10. Scripture saith, “Ye
have heard of the patience of Job, and have seen the end of the
Lord.”17801780 When we
read what great trials Job endured, it makes one shudder, it makes
one shrink, it makes one quake. And what did he receive? The double
of what he had lost. Let not a man therefore with an eye to
temporal rewards be willing to have patience, and say to himself,
“Let me endure loss, God will give me back sons twice as many;
Job received double of all, and begat as many sons as he had
buried.” Then is this not the double? Yes, precisely the double,
because the former sons still lived. Let none say, “Let me bear
evils, and God will repay me as He repaid Job:” that it be now no
longer patience but avarice. For if it was not patience which that
Saint had, nor a brave enduring of all that came upon him; the
testimony which the Lord gave, whence should he have it? “Hast
thou observed,” saith the Lord, “my servant Job? For there is
not like him any on the earth, a man without fault,17811781 true
worshipper of God.” What a testimony, my brethren, did this holy
man deserve of the Lord! And yet him a bad woman sought by her
persuasion to deceive, she too representing that serpent, who, like
as in Paradise he deceived the man whom God first made, so likewise
here by suggesting blasphemy thought to be able to deceive a man
who pleased God. What things he suffered, my brethren! Who can have
so much to suffer in his estate, his house, his sons, his flesh,
yea in his very wife who was left to be his tempter! But even her
who was left, the devil would have taken away long ago, but that he
kept her to be his helper: because by Eve he had mastered the first
man, therefore had he kept an Eve. What things, then, he suffered!
He lost all that he had; his house fell; would that were all! it
crushed his sons also. And, to see that patience had great place in
him, hear what he answered; “The Lord gave, the Lord hath taken
away; as it pleased the Lord, so hath it been done;17821782 blessed be
the name of the Lord.”17831783 He hath taken what He gave, is He
lost Who gave? He hath taken what He gave. As if he should say, He
hath taken away all, let Him take all, send me away naked, and let
me keep Him. What shall I lack if I have God? or what is the good
of all else to me, if I have not God? Then it came to his flesh, he
was stricken with a wound from head to foot; he was one running
sore, one mass of crawling worms: and showed himself immovable in
his God, stood fixed. The woman wanted, devil’s helper as she was
not husband’s comforter, to put him up to blaspheme God. “How
long,” said she, “dost thou suffer” so and so; “speak some
word against the Lord,17841784 and die.”17851785 So then, because he had been
brought low, he was to be exalted. And this the Lord did, in order
to show it to men; as for His servant, He kept greater things for
him in heaven. So then Job who was brought low, He exalted; the
devil who was lifted up, He brought low:
373for “He putteth down
one and setteth up another.”17861786 But let not any man, my beloved
brethren, when he suffers any such-like tribulations, look for a
reward here: for instance, if he suffer any losses, let him not
peradventure say, “The Lord gave, the Lord hath taken away; as it
pleased the Lord, so is it done: blessed be the name of the
Lord;” only with the mind to receive twice as much again. Let
patience praise God, not avarice. If what thou hast lost thou
seekest to receive back twofold, and therefore praisest God, it is
of covetousness thou praisest, not of love. Do not imagine this to
be the example of that holy man; thou deceivest thyself. When Job
was enduring all, he was not hoping for to have twice as much
again. Both in his first confession when he bore up under his
losses, and bore out to the grave the dead bodies of his sons, and
in the second when he was now suffering torments of sores in his
flesh, ye may observe what I am saying. Of his former confession
the words run thus: “The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away:
as it pleased the Lord, so is it done: blessed be the name of the
Lord.”17871787 He might
have said, “The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; He that
took away can once more give; can bring back more than He took.”
He said not this, but, “As it pleased the Lord,” said he, “so
is it done:” because it pleases Him, let it please me: let not
that which hath pleased the good Lord misplease His submissive
servant; what pleased the Physician, not misplease the sick man.
Hear his other confession: “Thou hast spoken,” said he to his
wife, “like one of the foolish women. If we have received good at
the hand of the Lord, why shall we not bear evil?”17881788 He did not
add, what, if he had said it, would have been true. “The Lord is
able both to bring back my flesh into its former condition, and
that which He hath taken away from us, to make manifold more:”
lest he should seem to have endured in hope of this. This was not
what he said, not what he hoped. But, that we might be taught, did
the Lord that for him, not hoping for it, by which we should be
taught, that God was with him: because if He had not also restored
to him those things, there was the crown indeed, but hidden, and we
could not see it. And therefore what says the divine Scripture in
exhorting to patience and hope of things future, not reward of
things present? “Ye have heard of the patience of Job, and have
seen the end of the Lord.” Why is it, “the patience of Job,”
and not, Ye have seen the end of Job himself? Thou wouldest open
thy mouth for the “twice as much;” wouldest say, “Thanks be
to God; let me bear up: I receive twice as much again, like Job.”
“Patience of Job, end of the Lord.” The patience of Job we
know, and the end of the Lord we know.17891789 What end of the Lord? “My God,
my God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?” They are the words of the
Lord hanging on the cross. He did as it were leave Him for present
felicity, not leave Him for eternal immortality. In this is “the
end of the Lord.” The Jews hold Him, the Jews insult, the Jews
bind Him, crown Him with thorns, dishonor Him with spitting,
scourge Him, overwhelm Him with revilings, hang Him upon the tree,
pierce Him with a spear, last of all bury Him. He was as it were
left: but by whom? By those insulting ones. Therefore thou shall
but to this end have patience, that thou mayest rise again and not
die, that is, never die, even as Christ. For so we read, “Christ
rising from the dead henceforth dieth not.”17901790