
Yeah, I’m still at it. Here’s another “through the bible” devotion from Job 1.
The book of Job starts like this:
“There was a man in the land of Uz whose name was Job, and that man was blameless and upright, one who feared God and turned away from evil” (Job 1:1).
Was Job perfect? No. “None is righteous” (Romans 3:10). “All have sinned” (Romans 3:23).
So what kind of a person was Job?
What’s the difference between being “blameless” and “sinless”? Here’s one explanation. Sin is vertical, blame is horizontal. Sinful is what you are like in the presence of a holy God. Blameless is about life with others. Think portrait vs. landscape mode.
Blameless? Everyone thought of Job as a good guy. But Job still needed God’s grace as much as anyone else.
No criminal record. Perfect attendance. Excellent credit score. Employee of the month. All lab results normal. Most likely to succeed. 4.0 GPA. A horizontal righteousness, blameless and upright in the eyes of most.
Angry. Jealous. Holds a grudge. Bitter. Lips honor God; heart is far from him. Selfish. A vertical unrighteousness in the sight of the one whose opinion counts.
Some of us claim that we don’t care what others think of us. That’s a lie. Of course we care. We work hard to look good horizontally. Do we care about what God thinks of us? Probably not as much as we care what others think of us. How much effort goes into that vertical relationship?
Good enough or God’s enough? That’s a good question, isn’t it?
