This morning, we welcome Nan Burch as our first Pulpit Assistant in a long time. You are invited to also lead us as the pulpit assistant – people have asked for us to have different voices leading worship, and serving as the pulpit assistant is a way for you to help enrich our worship time.
This summer, we are turning to Trinity’s favorites. After the message, Nan will tell us a little about her favorite hymn. And, for those of us who know Nan, we know that she is an animal lover. This morning, we hear one of her favorite scriptures, a selection from Job that highlights the trust the natural world has in God.
Nan:
The Scripture Lesson Job 12:7-10
“But ask the animals, and they will teach you,
or the birds in the sky, and they will tell you;
or speak to the earth, and it will teach you,
or let the fish in the sea inform you.
Which of all these does not know
that the hand of the Lord has done this?
In his hand is the life of every creature
and the breath of all mankind.
Here ends this reading of the word of God for the people of God. Thanks be to God. Amen.
Let us pray…
The Message The Wisdom of the Creatures
Job, the man at the center of the book of Job, had a very strange life. He was a man of faith. He was a hard worker. He was a good family man. But, he got thrown a curve ball that he didn’t expect, and the book named after him is focused on how he responded to that unexpected circumstance.
The book of Job starts out with an imagined conversation between God and Satan – they made a wager of sorts – Satan told God that if Job lost all of his possessions and family members, then Job would curse God….Satan theorized that Job was only blameless and upright and rejecting of evil because God had blessed him with abundance and possessions. Satan wagered with God that if everything was taken away from Job, he would no longer be blameless and upright – and he would become evil and curse God.
This is an imagined conversation – Job is a parable used to teach us a lesson about why God allows suffering – why God allows bad things to happen to good people ... ..why God allows evil to exist.
After this imagined conversation between God and Satan, bad things happened to Job. God allowed Satan to inflict harm on Job – his children all die, his wealth and possessions were lost, his health failed. And, then after all these problems, Job’s three friends came to “console” him, supposedly, but they tried to tell Job that his suffering was a punishment from God because Job had failed – the friends tried to tell Job he was deserving of his suffering because he had done wrong.
Despite every miserable and sad thing that happened to Job, he didn't curse God… .he complained ... ... ..he bemoaned his situation…but he didn’t curse God. Job’s friends told him to curse God and die (again, these friends were unhelpful)...but Job remained steadfast in his faith and his loyalty to God.
Finally, God spoke to Job (and his friends) out of a whirlwind, told Job he didn’t do anything to bring on his suffering, and then God restored Job’s health, possessions, wealth and children. God proved to Satan that people can remain faithful to God, and thankful to God, even when bad things happen to us. This book was written to encourage us to hold on to our faith in God even when our lives fall apart….No matter what befalls us, God is with us. God is real.
In the midst of the challenging conversation Job had with his unhelpful friends, we find the scripture we read today.
Job told his friends to stop being so intellectual – to stop speaking about theories and ideas and to take a look around outside…Job said the natural world, and God’s creations, help us understand God’s character.
Job tells his friends to look at creation to see God at work. The natural world doesn’t question the existence of God – instead, God is the source of all life. We are not self-sustaining – every single breath we take is a gift from God. Everything we need on earth is a gift from our loving God – the plants and animals we eat, the air we breathe, the materials we use to build our homes, the water we drink. Everything in our natural world is a gift from God.
We can also look to the natural world to calm our own anxieties. A 2020 article published by the American Psychological Association (“Nurtured by Nature”) describes several ways time spent in natural settings can improve our mental health and sharpen our cognition. And, we don’t need to read an article to feel this for ourselves – our moods lift when we take a walk outdoors or spend time sitting on a bench at a park or watching the waves crash at the ocean. Walking through a forest or watching birds play can remind us that there is a grand, intentional design operating perfectly well without our control.
Sometimes. we can also fall into the trap of Job’s oblivious friends – we sometimes over-intellectualize things. But, looking at the natural world reminds us God is in control and we can depend on God. Sometimes, we need to tell our intellectual brain to quiet down and just return to simply relying on God.
We don’t always understand what God is doing in the world. We certainly don’t understand the randomness of life – sometimes bad things happen to the best people, and good things happen to deeply flawed people. But, no matter what we experience, God is our sustainer. God is with us, rooting us on, comforting us, listening to us, holding us up in the midst of our struggles. God’s presence is with us no matter what. God loves us and cares about what happens to us. God stands by us even when we feel alone.
The book of Job reminds us that God cares about us even when our lives are hard. We don’t invoke bad things – our behavior doesn’t cause bad things to happen to us. And, even when we don’t understand how God’s plan is at work, God does have a plan. We must remember we don’t have to be in charge of everything – God is with us.
Thanks be to God. Amen.




