“Why
did I not die at birth?
Why
did I not perish when I came from the womb?
Why
did the knees receive me?
Or
why the breasts, that I should nurse?
For
now I would have lain still and been quiet,
I
would have been asleep;
Then
I would have been at rest – Job 3.11-13
There
is a scene from the great Christmas movie classic 'It’s a Wonderful Life.' Jimmy
Stewart is playing the part of George Bailey. His life has taken a series of
bad turns to the point where he suddenly gets the notion in his head that
everything would be better if he had never been born.
Long
before our fictional George Bailey stood on that snowy bridge we had a real
live Job who asked the same question.
Why
didn’t I die at birth?
Why
did my mother nourish me?
If
not for that I would be at peace and not going through the misery I am going
through now.
I
wish I could say that those kinds of thoughts were rare. However the reality of
life and the heaviness of trails can become overwhelming. Personal illness, especially
serious illness, can bring anyone to the point where they consider if life is
worth living. I can understand why anyone in Job’s situation would say ‘it
would have been better if I had never been born.’
And
that is the point of the book of Job. Job, like George Bailey and like you and
me could not see the whole picture at this point. All he could see was right then
and right there and all we can see is right here and right now.
That’s
why Job was in despair.
Nut
there was a bigger picture – and we are about to be privileged to see it.
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