The Television Church

By Harold V. Comer

What is the audience (or the congregation) of the Television Church like?

What motivates Christians to watch TV preachers and give their approval? Will their TV interest effect their local church affiliation and attendance?

If viewers stay home more and attend services less, what benefits will they miss?

What kind of personalities are particularly influenced by the appeals of today’s TV evangelists?

Why do people give money so readily to people and programs of work that they know so little about?

There are a number of questions that I have about the “congregation” of the Television Church that gathers a few feet from the flat glass pulpit and seems to respond so thoroughly to the appeals and messages of the television evangelist. Some of these questions cannot be completely answered but the questions that can be answered will provide us with a greater awareness of our challenges today and also give us an appreciation of the benefits of God’s plan of worship.

Examples And Case Studies

Harry is an untalented salesman who is struggling to be a success. He is addicted to the programs of Robert Schuller and Jim Bakker.

Harry is irregular at the local church where his wife, who is stronger than Harry spiritually, attends faithfully. For her part, she is repulsed by the television preachers he watches and is fearful of the doctrinal efforts they teach. Harry admits that they are wrong some of the time, but thinks that his favorite preachers still say a lot of “good things.”

“Good things” to Harry are the materialistic promises of the “wealth” and “success” theology at the core of the preachers that he listens to. He thinks that he is going to be a better salesman by watching them and that is very important to Harry.

Harry illustrates some of the motivation that traps weaker Christians and draws them into the audience of the Television Church.

A Different Case Study

A second example will illustrate another personality that finds TV preachers appealing. Alice is a Christian who is also a fan of some television ministers. Alice has a great awareness of her aches and pains. She is in relatively good health but has a great fear of illness and poor health.

Like Harry, she is a weaker member also. She likes the assurances of the “healing” ministers who promise her a perfectly healthy body. In contrast, the local preacher has a crippled leg and he recently lost a child. He has preached some on biblical help for your suffering. Alice is always troubled by those lessons and prefers a “positive” approach that assures her that God will never allow her to have to face such difficulties.

Her loyalty has gradually shifted from assembling with the congregation of saints to being in her Lazy Boy pew when the 15 piece band opens the program.

The Problem

We live in a materialistic, body-conscious world and television ministers must touch very deep immediate motivations to open up people’s pocketbooks. Health, wealth, unity, and entertainment to replace reformation of character, are appealing approaches to weak Christians who don’t understand all of the things they are missing as they gravitate to the Television Church.

What You Miss In The Lord’s Supper

The first thing you miss if you stay home more is the loss of the benefits of the Lord’s Supper. You miss the communion with Christ (Matt. 26:29) and with the body of Christ (1 Cor. 10:16). You lose the deep intense motivation that comes from fully visualizing the cross and the body and the blood of the Lord. Without that weekly image, you become weak and sick spiritually (1 Cor. 11:30).

When you say that the Lord’s Supper didn’t do you much good when you went, you simply confess that you did not .observe it reverently and thoughtfully. When the Lord’s Supper is properly visualized and appreciated, it will always be meaningful and effective in moving us to greater spirituality. When you miss service, you miss the Lord’s Supper and the many deep benefits that God incorporated into this act.

What You Miss In The Singing

The second thing you miss when you stay home to be entertained by the well performed “special music” of the expensive television productions is the loss of the subconscious instructions you receive when you sing in worship. Singing is for teaching and admonition to one another (Eph. 5:19; Col. 3:16), but I teach myself most of all when I sing with awareness and reverence.

When I repeat familiar songs, I deepen the process of “keeping my heart” (Prov. 4:23) through that repetition of valuable messages. There is a significant loss when I don’t sing, don’t sing with alertness, or watch someone else perform.

What You Miss With Your Brethren

The third thing I miss when I withdraw to my television set is the loss of association with God’s people. Urbanized brethren are taught by their daily experiences to withdraw from closer associations. Yet God teaches us to prefer our brethren (Rom. 12:10), and to love them (1 Pet. 1:22).

That loving family closeness is lost when I don’t make an effort or when I seldom go to service. Note, the Bible doesn’t tell us to “be loved,” it tells us to do the loving. Maslow says that one basic need of human beings is that of “belonging.” I belong more when “I love them” than I do when “they love me.” I only begin to start to develop these deeper relationships by fellowshipping with my brethren in worship together.

The contacts of the television watcher are more distant, less intimate, less personal, and therefore less satisfying and fulfilling. You need more than that.

What You Miss With Soft Preaching

Finally, the man who stays home to watch the television preacher will miss some pointed and important lesson that he needs. Television preaching must be less controversial and less provocative. Hard preaching drives away too many essential contributors.

So the viewer finds the T.V. messages unoffensive. His toes are never stepped on, except about general morality, selfishness, and giving. He loses the stimulation that comes from a minister who cares about him as a person and from elders that back the preacher to fully say what God commanded. I’ve never heard a television preacher deal with the subject of divorce except to be accommodating about it finally. You need someone who cares enough about you to say the painful things. We all need our toes stepped on.

Conclusion

Many of us don’t appreciate the great benefits we have in following the simplicity of God’s plan. When we neglect the assembly for a television performance, we weaken our souls and our spirituality and we sin before God. We all need something far better than the erroneous “health and wealth” promises of today’s television ministries. They offer false assurances and they rob the weak of far more important gifts that God has hidden for us within His commands to assemble reverently and lovingly with His saints.

Guardian of Truth XXXI: 12, pp. 353, 391
June 18, 1987

Victims Of Sin

By Randy Reynolds

Throughout biblical and secular history we find that by the sinful, evil ways of man, many times the innocent are victimized. This is clearly the case with over 1,500,000 unborn babies in our country each year. They have become victims due in part to the ruling of the U.S. Supreme Court on January 22, 1973 which stated that according to the U.S. Constitution unborn humans are not legal “persons.” An unborn baby has become the property of the owner (mother) and she can have the child killed (aborted) at her request, even up to the time of the birth if her doctor agrees. Thus by a 7 to 2 ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court declared unconstitutional all state laws protecting unborn children from abortion. This decision of course, has opened the door to the right to have an abortion-on-demand. All of this has produced more than 16,000,000 murders since 1973.

As appalling as it is, I guess we really shouldn’t be too surprised since similar events have characterized the sinner and sin all through time, as the following examples will further illustrate.

Example 1: In Exodus 1,2 we read that Moses was born at a time in history when Pharaoh, the king of Egypt, had resolved to have every newborn male child among the Israelites put to death. The death toll would have been one more had not Moses’ mother placed him in a basket in the Nile among the reeds.

Example 2: The following archaeological note concerning Baal worship is taken from Halley’s Bible Handbook.- “The Oriental Institute, excavating at Megiddo which is near Samaria, found, in the stratum of Ahab’s time, the ruins of a temple of Ashtoreth, goddess wife of Baal. Just a few steps from the temple was a cemetery, where jars were found, containing remains of infants who had been sacrificed in the temple. Prophets of Baal and Ashtoreth were official murderers of little children” (Halley’s Bible Handbook, p. 198).

Example 3: When King Herod found out that he had been deceived by the wise men whom he had sent out to locate baby Jesus, he ordered all the male children who were in Bethlehem and in all that region, from two years old and under, to be put to death (cf. Matt. 2:16f).

Example 4: In the late ’30s and early ’40s Adolf Hitler was able to delude Germany with his racial dogmas which eventually led to a policy of genocide, under which deliberate campaigns of extermination were carried out against the Poles, Russians, and most notably against the Jews. Some historical references estimate that as many as 7,000,000 Jews were murdered by the National Socialistic Party which was in power in Germany.

Why has all of this happened throughout the years of man’s existence? Sin!

In Egypt, Pharaoh saw that the children of Israel had multiplied to the point of being mightier than the Egyptians. And in Exodus 1:10 Pharaoh said, “Come, let us deal wisely with them.” So he afflicted them with hard labor, commanded the Hebrew midwives to kill the male children at birth, and when he saw that they continued to multiply and become mighty, he ordered every newborn son cast into the Nile. When Stephen touches on this part of history in Acts 7:19 he says that Pharaoh “dealt treacherously with our people, and oppressed our forefathers. “

The worship of Baal (a generic term for god in many of the Syro-Arabian languages) must have been a rather powerful force during Old Testament days. In numerous references the Bible speaks of temples erected to Baal, many altars on lofty eminences, and literally hundreds of priests. In one reference however to the Northern tribes of Israel we find these words recorded: “they have built the high places of Baal to bum their sons in the fire as burnt offerings to Baal, a thing which I never commanded or spoke of nor did it ever enter My mind” (cf. Jer. 19:5).

The Gospel writer Matthew tells us that when Herod the king heard of the King of the Jews being born, he was troubled. Why? Perhaps it was because he was by birth an Edomite, thus a usurper to the throne of David. Or perhaps it was the fact that his rise to power and his holding of the throne had been a bloody ordeal. Or could it have been the knowledge of the promised Messiah of the Jews that was anticipated? Whatever those selfish motives were that Herod had, the result was that hundreds of male children were slaughtered (cf. Matt. 2:1f).

And finally there was Germany, a country torn by economic and social problems, allowing Hitler to manipulate them into such human slaughter of innocent victims.

Conclusion

Sometimes sin masquerades as what seems to be best for a country; as religion; as control of worldly power; and even as an answer to economic woes. Today one disguise sin wears is a title of Planned Parenthood, an organization which promotes abortion on demand, immorality and undermines parental authority. This organization is being partly funded by our government, their sex curriculum is being used in public schools to promote promiscuity (sex education classes) while in their own clinics abortions are being performed.

