Of all the 66 books in the Bible, Job is the one that most vividly reveals the 
problem all of us face in life: how to understand suffering. And that problem 
always resolves itself finally into one great, perplexing, painful question: 
who is this who hates me? Who is bringing on me this undeserved calamity? Is it 
God, or is it Satan?
Your mind may have the correct answer, but what about your heart? If you are 
like I am, your heart in its natural, unconverted state, is "enmity against 
God" (Rom 8:7), and you're only kidding yourself if you think you are an 
exception. "Why me?" is the universal question we ask when great calamity 
strikes us, whether by an accident, or cancer, or loss of a human love, or 
bereavement. Job is I, and you; he is standing in for us. He couldn't figure 
out what "sin" he was guilty of that provoked God to curse him so terribly with 
the loss of everything he held dear, even his basic health.

Job is the first Christian book ever written; there are links that bind him on 
his dung heap wailing out in despair, "Why?" with Christ on His cross in total 
darkness wailing the same "Why?" God was forced to stake His throne and the 
stability of the universe itself on this one poor, weak, human man, Job. God 
had claimed that Job was true and righteous. Satan ridiculed the idea; he 
wagered that if God were to permit enormous affliction to come on Job, he would 
turn traitor and "curse God." And God couldn't back out; one human being in 
supreme wretchedness was holding the line in this great conflict with Satan, 
and God had to hold His breath in anticipation of what Job would do.

Today there are"144,000" individuals of "every nation, kindred, tongue, and 
people," each of whom is so important that he/she is holding that same line all 
alone, like Job did. And, as with Job, there is a link that binds each one to 
Christ on His cross asking,"Why Me?"

--Robert J. Wieland

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