Seen and Heard

Seen and Heard (CaD Job 42) Wayfarer

“My ears had heard of you
    but now my eyes have seen you.
Therefore I despise myself
    and repent in dust and ashes.”
Job 42:5-6 (NIV)

In this book, Imagine Heaven, John Burke summarizes his 30 years of studying people who physically died, were resuscitated, and claimed to have had an after-life experience while they were deceased. They are known as Near Death Experiences (NDE) and it is a fascinating read.

One of the common things that these individuals talk about is the beauty of what they saw on the other side. In particular, some mention that everything is so beautiful with colors a visual detail that they couldn’t quite describe in human terms because they’d never seen it before.

Nobel Prize winning physicist, Frank Wilczek, wrote an article in the Wall Street Journal a few years ago about how quantum mechanics work in our vision and hearing. He uses the metaphor that our hearing is like having a piano in each ear with its 88 keys that, depending on the pressure with a key is struck, can produce a dynamic range of sound for neurons to fire and our brains to interpret. Our eyes, on the other hand, should be thought of a poorly turned, three-string harpsichord because light vibrates faster than the mechanical engineering of our eyes can handle. There are distinct patterns of illumination created by different combinations of photons that our human eyes can’t discern. “In this way,” Wilczek writes, “we are all profoundly colorblind.”

I find it fascinating to ponder the possibility that those who experienced the heavenly after-life were seeing with eyes unbound by human limitations of the poorly tuned, three-string harpsichord. When sent back to their bodies, they returned with visions of things they couldn’t describe, because there are no human words to suffice.

In today’s chapter, we wrap up the Job story. God has spoken and Job has heard God’s message. What’s more, Job claims to have “seen” God, though from a human sensory perspective, only God’s voice in the storm is ever mentioned. Along my spiritual journey, I’ve had very distinct experiences in which my spirit suddenly perceives something I had not “seen” before. As Paul wrote to Jesus’ followers in Ephesus, “I pray that the eyes of your heart may be en-lightened in order that you may know the hope to which he has called you….” (Eph 1:18 NIV, emphasis added).

There is physical seeing and there is spiritual seeing.

With the eyes of his heart en-lightened, Job understands that his human knowledge has not, can not, and will not perceive God’s power and purposes. Job is humbled by this. Ironically, sitting there on the ash heap of the local burn pile, he says he “despises” himself using a Hebrew word whose root means “trash.” He repents.

Eli the younger is not even mentioned in the epilogue. Having given Job and his three friends an ear-full, the young man must have moved on with his “perfect knowledge” to pass judgment on others and tell them how to solve their problems and fix the world from his omniscient perspective.

The spiritual contest prompted by the evil one is ended. Job did not curse God, though he certainly questioned God emphatically. God restores Job’s fortunes and doubles Job’s blessing. The three amigos, Eli, Bill, and Z, are chastised for proudly proclaiming to have knowledge about both God and Job that they did not have. They are told to repent and have Job offer the priestly act of making sacrifices and praying for them. One commentator I read made the point that Job spoke to God, while his three friends spoke about God.

From beginning to end, there is familiarity and an implied relationship between the Almighty and Job. Not so with his three friends. In the quiet this morning, that’s a big part of my take-away from this ancient story. I don’t simply want to know about God. I want to know Him each day of this earthly journey in a spiritually experiential way. I want to hear and see God with the ears and eyes of my heart, trusting that when this journey is over, I will trade in my poorly tuned, three-string harpsichord and actually see things I can’t even imagine and could never describe in human terms.

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.

One thought on “Seen and Heard”

  1. I admit it. I was the one. I babbled on about things far beyond me,
    made small talk about wonders way over my head.
    You told me, ‘Listen, and let me do the talking.
    Let me ask the questions. You give the answers.’

    Yesterday’s sermon at church was about pride. It was a good message. Today’s chapter reminded me of that. Job’s admission that he was talking about things he had no business talking about, or being a know-it-all, can be an example of prideful thinking. God created us to have minds that reason, but how often that gets in the way of our understanding of Who is behind all of our gifts. Our spiritual gifts? From God. Our physical gifts? From God. Our physical appearance? From God. The list can go on. Father God, help us to stay grounded in the fact that everything we have is a gift from you.

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