Connect Job 35:14 with Psalm 27:14 on waiting for the Lord. Scripture Focus • Job 35:14: “Even if you say you do not see Him, your case is before Him, and you must wait for Him.” • Psalm 27:14: “Wait patiently for the LORD; be strong and courageous. Wait patiently for the LORD!” Observing the Passages • Both verses place “waiting” in direct relationship to the Lord’s justice and deliverance. • Job highlights unseen reality—God’s presence and judgment remain sure even when undetected. • David adds the call to courageous endurance, repeating the command for emphasis. Understanding the Context • Job 35 is Elihu’s answer to Job’s complaint. Elihu reminds Job that God is never absent; apparent silence is not abandonment. • Psalm 27 is David’s confident confession amid enemies. He ends by urging himself and readers to hold their ground in faith. • Together they portray waiting as more than passive delay; it is steadfast trust in God’s proven character. Key Parallels on Waiting • Certainty of God’s attention – Job: “your case is before Him” – Psalm: the person waited because “the LORD is my light and my salvation” (v. 1) • Call to endurance – Job: “you must wait” implies obligation – Psalm: “be strong and courageous” commands inner fortitude • Focus on God’s timing, not human perception – Job addresses lack of visible evidence – Psalm anticipates final victory yet unseen Practical Implications for Today • Waiting is an act of faith anchored in God’s unchanging justice. • Strength and courage grow while trusting what is true rather than what is felt. • Complaints can be redirected into confident expectation, knowing the Lord already holds the case file. • Repetition in Psalm 27:14 underlines the need to preach these truths to one’s own soul daily. Encouragement from Other Scriptures • Isaiah 40:31: “Those who wait upon the LORD will renew their strength.” • Lamentations 3:25–26: “The LORD is good to those who wait for Him… it is good to wait quietly for salvation from the LORD.” • James 5:7–8: “Be patient… the Lord’s coming is near.” • Galatians 6:9: “Let us not grow weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.” Waiting, then, is the courageous stance of believers who, assured of Scripture’s truthfulness, stand firm until God’s perfectly timed answer is revealed. |