When Everything
Goes at Once

Job is not an easy book. It doesn’t offer clean answers or tidy resolutions. It is a book that sits with you in the dark and refuses to turn the light on too quickly. And today, in just five chapters, you are going to encounter one of the most honest portraits of suffering ever written.

When Everything Goes at Once

Job is not an easy book. It doesn’t offer clean answers or tidy resolutions. It is a book that sits with you in the dark and refuses to turn the light on too quickly. And today, in just five chapters, you are going to encounter one of the most honest portraits of suffering ever written. Before we read a single word of Job’s story, understand this: this is not a book about why good people suffer. It is a book about what it looks like to remain in relationship with God when you cannot understand what He is doing. God is not afraid of your questions. He wrote a whole book to prove it. Job is introduced as a man who has everything. Wealth, family, health, reputation, integrity. The text says he was “blameless and upright, a man who fears God and shuns evil.” And then, in the space of a single chapter, he loses all of it. His livestock. His servants. His children — all ten of them, in one moment, under one roof that collapses. And then his health. He sits in ashes, scraping his sores with a piece of broken pottery, and his wife — who is also grieving, also broken — says: “Curse God and die.” — Grief can make people say things they don’t mean. And sometimes things they do. But what does Job do?
“The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away; may the name of the Lord be praised.” — Job 1:21