05 Mar 2026

What Do We Say When God Takes Away?

Job 9:12—“Behold, he taketh away, who can hinder him? who will say unto him, What doest thou?”

Job speaks these words in the midst of deep anguish. Having lost his children, his wealth, and his health, he wrestles not merely with pain but with the sovereignty of God. Though deeply wounded, not only by his losses but also by the false accusations of his friends, Job does not deny God’s sovereign rule. Even when misrepresented as a secret sinner and pressed to confess imagined crimes, he refuses to abandon the truth that the Almighty reigns. In chapter 9, Job acknowledges the greatness and unchallengeable authority of the Almighty. Though troubled, he does not deny God’s rule.

Job’s words, “Behold, he taketh away,” are his recognition that loss does not ultimately come from chance, nature, or men alone. Behind secondary causes stands the sovereign hand of God. This echoes the earlier confession: “The LORD gave, and the LORD hath taken away” (Job 1:21). Scripture consistently affirms that God’s rule is absolute (Daniel 4:35).

Job’s next utterance, “Who can hinder him?” is an expression of his awareness that God’s purposes cannot be restrained. No human strength, no earthly power, no unseen force can thwart His decree. His will is neither reactive nor uncertain.

So Job asked, “Who will say unto him, What doest thou?” This is not an irrelevant protest but a recognition of man’s creaturely limitation. The clay cannot summon the Potter to answer for His design (Isaiah 45:9; Romans 9:20). God’s sovereign purposes rise above the limits of human understanding, calling us not to interrogation, but to humble trust. 

Certainly, this verse is a call to all of us to humble ourselves before God, whatever the situation. In seasons when God “taketh away”, we may not understand, but we are reminded that He is never out of control. His sovereignty is not cold fatalism; it is the rule of a wise and righteous God. The believer’s comfort lies not in explaining every loss, but in trusting the One whose purposes are perfect and whose character is faithful.

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