How sad it is to think that less than 45 years after Hitler’s heartless massacre that shocked the world, we live in a nation that for 14 years now, has legalized the murder of innocent babies.

Regardless of its many names and many disguises, it is still sin (cf. 1 Jn. 3:4). And woe to those who must face the terrible vengeance of our God (cf. 2 Thess. 1:7-9).

Guardian of Truth XXXI: 11, pp. 323-324
June 4, 1987

Solos, Quartets: A Response

By Weldon E. Warnock

Our differences, however, in opposition to solos and quartets are the following: Brother Bragewll opposes these practices because he believes they are unlawful, and I oppose them because I believe they are highly inexpedient, leading to praise in public worship becoming theatrical and mere entertainment. The crux of this exchange, by and large, revolves around three passages – 1 Corinthians 14:26; Ephesians 5:19; Colossians 3:16. We will analyze these texts in response to brother Bragwell’s interpretation of them.

1 Corinthians 14:26

Paul wrote in 1 Corinthians 14:26, “How is it then, brethren? When ye come together, every one of you hath a psalm, hath a doctrine, hath a tongue, hath a revelation, hath an interpretation. Let all things be done unto edifying.” My contention is that this verse plainly teaches that at Corinth (obviously, other congregations, too), a brother would sing a solo before the assembly that he received from the Spirit, or perhaps he composed himself. Paul said in I Corinthians 14:15 that “I will sing with the spirit.” (The context favors Spirit, not spirit. The song was imparted most likely by the Spirit here, as well as v. 26.)

If the man in v. 26 brought the song so that he and all others could sing it together, why would not the man in v. 26 who had a doctrine or a revelation also just bring the instructions/teaching and hand it over to others for them to teach the assembly? Each one (those so gifted) hath a psalm, each one hath a doctrine, each one hath a revelation. One brother had a song to sing, another had a doctrine to teach and another had a revelation to give.

Wonder how a brother in that day would have proceeded in getting all the assembly to sing together a song he had received from the Spirit? He would not have brought copies to pass around. He could not have sung it through once or twice for the others to have learned it because he would have been guilty of singing a solo, which we are told is unlawful. Suppose he read it? Is it permissible to read the song, but not sing it? Then, there is the problem with the tune. How do we learn that without songbooks and shaped notes?

Kittel says, “in 1 Cor. 14:25 psalmon is a Christian song that is sung by an individual at workship” (Theo. Dict. of N.T., One Vol. Ed., p. 1226). Thayer states, “the phrase echein psalmon is used of one who has it in his heart to sing or recite a song of the sort, 1 Cor. 14:26” (p. 65). Findlay comments, “‘Each has a psalm (to sing) – a teaching, a revelation (to impart) – a tongue, as an interpretation (to give)” (The Expositor’s Gr. Testament, Edited by W. Robertson Nicoll, Vol. 2, p. 912).

Charles Hodge says, “One was impelled by the Spirit to pour forth his heart in a song of praise. Comp. v. 15” (1 Cor., p. 300). H.A. W. Meyw observes, “has a psalm ready, i.e. he feels himself qualified and constrained to sing aloud such a spirit-given song. It is not, however, the glossalalia psallein which is meant” (1 & 2 Cor., p. 329). Conybeare and Howson translate the passage, “If when you meet together, one is prepared to sing a hymn of praise. (Life & Epistles of St. Paul, p. 409).

Charles J. Ellicott says, “The psalmos here mentioned was probably a hymn of praise, under the influence of the Spirit, and so extemporaneous in its nature” (1 Cor., p. 277). Henry Alford stated, “Whenever you happen to be assembling together the present vividly describes each coming with his gift, eager to exercise it” (The Greek Testament, p. 598). We also read, “Each one.’not that everyone present would of necessity take part; rather it indicates the general distribution of gifts throughout the local church. Has a hymn, a lesson ” (T he New Layman’s Bible Commentary, Editors: G.C.D. Howley, F.F. Bruce & H.L. Ellison, p. 1452).

More sources could be quoted, but these excerpts will suffice to show that the weight of the scholarship favors my contention that 1 Corinthians 14:26 teaches solo singing was practiced in the early church. The aim was for edification, not exhibition of talent or entertainment. Wonder if some of us had been preaching at Corinth if we would have allowed a brother to sing before the assembly as taught in 1 Corinthians 14:26? It seems to me that brother Bragwell is the one who has the problem of harmonizing 1 Corinthians 14:26 with Ephesians 5:19 and Colossians 3:16, rather than I. There is nothing said, nor implied in 1 Corinthians 14:26, about a brother bringing a song for all the others to sing. He sang the song himself.

