“Lo, these [are] parts of his ways: but how little a portion is heard of him? but the thunder of his power who can understand?” (Job 26:14 AV)
A very sound theological statement. It doesn’t matter how of the infinite is revealed to man, he can never completely know God. In fact, Job is very correct here. Because God is infinite in attributes and scope, at best a finite being can only know little. Some find fear in this truth. I find comfort. A God who cannot be figured out is a God indeed! If God could be dissected and understood, then we become equal to God. The moment we become equal with God is the moment we do not need Him. What can be known is the results. At least as it affects us. Job asks a follow-up question. He asks who can know the power of thunder? That we can know. The obvious application is that we may not know everything there is to know about thunder, but we can know the sound and how it applies to us personally.
My wife loves the weather channel. I am finding out that many ladies love the weather channel. However, I think my wife’s fondness for it might be different. Many like the human side of the channel. They are drawn by the deep emotions people feel when disaster upends their lives. The kinship a viewer feels as interviews of storm victims are broadcast is the attraction to the channel. My wife, on the other hand, enjoys the extreme nature of weather. I have son who is the same way. If opportunity presented itself, I think both would sign up for an adventure with storm chasers. They like the power of nature. The LORD has seen fit to send some extreme weather my way. I have outrun a tornado. Felt and heard an ice-quake. We lived in an area that was prone to earthquakes and felt a tremor or two. Nothing comes close to a Midwestern thunderstorm! You have to experience it to understand. I have been through ice storms that brought everything to a halt for a two-week stretch. There have been a few floods. Don’t get me started on black ice and super-sized winter snowfalls. I have even been out on a small craft during a small craft advisory. Nothing compares to ten-foot swells in a sixteen-foot open-bow boat. Let’s just say weather is serious! I may not understand how it all works, but appreciation for what it can do is not lost on me.
This is the understanding Job is trying to convey. We don’t need to know all there is to know about God. We cannot anyway. It also does not figure that the more ignorant we are of God, the more comfort we experience. This is certainly not true. Rather, there is a balance to be had. That balance is found in the word of God. He has revealed Himself in as much as we are capable of knowing Him. Theology has bounds. Those bounds are the natural bounds of the finite compared to the infinite. These bounds are not in place for some nefarious purpose. Rather, they are natural. Mankind is foolish if he tries to understand the infinite. Even worse, if mankind has the impression that he can know the infinite, it is pride at its height. We cannot know the innumerable acts and attributes of God. But we can feel the roar of thunder. We don’t have to know any more than we are capable of knowing. Simply put, we must let God be God!