to be gracious to him and say, 'Spare him from going down to the Pit; I have found his ransom,' Sermons
I. GOD SPEAKS BY A MESSENGER. It is a question whether we should understand the word rendered "messenger" in the usual sense attached to it, i.e, as standing for "angel." God has spoken through angel-messengers from the days of Abraham. But any one charged with a Divine message becomes God's angel to those to whom he delivers it. Every prophet is God's messenger, one who speaks for God. The apostle is one sent forth by Christ. Angels, prophets, apostles - they are all, so far, the same. They are God's missionaries. Christ is once called an Apostle (Hebrews 3:1), because he too was sent forth by his Father (1 John 4:14). Our Lord's mission on earth was to bring the new message of salvation from heaven, and to make it a real and living thing among men. Every true follower of Christ is called to be a messenger from God to his fellow-men. People will listen to the human voice when they are deaf to the pleadings of conscience and blind to the teachings of experience. The true preacher is God's messenger. "We are ambassadors for Christ, as though God did beseech you by us: we pray you in Christ's stead, be ye reconciled to God" (2 Corinthians 5:20). II. GOD'S MESSENGER BRINGS A RANSOM. It is contrary to the whole course of historical revelation, which develops truth by slow degrees, to suppose that the ransom intended by Elihu was the sacrificial death of Christ on the cross. Such an anachronism implies an entire lack of perspective in the view of the interpreter. Nevertheless, the essential ideas of a ransom are here brought forward. 1. Deliverance. It is the duty of God's messenger to preach "deliverance to the captives." He is more than a revealer of truth; he is a herald of salvation. 2. A costly method. Elihu may have no conception of the price of redemption. Yet he perceives more or less dimly that some ransom must be paid. We have a much clearer view of the subject, because we can read it in the light of history. We now know that our deliverance is effected through the death of Christ. "The Son of man came to give his life a ransom for many" (Matthew 20:28). III. THE DIVINE RANSOM SECURES A GLAD WELCOME FROM GOD. The message may seem to come in stern tones of anger, following a John the Baptist preparation of chastisement. Yet it is a gospel. Ver. 26 paints a glowing picture of the redeemed man. 1. Acceptable prayer. Until he was ransomed his prayer seemed to be in vain. Now God hears it with favour. 2. The beatific vision. "He shall see his face with joy." Reconciled to God, he rejoices in communion with God. 3. Restoration of righteousness. "He restoreth unto man his uprightness." This is the grand human result of redemption. Deliverance from doom is not enough, is not the chief end. The restoration of the broken and defiled image of God to its original, or more than its original, beauty is the great outcome Of the redeeming work of Christ. - W.F.A.
If there be any messenger with him, an interpreter. It is not man's torment or ruin that God desires, but his reformation and amendment. To this end He speaks to men in dreams. When that will not do, by afflictions. To make those afflictions more intelligible and effectual, He sends a messenger, either an angel, by office, not by nature; or an interpreter — of the mind and will of God. Doctrine — That the seasonable instruction of sick and languishing persons is a work, as of great advantage, so of great skill and difficulty.I. IT IS OF GREAT ADVANTAGE. Some are apt to think that sick bed applications are in a manner useless and ineffectual. Observe — 1. That the instruction of sick persons is God's institution. 2. God's mercy is proposed by Himself, and may be offered by ministers, even to languishing persons. 3. Sick bed repentance is not wholly impossible, though it be hard. Sickness is one means that God useth to work repentance. II. IT IS OF GREAT DIFFICULTY. 1. It is a work which God hath put into the hands of His chief officers, His ministers, who ought to be the most accomplished persons. 2. It is not every minister who is fit for this work. How ministers or Christian friends may and ought to apply themselves to sick persons for their good, and the discharge of their own consciences.(1) Endeavour must be used to understand the state of the sick person.(2) The great business is to bring the sick man to a true sight of his state and condition.