Job 9 "There Is No Mediator Between Us and God" (ft. Guest Speaker Curt Obrigewitch)
Guest speaker Curt Obrigewitch joins us for Mother's Day! Curt is taking a look at Job 9 where his deepest problem was not his physical pain — it was that God felt completely distant and Job had no way to bridge the gap. As Job wrestles with God's overwhelming power, the confusing silence, and his own sense of total separation, he cries out for something he can barely name. "There is no mediator between us to lay his hand on both of us." Centuries later, Jesus became that exact mediator. Curt clarifies that we don't have a sin problem we can fix. We have a sin problem we need to be rescued from, and Jesus stepped down into the muck of our lives to pull us out. The application is threefold: be honest with God, don't confuse His silence with His absence, and lean into Jesus rather than pulling back. By the end of Job, the greatest restoration wasn't his wealth or his family — it was relational, as Job declared, "My ears had heard of you, but now my eyes have seen you."
SCRIPTURE REFERENCES:
Job 9:1-35
Job 9:33
Job 42:5 (referenced — "my ears have heard you, but now my eyes have seen you")
Job 3 (referenced — Job wishes he'd never been born)
1 Timothy 2:5 (one mediator between God and mankind, Jesus Christ)
Psalm 39:23 (search me, God, and know my heart)
Psalm 40:1 (referenced — I waited patiently for the Lord)
1 Peter 5:6-7 (humble yourselves, casting all your cares on him)
Ephesians 3:10 (referenced — manifold wisdom of God to principalities and powers)
TOPICS AND KEYWORDS:
Job Chapter 9 — God's power, silence, and separation
Faith that survives when trials stretch on
God feeling distant versus God being absent
Job's friends making everything worse
The courtroom language of Job
How can I stand before God?
Job crying out for a mediator he couldn't see coming
The gap between a holy God and broken humanity
Jesus as the answer to Job's deepest cry
We don't have a sin problem we can fix, we need rescue
Don't confuse silence with absence
Pressing in instead of pulling back during trials
Suffering as a tool God uses to shape and position us
The cross as the bridge that tears down separation
Restoration at the end of Job, greatest change was relational
Feelings are not the measure of God's presence