Ephesians 5:19 and Colossians 3:16

We are told that 1 Corinthians 14:26 does not permit a solo in the assembly of the church because it would violate Ephesians 5:19 and Colossians 3:16. Would it? These two passages say nothing about singing in unison. They simply state that we are to teach one another through singing. This is done by congregational singing, whether in unison or antiphonally. We can also teach one another through solos. At Corinth one brother would sing a song, perhaps followed by another, and then another. They were speaking to one another. The two passages say, “speaking one to another in psalms and spiritual songs, singing and making melody with your heart to the Lord” (Eph. 5:19, ASV), and “. . . teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord” (Col. 3:16).

It is interesting how Conybeare & Howson translate these two passages. “Let your singing be of psalms an hymns and spiritual songs, and make melody with the music of your hearts, to the Lord” (Eph. 5:19). “Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly. Teach and admonish one another in all wisdom. Let your singing be of psalms, and hymns, and spiritual songs, sung in thanksgiving, with your heart, unto God” (Col. 3:16). But this translation seems to be strained and unnatural. The weight of scholarship is according to the rendition of the verses in the preceding paragraph.

Brother M.C. Kurfees wrote,

There are some things, such as prophesying or public speaking, to which these statements do not apply, for God has legislated here, and he limits public speaking to one person at a time for the clearly expressed purpose of avoiding confusion. Singing, which may be done in concert without confusion, is not thus restricted by legislation. To the Corinthians, Paul said: “When ye come together, each one hath a psalm, hath a teaching, hath a revelation, hath a tongue, hath an interpretation. Let all things be done unto edifying.” (1 Cor. 14:26). He here distinctly says that each one hath a psalm, and it will be observed that he does not condemn them for this, but only condemns their doing things without proper order, and urges that all be done to edifying. His admonition for Christians to sing is in the following words: “Speaking one to another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs.” (Eph. 5:19). He uses the reflexive pronoun, “speaking one to another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs.” It is a service rendered by “one to another” or by “one another.” He does not say whether this speaking in psalms and other kinds of musical compositions shall be done by all in concert or by one at a time: hence, either is correct (Gospel Advocate, May 15, 1913, p. 464).

I agree with brother Bragwell that there should be reciprocity in singing, but just how this would be exercised is not stated in Ephesians 5:19 and Colossians 3:16. In fact, these two Scriptures do not apply exclusively to the worship assembly of the church. They are just as applicable out of the church-assembly as in it. Oh, they include the worship assembly, by all means, but not just the public assembly of the church. I have studied the context, the phrases and the words of these texts, and I do not see the compelling evidence that makes them apply to a church-assembly, only. They would be applicable to any period or place of worship in song.

We sometimes meet in our homes for social activities. Frequently, during these times, we sing hymns. Are not Ephesians 5:19 and Colossians 3:16 being practiced? Occasionally, three or four of us will continue to sing after the others have quit. Are we sinning? Must all sing or none sing in all situations?

Charles J. Ellicott said on Ephesians 5:19, “Whether the reference is here to social meetings . . . or expressly to religious services … or, more probably, to both, can hardly be determined from the context” (Epist. of St. Paul, Gal. – 2 Thess., p. 128). T.K. Abbott stated, “But the reference (Eph. 5:19) cannot be specially to religious services, as the context shows.” Commenting on Colossians 3:16, Abbott wrote, “Here as there the reference does not appear to be exclusively or chiefly to public worship, for mutual instruction is what is prescribed” (International Critical Commentary, Eph. & Col., pp. 162, 291).

MacKnight stated, “. . . the Ephesians were directed to sing alternately, a custom which was early practiced in the church; and that the apostle recommended it to them to sing psalms, and hymns, and spiritual songs, not only in their assemblies for worship, but in their houses, mentioning, as an example, Paul and Silas singing the praises of God in the prison of Philippi, so as to be heard by their fellow prisoners” (Apostolical Epistles, p. 340).

J.B. Lightfoot wrote, “The reference (psalms, hymns, wew) in the text is not solely or chiefly to public worship as such. . . ” (Epistles of St. Paul, Col. & Philemon, p. 223). William Hendriksen, commenting on Colossians 3:16, said, “His (Paul) admonition, therefore, can be applied to every type of Christian gathering … whether in the church or at home or anywhere else” (Colossians & Philemon, p. 163).

Worshiping God in song is not confined to the church building. We worship Him in praise in various and sundry circumstances. We worship God when we sing at home in our devotions and in our home gatherings of brethren wherein we sing. We worship God when a small group of us sing on a radio or TV program, when one, two or more of us sing at a funeral. It seems to me that we are too restrictive on this matter, and if we follow our reasoning to its ultimate consequence, we would have to have everybody sing in every circumstance in which we sing. The Bible does not teach this.

Brother Bragwell introduced some passages that showed reciprocal action, such as Mt. 16:8; 21:38; Mk. 163; Lk. 20:5; Eph. 4:32; etc. When the disciples reasoned among themselves in Mt. 16:8, did they all speak at once? How many minutes might have elapsed between the speech of the first one and the speech of the last one? Would brother Bragwell permit brethren to sing one at a time? If we sang the way they reasoned in Mt. 16:8 and spoke in Mt. 21:38, we would solo, one at a time. Would we allow brethren to sing in the order that these disciples reasoned among themselves?