(3) Ministers and others must take heed lest, while they avoid one extreme, they run upon another; which is a common error in practice.(4) The same methods are not to be used to all sick persons. Regard must be had to difference of tempers; of education and conversation; and of guilt.(5) It is a very bad guide to follow the counsels or desires of sick persons, or their carnal friends.(6) The same course (for substance) is to be taken for the conversion of sick and healthful persons.(7) The greatest care mast be to keep sick persons from those errors whereby such persons commonly miscarry. Such as insensibleness of their danger; willingness to be deluded; carelessness and listlessness; resting in generals; the concealment of some hidden way of wickedness.(8) Taking heed of healing the souls of sick persons slightly. This we are very apt to, from the sick man's greedy desire of comfort; from the expectation and desire of carnal friends; from our own careless hearts, that love not to put ourselves to any trouble or reproach, which we shall meet with, if we be faithful to the ease.Uses — 1. To ministers. Learn the great difficulty of ministerial work. What angelical abilities doth it require! Acuteness, to discern the sick man's temper; knowledge, to understand the nature of all spiritual diseases; wisdom, to make suitable applications. A minister had need know all things, understand all persons, discern the subtleties of men's hearts, and not be ignorant of the wiles of the devil. 2. To people. Is it of such difficulty? Oh, labour you to do your work in health, while time and strength last, before the evil days come. (Matthew Poole, A. M.) 1. A state of impending ruin. "His soul draweth near to the grave." 2. A state of grace. "If there be a messenger with him," etc. 3. A state of justification. "I have found a ransom." 4. A state of sanctification. "He shall return to the days of his youth." 5. A state of peace with God. "He will be favourable unto him." 6. A state of glory. "He shall see His face with joy."The text closes with a brief recurrence to the gracious cause of all this progressive advancement from repentance to glory. (C. A. Hulbert, M. A.) II. Now, secondly, wherever this Divine messenger comes, according to the text, HE REVEALS GOD'S UPRIGHTNESS. III. The third stage is this — "THEN HE IS GRACIOUS UNTO HIM." God deals with convinced sinners in a way of grace. Every word here is weighty. "Then He is gracious unto him." Mark the time — then! God is gracious to a man when, Christ having come to him as a messenger and an interpreter, he is led to discern his own sin and God's uprightness. The way as well as the time demands your notice. It is through the messenger that God is gracious. Then — that is when the messenger comes. When Jesus interposes then God is gracious. IV. Let us proceed to the next stage — GOD DELIVERS THE SINNER. "He saith, Deliver him from going down into the pit." V. The last thing is that GOD EXPLAINS TO THE SINNER WHOM HE DELIVERS THE REASON OF HIS DELIVERANCE. "Deliver him from going down into the pit; I have found a ransom." "I have found a ransom" — a covering. You notice these words, "I have found a ransom." You do not find it for yourselves. You could not ever have discovered it, much less have brought it into the world. ( C. H. Spurgeon.) I have found a ransom. These words were from the lips of Elihu, the companion and counsellor of Job. The men of that day had but dim visions of Him that was to come; they had to look through, the type to the antitype; through the symbol to the thing signified. "I have found a ransom." This indicates in the man who spake it —I. A KNOWLEDGE OF MAN'S STATE. A ransom signifies the price of redemption from captivity. Before we apply for a ransom we must feel that we are involved. Sensibility to our suffering condition is the very foundation work of an appeal to Jesus. Man by nature is in bondage; he is taken captive by Satan at his will. II. THE MEANS OF MAN'S DELIVERANCE. "I have found a ransom." The prisoner finds a ransom — where? In the offers of the worldly-wise? In the counsellings and suggestions of self? Nay; no man ever breathed this assurance until his eyes were fixed on the atoning sacrifice of Jesus. To what else could he turn? III. THE ACQUISITION OF THIS KNOWLEDGE. That is, a knowledge of your own heart in a state of nature, and a knowledge of the ransom that is provided for you in the dispensations of grace. Both the one and the other proceed immediately from the Spirit of God. He convinces of sin, and He alone. "I have found a ransom" implies that the ransom was sought for; and this seeking is a course of humble, diligent, and persevering prayer. (T. J. Judkin, A. M.) I. MAN'S PERILOUS STATE. He was "going down to the pit."1. Man in his fallen and debased condition. Crown fallen from his head; fallen from holiness, dignity, dominion, happiness, etc.; into guilt, depravity, and misery. 2. It denotes man's passage to the grave. Sin introduced disease and death. 3. It represents our exposedness to the pit of destruction. The tendency of the sinner was towards perdition. His sin had doomed him to it. And sin also was ripening him for it. His steps were downwards towards the gates of perdition, the regions of endless woe. What a dreadful state! II. DISPLAYED HIS GRACIOUS REGARDS TOWARDS HIM. Now God's interposition on his behalf must have been altogether gracious. 1. Deity was entirely independent of man. He could easily have blotted out the human race, and have formed creatures every way more worthy of His regards. 2. Man had nothing to interest Jehovah in his welfare. No moral excellency; no reasonable apologies for his crime; no possibility of giving a return. 3. Jehovah had every reason to punish. Justice was injured, holiness insulted, goodness abused, etc., yet mercy prevailed. III. TO THE MEANS OF DELIVERANCE PROVIDED. "I have found a ransom." 1. The source of our deliverance. "I" have found, etc. Man did not find, nor yet angels, but God found a ransom. Oh yes! God alone possessed stores of wisdom sufficient for the great and mighty undertaking. 2. The instrument of our deliverance was a ransom. That ransom was His own Son. "He gave His Son," "Spared not His own Son," etc. The price of our ransom was "the precious blood of Christ." 3. The mode of our ransom. This was done by assuming our nature; obeying the law; dying for sin; overcoming the powers of hell; rising from the grace, etc. (Isaiah 53:4-11; Romans 4:15; Colossians 1:20).Learn — 1. What ruin and misery sin has produced. 2. What Divine mercy has provided. 3. What the Saviour's merits hath procured. 4. The necessity of feeling ourselves personally interested in the blessings of redeeming grace. "He that hath the Son, hath life." 5. The grateful return we Should render for the loving kindness and redeeming mercy of God. (J. Burns, D. D.) Let it never be forgotten that, in all that God does, He acts from good reasons. You observe that the text, speaking of the sick man, represents God as saying, "Deliver him from going down to the pit: I have found a ransom." If I understand the passage as relating solely to a sick man, and take the words just on the natural common level where some place them, I would still say that the Lord here gives a reason why He suspends the operations of pain and disease, and raises up the sufferer: "I have found a ransom." There is always a reason for every act of grace which God performs for man. So let each one of us think, "If I have been raised from sickness, if my life, which was almost gone, has been spared, I may not know why God has done it, but certainly He has done it in infinite wisdom and compassion." There is such a thing as sickness of the soul, which is, in God's esteem, far worse than disease of the body; and there is such a thing as recovery from soul-sickness.I. Now, coming to our text, I shall ask you, first, to look with me upon A MAN IN GREAT PERIL. This is his peril: he is "going down to the pit." That phrase describes his whole life, going down, down. 1. Notice, first, that this is a daily and common danger. If we are unconverted, if we are unrenewed by Divine grace, every one of us is in danger of going down into the pit of woe. 2. Further, there are some who, of set purpose, are going down to the pit. In this chapter Elihu said of some that God sends sickness to them that He may withdraw them from their purpose. 3. There are some, also, who are going down to the pit through their pride. 4. There are others who feel some present apprehension of coming judgment. 5. If you add to all this the fact that the man, as Elihu describes him, was suffering from a fatal sickness, so that he dreaded the actual nearness of death, you have indeed an unhappy case before you. II. Now let us notice, in the second place, A NEW PRINCIPLE IN ACTION: "Then He is gracious unto him." What does that mean? 1. Well, "grace" means, first, free favour. 