Blustery

 "How long will you say these things, and the words of your mouth be a great wind?
Job 8:2 ESV
https://bible.com/bible/59/job.8.2.ESV

Bildad was even more of a 'Job's comforter' than Eliphaz. His faulty theology came before compassion for his friend Job. Because Job dared to contradict his beliefs, he raged at him in a stormy bluster.

The irony is that when God finally breaks in on the scene, He literally storms in. He accuses Job's comforters of speaking a load of blustery nothings, and vindicates Job. What Job is accused of is what his friends are guilty of: mouthing empty nothings.

Before we condemn Bildad, we would do well to search ourselves. Do we put our views before our friends? Do our friends play second fiddle to our hobby horses? Do we need to get off our high horses?

Thankfully, God restored Job to a pedestal of prosperity to match his deserving integrity. Even if He hadn't have done so, God would still be just, and would have still vindicated Job in eternity. We need an eternal perspective to make sense of this fleeting life.

'Almighty God, thank You that there's no superfluous word in Your Scriptures, and that we can even learn from the vacuous blusterings of the likes of Bildad to hopefully have more humility. In Jesus' name, amen'

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