In the last paragraph of brother Bragwell’s article, he stated a fear that the seeds of justification for solos and quartets sown today may influence the future generation to incorporate them into their worship. I can appreciate brother Bragwell’s concern, but I have heard the same anxiety about other matters from brethren concerning expedients. One brother I debated on “women teachers” said our practice of putting women in the classroom to teach children would lead to their being put into the pulpit to preach. Should we stop having women teachers because of a potential danger? Should we declare women teachers unlawful in order to head off the possibility of women evangelists?

A brother asked brother E.G. Sewell if singing different parts of music would lead some to the opinion that instruments are admissible. Sewell replied, “No, it is not the singing of the different parts of the tunes that cultivates the desire for the organ, but a worldly freshly mind and a mere desire for the fine music and have something to attract and entertain. . . ” (Queries Answered, p. 609). Methinks this is also true with solos and quartets.

Brother Kurfees wrote in the Gospel Advocate that solo singing is lawful, but inexpedient, and nobody was influenced to adopt solos from his article. Brother R.L. Whiteside, author of an excellent commentary on Romans, and Query Editory for the Gospel Advocate for several years, wrote, “To the Corinthians, Paul said, ‘when ye come together each one hath a psalm’ (1 Cor. 14:26). A solo is sometimes very effective; so also is a quartet. But no one wants either as a regular diet. In solos there is a temptation to sing for show, and a poor solo or a poor quartet is a mess” (Reflections, p. 372). Who has started practicing solos as a result of brother Whiteside’s observations?

Again, may I say that brother Bragwell and I stand side by side in our fight toward all unauthorized innovations into the church. I appreciate him as a man, as a Christian and as a preacher of the gospel. I trust this exchange will be profitable for all that read it.

Guardian of Truth XXXI: 11, pp. 327-329
June 4, 1987

The Problem Of Suffering

By Homer Hailey

There is no experience more universally peculiar to the human family than that of suffering. Suffering may be physical, or it may be mental. Its source may be that of nature, the great benefactor of man, which blesses us, and then indiscriminately inflicts inestimable suffering upon her subjects. Or, its source may be man himself as he wounds and hurts his fellow men. Or, suffering may be self-inflicted, either willfully or in ignorance. But of whatever source it may originate, suffering is the common lot of all. The real question is not how to avoid it, but, “How shall I meet it?” and, “What use shall I make of it?”

God and Suffering

How often when calamity strikes, and suffering or death invades the sacred realm of a home, does one hear the plaintive cry, “Why did this happen to me? What have I done to cause God to send this tragedy into our home?” It is unjust to God and to His holy nature to blame Him with the suffering or calamity that comes into the experiences of men. Men would make a brute of God, a cruel monster who strikes the little children with dread disease, leaving their bodies helpless or their minds deranged, or the mature man or woman with afflictions, excruciating in their intensity. The claims of many in trying to explain suffering only make God contradict Himself.

“It is the Lord’s will,” say some. But, No, it is not the Lord’s will; it is the devil’s will. Imagine God sending sickness, disease, blindness, deafness, and other afflictions, and then have Jesus come and undo the very thing God had done. Jesus healed the sick, restored soundness to the deformed, caused the deaf to hear, and the dumb to sing the praises of God. Did He do this in opposition to the very thing God had sent upon men, and that according to His will? A thousand times, NO! Upon being questioned for having healed a woman on the Sabbath, one who had possessed a spirit of infirmity for eighteen years, so bowed together that she could in no wise lift herself up, Jesus made His defense saying, “And ought not this woman, being a daughter of Abraham, whom Satan hath bound, lo these eighteen years, to have been loosed from this bond on the day of the sabbath?” (Luke 13:16) Her binding was according to Satan’s will; the loosing was of God.

To the apostle Paul there was given a “thorn in the flesh.” What it was no one knows, nor has he the means of knowing. Instead of telling us what it was, the apostle has told us from whence it came and how God gave him the power to use and bear it. “There was given me a thorn in the flesh, a messenger of Satan to buffet me, that I should not be exalted overmuch.” The thorn in the flesh was “a messenger from Satan”; it was not from God. But there was something which was from God, and it is that which God gives to all. Paul said, “I besought the Lord thrice, that it might depart me. And he hath said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee: for my power is made perfect in weakness” (2 Cor. 12:7-9). God does not send the thorn, Satan sends that; and God may not remove it, even though we implore Him. But He sends the grace with which to bear it.

God’s Inexorable Law

And inexorable, unchangeable, immutable law of God – one that cannot but be – is, “Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.” This is universal as well as individual. All of’ God’s laws are good; they are founded on the very character of God Himself, for they emanate from Him. Conditions that exist, sufferings that must be endured, death that comes to all, are the result of man’s being out of order with the Law or Laws of God. Somewhere, by someone, at some time, law has been violated, and that sowing demands it own reaping.