2. But grace has another meaning in Holy Scripture; it means saving interference, a certain Divine operation by which God works upon the wills and affections of men, so as to change and renew them. III. This brings me to my third point, which is concerning how this grace operates. It operates by A WORD OF POWER. This man was going down to the pit, but God said, "Deliver him." To whom is this command spoken? 1. It appears to be addressed to the messengers of Divine justice. 2. More than that, the man was not only bound by justice, but he was fettered by his sin. His sins held him captive, and they were dragging him down to the pit. There was drunkenness, for instance, which held him as in a vice, so that he could not stir hand or foot to set himself free. 3. I see this same man, in after life, attacked by his old sins. IV. I finish by noticing that, in this case, God supplies us with His reason for delivering a soul, and it is AN ARGUMENT OF LOVE: "Deliver him from going down to the pit: I have found a ransom." Observe that the text says, "I have found a ransom." 1. This ransom is an invention of Divine wisdom. I do not think it would ever have occurred to any mind but the mind of God Himself to save sinners by the substitutionary sacrifice of Christ. Notice, next, that God has not only invented a way of deliverance, but He has found a ransom 2. So that it is a gift of Divine love: "Deliver him from going down to the pit." It does not say, "because there is a ransom," or "I will accept one if he finds it and brings it"; but the Lord Himself says, "I have found a ransom." It is the man who sinned, but it is God who found the ransom. 3. And is there not something very wonderful in the assurance of this truth? This is God's "Eureka! I have found a ransom. I did not look for a ransom among the angels, for I knew they were too weak to furnish it. I looked not for it among the sons of men, for I knew it was not to be found there, they were too fallen and guilty. The sea said, 'It is not in me.' All creation cried, 'It is not in me.'" ( C. H. Spurgeon.) People JobPlaces UzTopics Atonement, Deliver, Favour, Gracious, Mercy, Pit, Price, Ransom, Says, Spare, UnderworldOutline 1. Elihu offers himself instead of God to reason with Job8. He excuses God from giving man an account of his ways, by his greatness 14. God calls man to repentance by visions, by afflictions, and by his ministry 31. He incites Job to attention Dictionary of Bible Themes Job 33:24Library The Host of Heaven and of Earth. "The Spirit of God hath made me."--Job xxxiii. 4. Understanding somewhat the characteristic note of the work of the Holy Spirit, let us see what this work was and is and shall be. The Father brings forth, the Son disposes and arranges, the Holy Spirit perfects. There is one God and Father of whom are all things, and one Lord Jesus Christ through whom are all things; but what does the Scripture say of the special work the Holy Spirit did in creation and is still doing? For the sake of order we examine … Abraham Kuyper—The Work of the Holy Spirit The Creaturely Man. Whether the Testimony of the Father's Voice, Saying, "This is My Beloved Son," was Fittingly Added? Whether for the Justification of the Ungodly is Required a Movement of the Free-Will? Whether Divination by Dreams is Unlawful? Whether Nocturnal Pollution is a Mortal Sin? Whether Pride is a Special Sin? The Christian Man The Work of the Holy Spirit in the Material Universe. Whether a Movement of the Free Will is Required for the Justification of the Ungodly Whether the Precept of Fraternal Correction Demands that a Private Admonition Should Precede Denunciation? The Angel of the Lord in the Pentateuch, and the Book of Joshua. The Person and Work of the Holy Spirit as Revealed in his Names. The Order of Thought which Surrounded the Development of Jesus. "Let any Man Come. " The Deity of the Holy Spirit. Its Source The Care of the Soul Urged as the one Thing Needful The Sick Person Ought Now to Send for Some Godly and Religious Pastor. "That the Righteousness of the Law Might be Fulfilled in Us. " Conversion. What the Scriptures Principally Teach: the Ruin and Recovery of Man. Faith and Love Towards Christ. The Doctrine of the Holy Spirit A Prayer when one Begins to be Sick. Links Job 33:24 NIVJob 33:24 NLT Job 33:24 ESV Job 33:24 NASB Job 33:24 KJV Job 33:24 Bible Apps Job 33:24 Parallel Job 33:24 Biblia Paralela Job 33:24 Chinese Bible Job 33:24 French Bible Job 33:24 German Bible Job 33:24 Commentaries Bible Hub |