
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


When I was young, my dad and I watched the movie Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. In the story Jefferson Smith stood up against corruption by holding a 24-hour, one-man filibuster on the Senate floor. In his speech, he wasn’t just speaking to the Senate chair, but to the entire Senate and any onlookers.
Elihu has been giving Job his opinion on the man’s desperate situation. Now, he moves from talking to Job to addressing the crowd that had gathered. He begins, “Hear my words, you wise men; listen to me, you men of learning” (v. 2). He speaks to them as if they were a jury in a court case that would give a verdict after his final argument. He ends with the appeal, “Men of understanding declare, wise men who hear me say to me, ‘Job speaks without knowledge; his words lack insight’” (vv. 34–35).
What is Elihu’s verdict? He not only views Job as a person covering up sin, but he also said Job was in a state of rebellion. “To his sin he adds rebellion; scornfully he claps his hands among us and multiplies his words against God” (v. 37). The clapping of the hands is an expression of contempt. Lamentations 2 states, “All who pass your way clap their hands at you; they scoff and shake their heads at the Daughter of Jerusalem” (Lam. 2:15).
Elihu is anything but kind toward Job. He publicly scolded him and actively recruited others to join in his “righteous” indignation toward this dear man of God. Do we do the same? With the advent of social media, it can be easy to publicly attack a fellow Christian without knowing the whole story. In Job 34, Elihu shows us how it’s done.
Donate to Today in the Word: https://give.todayintheword.org/
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By Today In The Word4.8
6565 ratings
When I was young, my dad and I watched the movie Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. In the story Jefferson Smith stood up against corruption by holding a 24-hour, one-man filibuster on the Senate floor. In his speech, he wasn’t just speaking to the Senate chair, but to the entire Senate and any onlookers.
Elihu has been giving Job his opinion on the man’s desperate situation. Now, he moves from talking to Job to addressing the crowd that had gathered. He begins, “Hear my words, you wise men; listen to me, you men of learning” (v. 2). He speaks to them as if they were a jury in a court case that would give a verdict after his final argument. He ends with the appeal, “Men of understanding declare, wise men who hear me say to me, ‘Job speaks without knowledge; his words lack insight’” (vv. 34–35).
What is Elihu’s verdict? He not only views Job as a person covering up sin, but he also said Job was in a state of rebellion. “To his sin he adds rebellion; scornfully he claps his hands among us and multiplies his words against God” (v. 37). The clapping of the hands is an expression of contempt. Lamentations 2 states, “All who pass your way clap their hands at you; they scoff and shake their heads at the Daughter of Jerusalem” (Lam. 2:15).
Elihu is anything but kind toward Job. He publicly scolded him and actively recruited others to join in his “righteous” indignation toward this dear man of God. Do we do the same? With the advent of social media, it can be easy to publicly attack a fellow Christian without knowing the whole story. In Job 34, Elihu shows us how it’s done.
Donate to Today in the Word: https://give.todayintheword.org/
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

3,129 Listeners

16,086 Listeners

8,698 Listeners

3,958 Listeners

1,377 Listeners

4,794 Listeners

1,717 Listeners

3,108 Listeners

1,293 Listeners

299 Listeners

1,416 Listeners

2,192 Listeners

571 Listeners

36,296 Listeners

88 Listeners