“But he knoweth the way that I take: [when] he hath tried me, I shall come forth as gold.” (Job 23:10 AV)
I don’t think this idea is a welcomed idea prior to a trial occurring. Rather, this is perfect for those who are in the middle of it. I am sure that if Job knew of his pending trial, he wouldn’t have made the statement above. Rather, he would have done everything possible to avoid it. No one wants to go through deep water. No one seeks deep trials as a thing to do. Who in their right mind would want to suffer? Not me. Not Job. While in the midst of a trial, our hearts can change. A heart of hope and gratitude can be a result. Job has his ups and downs. He has his pleasant moments and his terrible moments. There are times he speaks of God’s goodness, grace, and mercy. There are other times he refers to the LORD as an adversary or judge. The ups and downs of deep waters force to the top our emotional person. We feel and express our feelings. The statement above is one of Job’s most optimistic. He knows it. But he doesn’t always feel it.
Peter tells us that Job was patient. The above statement by Job proves the point. He was a patient man to endure the onslaught of criticism leveled by his friends. He was patient while at the same time agonizing over questions that had no answer. It is the ‘gold’ part that we seem to struggle with. Is the trial worth it? Will the changes be worth the turmoil? Will the work that God does through all the loss be worth more than the loss I feel? As I get older, there are lessons learned that are profound and hard. Lessons we knew were coming. Lessons that one cannot prepare for. There is a time of transition. We begin to realize there is more time behind us that before us. We begin to realize that opportunities are becoming less and less. We look back on our lives and wish we had taken more opportunities or invested our talents much better than we did. We look ahead and realize that time is short. We go through a systematic exercise of ends. There is coming a time when the things we took for granted become less, or cease altogether. This is a hard thing to adjust to. The biggest trial of our lives is always tomorrow. Gold has to be the standard.
Job’s hope was that change would more than compensate for the trial he was facing. He lost much. He lost children who could never be replaced. Things can be replaced. But relationships cannot. Those sons and daughters were gone. There was nothing that could bring them back. Of all the things Job lost, it was the relationships that would leave a lasting scar. Sure, God replaced the ten children Job lost with ten more. But they were ten new and different people. Job would never know his eldest to take on the family business. The daughters he lost would never walk an aisle arm in arm with their dad on their wedding day. There would always be a reminder of that which he lost evidenced by a grave marker and a name. God compensated for it. But He could not undo it. Gold is the hope. Change is the goal. Knowing that through all of our deep water, we will be changed into the likeness of Christ is the only result that makes up for the cost paid. This takes maturity. This takes a love for God that few know of. This takes heavenly priority. This state of mind understands that we were created for God’s glory and change is part of it. This state of mind sees the hand of God as an extension of His benevolence and grace. This state of mind treasures the gold far more than what was lost.