God does not change the natural order or law because a saint must suffer in consequence of the violation of law. He cannot change it, for it is good; it is best for man as God made him. In a moral world, governed by laws of an infinite wisdom, both the law and its consequences are best for man. We speak of the law as having been “broken.” This is a mistake; the law is not broken, but man breaks himself against the law. The law remains.

Suffering, therefore, is not sent from God; nor is it punishment from God for sins done by the individual. It is the inevitable consequence that comes from violated law. The law may be unknown to the violator; he may be in utter ignorance and darkness as to what he or others have done, but the consequence is the same. When God provided the means of human redemption in Christ, He provided redemption from the guilt of sin, not from the consequences of sin. The consequences must be avoided by removing the cause: violation of natural law or laws, which result in physical suffering; and the violation of spiritual or moral laws, which result in mental or spiritual suffering. Suffering is the price one must pay for being a moral creature, living in a world governed by law, in which he and his predecessors have had the right of choice.

“Thy Will Be Done”

Probably no saying of the Bible is more misused than that of Jesus, as in the garden of Gethsemane He fell on His face and cried, “My Father, if this cannot pass away, except I drink it, thy will be done” (Matt. 26:39-42). This was not a cry of despair; it was not a fatalistic resignation to the principle of “Come what may.” It was and is an expression of cheer, of faith, of glory. It is the prayer of one whose disposition is to have God’s will done in and through himself. Jesus taught the disciples to pray, “Thy will be done, as in heaven, so on earth” (Matt. 6:10). When, from the heart, one seeks that the will of God be done, he is not resigning himself to a cold, hard fate, but is praying that in himself the will of an infinitely good Father shall be done on earth as it is done in heaven.

Tragedy strikes and death invades the family circle. In a frantic effort to find consolation and to discover some explanation for the cause, the bereaved one cries, “It was the Lord’s will.” Or, “This is punishment for some sin I have committed.” Or a well-intentioned and well-meaning, but badly misinformed friend says, “You loved it too much, God took it from you.” Or perchance, “It was too precious, God wanted it with Himself.” What ignorance! What profound stupidity in so charging God. Suffering is not sent by God; how wicked to blame Him with that for which He is not responsible.

Occasionally one is called into a home where the mother sits by the lifeless form of her beloved child, only recently snatched from her loving presence by the insatiable sickle of death. Heart-broken, between the grief stricken sobs that rise and fall like the billows of the unrestrainable sea, she strives in the plaintive cry, “The will of the Lord be done,” to find an explanation for what has happened. Without being fully conscious of it, what has she done? She has blamed the Lord with the disease that so recently smote the darling of her heart, or with the accident in which a drunken wretch crashed into the frail body of her beloved, robbing it of life’s precious breath. Is God to blame? Is one being fair to Him who gave life, and who sustains its every waking moment, when fatalistically he resigns himself to the unholy doctrine that God sent either of these, or one of these, or one of a thousand other messengers of death that leaves hapless mothers to nourish a broken heart by such tragedies? Again, NO! Emphatically, No. This is not the God of the Bible.

“Thy will be done” is a prayer that in our lives God’s will shall be carried out as it was in Jesus, His Son. It is not an inspired expression by which to blame God with our woes and ills, too often the result of ignorance and sin, and always the consequence of law violated somewhere by some one, at some time – the consequences of which I am heir. Possibly we can find some help to the solution of our problem in the trials and conclusion of Job.

Job, and His Trials

Suffering in one of its most baffling aspects is set before us in the book of Job. The opening scene presents to the reader a man described as “perfect and upright; and one that feared God, and turned away from evil” (1:1) – a good man. Not only a good man morally, but he was a man deeply interested in the spiritual welfare of his children; a man who “rose up early in the morning and offered burnt-offerings according to the number of them all” (1:5). Nor was his goodness and piety spasmodic; it is said of him, “thus did Job continually.” His goodness was habitual.

From the plane of one enjoying all of the blessings and pleasures of such an honorable estate, the hero of the book suddenly found himself bereft of all his children, his possessions and his health. In the stead of such prosperity he found himself afflicted with the loathsome and dread disease of what some think to have been black leprosy, forced to sit in the ashes of the city dump, separated from friends and loved ones, suffering excruciating bodily pains. And, added to all this, there was the mental anguish of having no explanation for it all, which pain likewise must be endured.

The condition of this good man suddenly plunged to such an awful depth of suffering and humiliation for no cause so far as he could see, raised the challenging question which must have some solution: “Why do the righteous suffer, while on every hand the wicked are seen to prosper?” “Why does God allow this, since He is wise and good?”

