Listening to our Inner Job: Reflections on Isaiah 40:21-31

Such "arguments" are hardly unique to the exilic Isaiah. Religious traditionalists have long countered hard and honest questions with demands to just be quiet and pray and wait. Do not misunderstand me. I think Isaiah firmly believes that the way to Israel's very survival is to follow his advice by not giving up the old ways of YHWH, by relying even more on the tried and true beliefs of the ancestors. Give me that old time religion, he says, since it was good enough for the Hebrew children. And it without doubt has been good for many.

But do we do well to silence our Jobs, our honest questioners of the "tried and true?" I think not. The Jobs among us remind us that our faith must be a living one, adaptable to changing circumstances, nimble in the face of new perplexities and possibilities. I would suggest that our day is very like 6th century BCE Babylon, a seething pot of theological stew that desperately needs its questioning carrots as much as its traditional turnips. We need to hear our Jobs, despite the sometimes too-easy nostrums of our too-certain Isaiahs.

2/3/2012 5:00:00 AM
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  • John Holbert
    About John Holbert
    John C. Holbert is the Lois Craddock Perkins Professor Emeritus of Homiletics at Perkins School of Theology in Dallas, TX.