
P1664:4, 148:6.12
John pondered these sayings in his heart for many days. His entire afterlife
was markedly changed as a result of this conversation with the Master in the
garden, and he did much, in later times, to cause the other apostles to change
their viewpoints regarding the source, nature, and purpose of commonplace
human afflictions. But John never spoke of this conference until after the
Master had departed.