Rest in Peace [Job 3:25-26]
Last Wednesday, in our study of Job 3, we discussed what Job was needing the most. His life had
become a life of turmoil and as a result, his mind and his heart were not at rest. From a human
perspective, we can understand and even approve of Job’s reaction. It is humanly impossible for anyone
to be at rest when forced to endure what Job endured.
“For what I fear comes upon me, and what I dread befalls me. I am not at ease, nor am I quiet, and I am
not at rest, but turmoil comes.” [Job 3:25-26]
Job cries out as his greatest fears have smothered and choked out of him any life that he once had.
I am not at ease – a very honest assessment. Job had no peace. Nor am I quiet – another very honest
assessment. In his inward parts, Job was screaming for relief and crying out for understanding as to
why he had become the target of such great turmoil. I am not at rest – perhaps his greatest
assessment of all. Job was not at rest…but he wanted to be. And he needed to be because more
turmoil was about to come. Three ‘friends’ would travel from afar to ‘comfort’ him in his time of great
turmoil…three men who came with good intentions but who would arrive with false
accusations…three self-righteous God proclaimers were about to become one of Satan’s greatest
weapons in tearing down God’s man.
Again, Job would be tested. He would be tested (and tempted) to give up on God and to walk away
the commitment he had made that made him into the man which he had become. Satan, once
more, asks God’s permission to sift Job like wheat [Lk 22:31] so that he would divorce himself from His
Creator and His Redeemer [Job 19:25]. And Job would be tempted to shift his faith in a gracious and
sovereign God to a hardhearted belief in callous and condemning one. Yes, it was peace that he
needed most. So, in the beginning of chapter three, Job laments the day he was born. In so many
words he says – I am better off either dead or not to have been born in the first place.
I spoke with someone the other day and he shared something very pointedly with me. He told me how
he doesn’t really like the book of Job. My quick reply was – then why do you continue to come to the
study? I believe he’d said this only to make a point, and he did. As a young boy, he had watched as his
father endured a debilitating disease that eventually took his life. He reminded me that he was only
twelve when that day occurred. He shared how his father had poured his remaining days into the book
Job…seeking understanding and searching for comfort. It seemed as if he was saying that his father
was trying to find rest and to be at ease in the midst of his great turmoil. I don’t remember exactly
what his reply to my question was, but I do remember his attitude and the peace that I heard in his
voice as he shared about his own personal health struggles. His spirit was so calm and much at ease.
He told me he was ready to go if The Lord would take him. And then he did as Job did when he faced
Satan’s first test – he praised God above and reminded me of how good God still is…in spite of his pain
and his turmoil.
As I write this, I am reminded of those times that I allowed myself to be overcome with sorrow and
grief. I’m not saying that being sorrowful or grieving is bad or even sinful. I’m saying that I, like Job, had
allowed myself at times to be overcome by the turmoil that was providentially thrust upon me. Still,
we know how this book ends…and how Job learns one of the greatest lessons in life. Isn’t it comforting
to know that we can learn what Job was divinely predestined to learn? That God is good…and that He
is just…and that He is great…even greater than our pain and our sorrow and our sin. Isn’t it good to
know that we, like Job, can enter into a divine state of supernatural peace…if only, we would choose
to?
This is what I remember most from the conversation I had with this man the other day. In watching
how his father lived out the rest of his days and experiencing his own turmoil in life, he chose to do
what Job learned to do – rest in peace. It is a lesson that Job could only learn in the midst of turmoil
and suffering and pain. God offers ‘His’ peace; however, it is a peace that we must choose to accept. It
is not one that we can create ourselves or one that can be manufactured outside of the glories of
heaven. This peace our Savior offers to us…even now. Today, will you choose to Rest in Peace?
A Shepherd's Muse






