Job longed for an audience with God so he could defend himself, certain that if he could just present his case, everything would be cleared up. When that moment finally came, it did not unfold as Job expected. God did not defend Himself or provide a list of explanations. Instead, He revealed Himself. The result was immediate and humbling. Job confessed, “I had heard about you before, but now I have seen you with my own eyes. I take back everything I said and sit in dust and ashes to show my repentance” (Job 42:5–6). Like Isaiah, who cried out, “Woe is me,” and like Peter and Thomas who fell before Jesus, Job discovered that encountering God does not inflate our confidence, it reshapes it. What began as a desire to argue ended as a quiet surrender. Job was not crushed, but changed, and that change came not through answers, but through a clearer vision of who God is.
That same pattern quietly works its way into our own lives. We often believe that if we could just get a few more answers, everything would fall into place. I admit I have tried to reason things out as though life were a puzzle that could be solved with enough effort and a fresh cup of coffee. But as we draw closer to God, something else happens. A teacher once described it like standing in front of a mirror under a bright light. From a distance, everything looks fine. The clothes appear neat, the hair is in place, and nothing seems out of order. But as we move closer, details begin to appear. A spot here, a wrinkle there, and suddenly we realize things are not as polished as we thought. The same is true in our walk with God. The closer we come to Him, the more clearly we see ourselves. This is not meant to discourage us, but to help us understand our need more honestly than we might prefer.
The New Testament brings this truth into full clarity through Jesus. When people encountered Him, they often responded just as Job did. Peter fell at His feet and said, “Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord” (Luke 5:8). Yet Jesus did not turn him away. Instead, He drew him in. Scripture tells us, “If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves” (1 John 1:8), but it also assures us that Christ came to deal with that very need. The contrast between God’s perfection and our condition points us directly to Him. Jesus, who rose from the dead, meets us not with rejection but with grace, showing that seeing God clearly ultimately leads us to the Savior we desperately need.