Back of the problem confronting Job was an adversary unknown to himself. Satan had raised the question before Jehovah, “Doth Job fear God for nought?” (1:9) That is, does a man serve God except for the pay he receives for the service, such as the blessings enjoyed by Job? This question, in turn, would raise the question with God, “If man serves God for the pay there is in it, can God trust man to serve Him for love of righteousness?” While in the mind of Job, in the midst of such inexplicable suffering, there would be the added question, “Can man trust God – can he continue to believe in His goodness, benevolence and power under such conditions – when he has no explanation for the suffering?”

Other questions arise from time to time throughout the discussion, but these three appear to be the most prominent: 1. Why do the righteous suffer? 2. Can God trust man to serve Him simply for the love of God? 3. Can man trust God, when his suffering is inexpressible in its intensity, and unexplainable as to its cause? Soon after the arrival of the friends, who came to comfort him but remained to accuse, Job lamented his condition before them, which opened the way for the discussion that followed.

The Philosophy of the Friends

Eliphaz, apparently the eldest and most sedate of the group, opened the discussion. In his first speech he presented his philosophy of suffering, which was the wisdom of the ancients. His position can be summed up in a word: It is the wicked who suffer; they suffer because of their sin. Suffering is punitive. If men will return to God, and do that which is right, their prosperity will return unto them. In the form of syllogism the position of Eliphaz would be:

1. Suffering is the result of sin.

2. Although apparently Job, you have been a good man, yet you suffer.

3. Therefore, since you suffer, you have sinned.

Eliphaz is saying likewise which is the inescapable consequence of his doctrine, that God controls the world by the principle of good for good, and bad for bad. Job is receiving bad; therefore he has been bad.

In his second speech Eliphaz becomes more intense in his accusation of Job. The wisdom of Eliphaz is not his, but the fathers’ – it cannot be wrong. In his speech his accusation is more direct; he has nothing to say about Job’s having been a good man. The premise of this speech is the same as the former, only more intense:

1. Only the wicked are cut off speedily.

2. You, Job, have been cut off speedily.

3. Therefore, you are a wicked man.

In the third speech of Eliphaz there is no change in his position. There is only a stronger accusation, of Job, charging him with great wickedness, and appealing to him to confess his sin and return to God. There is much truth in what he says, but his premise and application are wrong. His premise is that all suffering is punitive, the result of the individual’s sin. His application is that Job suffers because of sin; therefore Job is a sinner.

Bildad assumes the same position as that of his elder associate. In his first speech he accuses Job’s children of sinning, while he simply iterates and reiterates the charges of his predecessor, incriminates and reincriminates Job as a sinner. In his second speech he does not more than depict the awful lot of sinners. His premise and conclusions are the same as of Eliphaz:

1. The lot of sinners is terrible.

2. Your lot, Job, is terrible.

3. Therefore you must be a terrible sinner.

Zophar is the most direct, harsh and blunt of all the friends. He charges that Job’s suffering is not even so great as it should be: “Know therefore that God exacteth of thee less than thine iniquity deserveth” (11:6b). Not only has Job committed the former sin which brought the calamity upon him, but, according to Zophar, he has added to it by denying that he had sinned. Wherefore he has charged God with letting him suffer when he has not sinned.

The only change in the position of the friends is the concession made by Zophar. In his final speech he modifies his position to allow that if the wicked should prosper, it would be for a short time only. “Knowest thou not,” says he, “that the triumphing of the wicked is short, and the joy of the godless but for a moment? (20:5) The same modification would have to be made for the good man who suffers. It, too, would be but for a short time.

In the words of a former teacher, the position of the friends throughout the discussion is, “Piety pays, perversity punishes.” To this position they tenaciously cling from beginning to end, even when they are put to silence, convinced that they cannot meet Job’s challenge made from the first respecting his own integrity.

The Contention and Perplexity of Job

From the beginning of the discussion, and throughout to the end, three points stand out most prominently:

1. Job always affirms his integrity: “I am innocent.”

2. He is undergoing terrible suffering; suffering beyond all description.

3. He continues to go back to God as the cause.

Toward his suffering Job is perplexed. He has been a good man; no man can accuse him of wrong-doing, so why should his suffering be so intense? He blames God with being unmerciful to him, of being unduly and unjustly hard on him (chapter 6). He then charges that there is no moral standard in the universe, that God makes no distinction between right and wrong (9:22-24). All power belongs to God, but it appears as if God uses it to further the cause of the bad as well as the good (chap. 12). In this Job accuses God unjustly, and without knowing some of the things he later came to realize he did not know.

