If We Receive Good
from the Hand of God,
Why Should We Not Also Receive Evil?
Paul
saw the riches of wisdom within himself though he himself was outwardly a
corruptible body, which is why he says We have this treasure in earthen vessels. In Job, then, the
earthenware vessel felt his gaping sores externally; while this interior treasure
remained unchanged. Outwardly he had gaping wounds but that did not stop the
treasure of wisdom within him from welling up and uttering these holy and
instructive words: If we have
received good at the hand of the Lord, shall we not receive evil? By the good he means the good
things given by God, both temporal and eternal; by evil he means the blows he is suffering from in the
present. Of those evils the Lord says, through the prophet Isaiah,
I
am the Lord, unrivalled,
I form
the light and create the dark.
I make
good fortune and create calamity,
it is
I, the Lord, who do all this.
I form the light, and create the dark, because
when the darkness of pain is created by blows from without, the light of the
mind is kindled by instruction within.
I make good fortune and create calamity, because
when we wrongly covet things which it was right for God to create, they are
turned into scourges and we see them as evil. We have been alienated from God
by sin, and it is fitting that we should be brought back to peace with him by
the scourge. As every being, which was created good, turns to pain for us, the
mind of the chastened man may, in its humbled state, be made new in peace with
the Creator.
We
should especially notice the skilful turn of reflection he uses when he gathers
himself up to meet the persuading of his wife, when he says If we have received good at the hand of the
Lord, shall we not receive evil? It is a great consolation to us
if, when we suffer afflictions, we recall to remembrance our Maker’s gifts to
us. Painful things will not depress us if we quickly remember also the gifts
that we have been given. As Scripture says, In the day of prosperity do not forget affliction, and in the day of
affliction, do not forget prosperity.
Whoever,
in the moment of receiving God’s gifts but forgets to fear possible affliction,
will be brought low by his presumption. Equally, whoever in the moment of
suffering fails to take comfort from the gifts which it has been his lot to
receive, is thrown down from the steadfastness of his mind and despairs.
The
two must be united so that each may always have the other’s support, so that
both remembrance of the gift may moderate the pain of the blow and fear of the
blow may moderate exuberance at receiving the gift. Thus the holy man, to
soothe the depression of his mind amidst his wounds, weighs the sweetness of
the gifts against the pains of affliction, saying If we have received good at the hand of the Lord, shall we not receive
evil?
Source:
The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From The Moral Reflections on Job by Pope
St Gregory the Great
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