


The Accusation
“Then Satan answered the LORD, and said, Doth Job fear God for nought?”
Job 1:9
God brought him up.
He asked the question.
In that question He reveals the confidence He has in one man: A man named Job.
Job was no ordinary man. Well, he was ordinary in many ways:
He had normal feelings.
He dealt with the same emotions as anyone else.
He experienced the same longings, felt the same joy, was familiar with pain.
Yet, Job was no ordinary man. You see, he had been extraordinarily blessed:
He was the father of seven sons and three daughters.
Seven thousand sheep pastured his fields while three thousand camels roamed his hillside.
He was the owner of five hundred yoke of oxen. . .
. . . five hundred female donkeys. . .
. . . had a very large household. . .
The list could go on and on.
Extraordinarily blessed.
Job was the Donald Trump or, perhaps, the Bill Gates of his time. He had wealth beyond measure. Certainly he was a man of means. So much so that Scripture says that Job was the greatest of all the people of the East. Pretty impressive. No ordinary man.
And, God brought him up.
He asked the question:
“Have you [Satan] considered my servant Job?”
Not only does He ask the question but in the asking He reveals the character of Job that results in the confidence He feels toward this man. Listen to the descriptors that He uses to describe Job: