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Cry when it Hurts

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'Someone must have been lying about Joseph K., for without having done anything ... 'Naked I came from my mother's womb, and naked shall I return there; the Lord ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cry when it Hurts


1
Cry when it Hurts
  • Job 3.1-26

2
It Hurts!
  • "Someone must have been lying about Joseph K.,
    for without having done anything wrong he was
    arrested one fine morning."
  • Franz Kafka, The Trial

3
A Definition of Affliction
  • "There is not real affliction unless the event
    that has seized and uprooted a life attacks it,
    directly or indirectly, in all its parts, social,
    psychological, and physical."
  • Simone Weil, Waiting for God

4
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5
Job 3.1-2
  • "After this Job opened his mouth and cursed the
    day of his birth. He answered, saying . . . ."

6
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7
Job 11-5
  • He was "blameless and upright, one who feared God
    and turned away from evil."
  • He had an ideal family and all the wealth that he
    could desire.
  • He did obsess a little about his children's
    spiritual state, but that is not really
    "abnormal."

8
Job 1.6-12
  • The Heavenly Scene
  • "Have you considered my servant Job?"
  • ". . . he will curse you to your face."

9
Job 1.14a
  • "a messenger came to Job and said . . . ."

10
Job 1.16
  • "The fire of God fell from heaven and burned up
    the sheep and the servants, and consumed them"

11
Job 1.18-9
  • ". . . a great wind came across the desert,
    struck the four corners of the house, and it fell
    on the young people, and they are DEAD . . . ."

12
Job 1.21
  • "Naked I came from my mother's womb, and naked
    shall I return there the Lord gave, and the Lord
    has taken away blessed be the name of the Lord."

13
Job 2.7
  • ". . . the satan . . . inflicted loathsome sores
    on Job from the sole of his foot to the crown of
    his head."

14
Job 210
  • ". . . shall we receive the good at the hand of
    God, and not receive the bad?"

15
Job 2.11-13
  • "Job's three friends . . . met together to go and
    console and comfort him . . . . they raised their
    voices and wept aloud . . . . sat with him on the
    ground seven days and nights . . . ."

16
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17
Job 3.1-2
  • "After this Job opened his mouth and cursed the
    day of his birth. He answered, saying . . . ."

18
Job 3.3-10
  • 3.3 Let the day . . . and the night . . . .
  • 3.4-5 Let the day . . . .
  • 3.6-7 That night . . . .
  • 3.8 Curse of the Day/Sea
  • 3.9 Day Night Luminescence
  • 3.10 The Reason Since he was not allowed to die
    at birth, he now has had to experience much
    trouble.

19
Job 3.3-10
  • Jeremiah in a different context Jer 20.14-18.
  • "The bourgeois etiquette that has dominated the
    mores of western Christendom, especially in the
    Puritan tradition, is not guide to the rightness
    of Jobs speech." F. I. Andersen
  • No thought of Suicide!

20
Christian Masochism Calvin's Prayer
  • "And surely, O Lord, from the very chastisements
    which thou has inflicted upon us, we know that
    for the justest causes thy wrath is kindled
    against us for, seeing thou are a just Judge,
    thou afflictest not thy people when not
    offending. Therefore, beaten with thy stripes, we
    acknowledge that we have provoked thy anger
    against us and even now we see thy hand
    stretched forth for our punishment. The swords
    which thou art wont to use in inflicting
    vengeance are now drawn, and those with which
    thou threatenest sinners and wicked men we see
    ready to smite.

21
Christian Masochism Calvin's Prayer
  • But though thou mightest take much severer
    punishment upon us than before, and thus inflict
    blows an hundredfold more numerous, and though
    disasters only less dreadful than those with
    which thou didst formerly chastise the sins of
    thy people of Israel, should overtake us, we
    confess that we are worthy of them, and have
    merited them by our crimes."

22
Christian Masochism Powerlessness
  • Powerlessness "Powerlessness signifies 'the
    expectancy or probability held by the individual
    that his own behavior cannot determine the
    occurrence of the outcomes, or reinforcements, he
    seeks' . . . . The consciousness that one is
    powerless is a fundamental element in suffering."
  • Soelle, Suffering

23
Christian Masochism Meaninglessness
  • Meaninglessness "Meaninglessness. . . . This
    occurs when 'the individual is unclear as to what
    he ought to believe - when the individuals
    minimal standards for clarity in decision making
    are not met.'"
  • Soelle, Suffering

24
Christian Masochism
  • "The logic of this sadistic understanding of
    suffering is hard to refute. It consists of three
    propositions which recur in all sadistic
    theologies 1) God is the almighty ruler of the
    world, and he sends all suffering 2) God acts
    justly, not capriciously and 3) all suffering is
    punishment for sin."
  • Soelle, Suffering

25
Christian Masochism
  • "In the face of suffering you are either with the
    victim or the executioner - there is no other
    option. Therefore that explanation of suffering
    that looks away from the victim and identifies
    itself with a righteousness that is suppose to
    stand behind the suffering has already taken a
    step in the direction of theological sadism,
    which wants to understand God as the torturer."
  • Soelle, Suffering

26
Christian Masochism
  • "When Christians try to explain all suffering in
    and of itself having theological significance we
    end up vacating the cross of its significance
    because we fail to remember that what is
    important about the cross is who was crucified
    there. Moreover such accounts of suffering tempt
    us to masochistic accounts of the Christian life
    that cannot help belie the joy characteristic of
    the Christian orientation."
  • Hauerwas, Suffering Presence

27
Job 3.11-19
  • 3.11-12 Why did I not die at birth . . . .
  • 3.13-15 I could have been at rest from my
    troubles like the great people of the past.

28
Job 3.11-19
  • 3.16 Why was I not buried . . . .
  • 3.17-19 I would be relieved from the trouble
    that I am experiencing like those that were
    disenfranchised.

29
Job 3.11-19
  • Self-lament
  • Deep pain that cannot easily be brushed aside.
  • Troubled family
  • Richard

30
Job 3.20-23
  • Why is light given . . . .
  • A lament leveled at God.

31
The Hidden God
  • "God being thus hidden, every religion which does
    not affirm that God is hidden is not true and
    every religion which does not give the reason of
    it is not instructive." Pascal, Pensees, 585

32
Job 3.24-26
  • "Truly the thing that I fear comes upon me,
  • And what I dread befalls me.
  • I am not at ease, nor am I quiet
  • I have no rest but trouble comes."

33
Apply the Cry to our lives
  • Laments in the O.T.
  • Gospel of Mark as an extended Passion Narrative.
  • Mark 15.34b "My God, my God, why have you
    forsaken me?"
  • Maranatha (?)

34
Apply the Cry to our lives
  • Rev. 6.10 They cried out with a loud voice,
    "Sovereign Lord, holy and true, how long will it
    be before you judge and avenge our blood on the
    inhabitants of the earth?"

35
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