After Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar finish delivering their three volume lecture series on suffering, Elihu steps forward with a question that cuts straight to the point. Why does Job accuse God of being silent? Job had cried out for answers. He wanted explanations, reasons, and preferably a clear presentation titled something like “Why Job Suffers: A Divine Overview.” When clarity did not arrive, Job grew frustrated and demanded that God explain Himself. When those answers did not come right away, Job concluded that heaven had gone quiet. Elihu responds with calm insight. He says, “God speaks in one way, and in two, though man does not perceive it.” In other words, the problem is not that God has stopped speaking. The problem is that people often fail to recognize His voice. Elihu gently suggests that God may already be communicating, but human ears are not always tuned to hear Him. It is a little like missing a phone call because the ringer is turned off and then wondering why nobody ever calls.
That idea feels very familiar in daily life. God is always speaking, yet many of us only seem to notice if the message arrives wrapped in flashing lights or delivered by someone wearing a name tag and holding a microphone. Scripture teaches that God is constantly at work around us, inviting us into a real relationship with Him. He speaks through the Holy Spirit, through Scripture, through prayer, through circumstances, and often through other believers. Still, we sometimes treat His timing like a delayed message that never arrived. When God calls, His invitation usually leads us toward faith and action, which explains why many of us hesitate. We can resemble Bilbo Baggins when Gandalf invited him on a grand adventure. Bilbo blinked and replied, “Adventure? Oh no! Adventures make one late for dinner.” That line captures something about human nature. We often prefer a quiet breakfast, a comfortable chair, and a predictable day. Following God rarely fits neatly between morning coffee and evening television.
The New Testament explains why God keeps speaking. His purpose is to shape His people into the likeness of Jesus Christ. The apostle Paul writes that believers are to be “conformed to the image of his Son” (Romans 8:29). That process requires change, and change tends to make people a little uneasy. Jesus described the relationship in simple terms: “My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me” (John 10:27). Hearing His voice leads to following Him, and following Him reshapes a life from the inside out. Through Christ we see the clearest picture of God’s heart, especially at the cross where His love was displayed. As people worship God “in spirit and truth” (John 4:24), serve others, and grow through obedience, God continues to work within them. Since none of us reaches the finish line in this life, the process continues. Sometimes we step forward. Sometimes we pause. Sometimes we hesitate like a hobbit worried about missing supper. Yet through it all, God continues speaking and forming Christ within those who listen.
