The Bible in a Year
“I know it is so of a truth; but how should a man be just with God?” — Job 9:2
Job’s question reaches across the centuries and still unsettles the human heart today: “How should a man be just with God?” Beneath every religious system, every moral effort, and every restless conscience lies this same concern. How can sinful people stand before a holy God without fear, shame, or condemnation? Job understood something many modern people ignore. The greatest issue in life is not financial success, social approval, or earthly comfort. The greatest issue is whether we are right before God.
As I read Job’s words, I am reminded that Scripture never minimizes human sinfulness. Romans 3:23 says, “For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God.” The Bible does not divide humanity into the obviously sinful and the naturally righteous. It places all of us under the same verdict. Sin is not merely bad behavior; it is rebellion against the holiness of God. The Hebrew understanding of holiness carries the idea of separateness and moral purity. God is completely righteous, and because He is righteous, He cannot simply overlook sin as though it were insignificant. Habakkuk 1:13 says of God, “Thou art of purer eyes than to behold evil.”
That reality creates a crisis no amount of self-improvement can solve. Humanity spends enormous energy trying to justify itself before other people. We defend ourselves, polish our image, and measure ourselves against those we consider worse than ourselves. Yet Job wisely asks about being justified before God. Public approval cannot cleanse the conscience. Human applause cannot erase guilt. Eternal destiny is not settled in the courtroom of public opinion but before the throne of God Himself.
This is why the doctrine of justification is so precious within the gospel. The word “justify” carries the sense of being declared righteous. It is a legal declaration from God, not because we earned righteousness, but because Christ provides it. Charles Spurgeon once wrote, “God justifies the ungodly, not the righteous.” That statement shocks human pride because we instinctively want to contribute something to our salvation. Yet Scripture continually points us away from ourselves and toward Christ.
The answer to Job’s question is ultimately found at the cross. Jesus Christ lived the sinless life humanity failed to live and willingly bore the judgment sin deserved. Second Corinthians 5:21 explains it beautifully: “For he hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in him.” Christ died as our substitute. The theological word “vicarious” means He acted in our place. The punishment justice demanded fell upon Him so mercy could be extended to us.
Martin Luther called justification by faith “the article upon which the church stands or falls.” That is because justification protects the heart of the gospel itself. We are not saved through religious performance, church attendance, family heritage, or moral effort. Romans 5:1 declares, “Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.” Peace with God is not achieved through striving but received through faith in Jesus Christ.
This truth changes the way I approach daily life. When I understand justification properly, I stop trying to build my identity upon human validation. I no longer need to exhaust myself proving my worth before others because my standing before God rests securely in Christ. At the same time, justification does not produce spiritual laziness. Instead, gratitude begins to shape obedience. Good works become the fruit of salvation rather than the means of obtaining it.
Job asked the question generations before the cross, but the gospel now gives the full answer. A man is made just with God through Jesus Christ alone. The cross satisfies divine justice while opening the door for divine mercy. Every believer who trusts in Christ stands forgiven, accepted, and declared righteous before the Father. That is not merely theology for scholars; it is hope for every weary soul carrying the burden of guilt.
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