A change in Job’s attitude toward God is seen as the discussion progresses, beginning in chapter 13. He there charges the friends with seeking to shield God with falsehood, while Job affirms “that a godless man shall not come before him” (13:16). However, this changed attitude toward God on Job’s part only raises more questions in his mind:

1. “How many (what) are mine iniquities and sins?” (13:23)

2. “Wherefore hidest thou thy face, and boldest me for thine enemy?” (v. 24)

3. “Wilt thou harass a driven leaf? and wilt thou pursue the dry stubble?” (v. 25) This attitude of friendliness toward God continues to develop. Job appeals to God to witness for him (16:18-17:2), while continuing to lament his condition. This friendliness reaches its highest degree of development when Job turns to Him, confident that He will vindicate him (19:23-29). The contention of Job here adds a fourth phase:

1. Job is innocent.

2. Job is suffering.

3. God is back of the suffering.

4. But God will vindicate him in his suffering.

As Job progresses with his argument he proclaims God’s greatness, declaring that He is so great and majestic that one cannot get to Him; He is beyond the plane of being reached with the suffering of man. His ways are baffling, one cannot get to Him; while at the same time good people suffer, and the wicked prosper. Job almost turns the philosophy of the friends around, “the righteous suffer, while the wicked prosper.” But he is forced to conclude that in the end God will vindicate him in his righteousness and innocence. The contention of Job may now be stated as follows:

1. I am righteous.

2. God is all-mighty, powerful, wise.

3. Therefore there must be some other solution than that of the friends; they are unquestionably wrong. Suffering is not punitive.

Throughout the discussion one can see in Job’s attitude toward his friends only disgust and disdain. He charges them with lying, and their theology and position as rubbish. They are not friends! Only once does he make any gesture of friendliness toward them (chap. 19), only then to turn from them to his appeal to God.

As the cycles of speeches draw to a close, Job describes his glory of former days, his suffering of the present, and reaffirm his integrity before God and man. With the speeches complete, one point is clear: the friends’ claim that suffering is punitive is wrong. Job has been good; so whatever the answer to the problem of suffering, the friends, do not have it. The righteous suffer, the wicked prosper; therefore the suffering of the righteous is not in punishment for sin in the individual life.

The debate has been won by Job, so far as the position of the friends is concerned. The two questions growing out of Satan’s query to God have been answered: 1. Man will and does serve God for the pure joy of that service, for righteousness sake; therefore God can trust man so to do. Job’s stedfast holding on to God has proved this point. 2. Man can trust God, for God does not afflict simply to hurt man. This question, however, is not so clearly and completely answered at the end of the cycle of speeches as one would like. More must be said, for Job has affirmed some hard things about God which need to be corrected. The distorted view of God must be changed, the conception of God is too low.

Elibu Speaks

The friends have failed. Job has spoken harshly of God. And no correct view of the use of suffering has been suggested. Elihu has sat silently by, but he can endure silence no longer. He asks permission to say a few words, “He would vindicate God, rebuke the friends, and upbraid Job for his ideas fo God,” which have not been correct. He then points out a new suggestion on suffering. It may be disciplinary or corrective. The speeches of Elihu pave the way for Jehovah to speak and bring the debate to an end.

The Final Word

Jehovah speaks. His speeches become an examination of Job, testing the wisdom and knowledge of the suffering patriarch. At times the sufferer has spoken as if he knew all behind the government of the universe, yet admittedly ignorant as evidenced by his search for the answer. He now confesses his ignorance in the presence of the majestic wisdom of God. In all of God’s works there are manifestations of wisdom and purpose. Job had been boastful in his suffering. He had lacked humility and a sense of dependence on God. God speaks that simple faith in Him might be restored; that man should trust when he cannot see, because of the great evidence of purpose on the face of the universe. Surely if there is the stamp of design and purpose in the whole of the universe there must be purpose in God’s designing a world in which suffering plays such a part. In the book these problems seem to be solved:

1. The traditional position is refuted: all suffering is not punitive; it cannot be traced to the sin of the individual sufferer.

2. God can trust man to serve Him for righteousness’ sake, and not simply for the pay that might be involved.

3. Man can trust God when he cannot see. For though he cannot know why he suffers, he may know that God cares, and that He rules in the universe, and that in all His ways there is purpose. God does not arbitrarily inflict suffering, nor is God disinterested in the suffering of the righteous.

4. No matter how often we may be told a thing, some things can be learned only in the school of affliction. After his experience in the crucible of suffering, and after God had spoken to him, Job could say, “I had heard of thee by the hearing of the ear; but now mine eye seeth thee: Wherefore I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes.”

Although the book leaves many of the “Whys” of suffering unanswered, it does answer the greater question: “What use shall I make of my suffering?” Job is the answer. Out of the furnace of affliction he came forth a less self-righteous man, possessing a deeper faith in God, and a humble trust he did not know before, and which he could not have learned in any other school. Suffering is in the world; this fact is evident on every hand. The solution of the “why” would be worth little if clearly reached. The important thing is to learn how to use it for the development of a deeper and more abiding trust in God, assured of the great truth that God cares, and through suffering to come out with a greater insight into God’s strange ways in disciplining His children. God is mindful of every moment of that suffering, and through it He can work to His glory and to the development of the trusting soul that suffers.

Guardian of Truth XXXI: 10, pp. 304-307
May 21, 1987