I Don’t See the Full Picture
Day 29 · Job 41:11; 42:3
📖 TODAY’S SCRIPTURE
Job 41:11; 42:3 (NIV)
“Who has a claim against me that I must pay? Everything under heaven belongs to me.”
“You asked, ‘Who is this that obscures my plans without knowledge?’ Surely I spoke of things I did not understand, things too wonderful for me to know.”
Today’s John 15 thread: The branch that stays connected to the Vine doesn’t need to understand every decision the Gardener makes. It just needs to trust that the Gardener knows. Job’s final words to God are the words of a branch that has stopped demanding explanations — and started resting in the One who holds all things.
✍️ REFLECTION
For 37 chapters, Job has been asking questions. Hard ones. Honest ones. Why me? Where are you? Speak to me. Answer me. And God has been silent.
Then in chapter 38, everything changes. God comes — not with answers, but with questions of His own.
“Where were you when I laid the earth’s foundation? Have you entered the storehouses of the snow? Can you bring forth the constellation of Orion?”
God takes Job on a tour of the universe. Stars and seas and storm systems and creatures beyond anything Job could name. And in the middle of it all He says: “Everything under heaven belongs to me.”
This is not God being harsh. This is God being kind. He is showing Job — and showing us — just how big He actually is. And the moment Job sees it clearly, something breaks open in him. Not bitterness. Not defeat. Awe.
“Surely I spoke of things I did not understand. Things too wonderful for me to know.”
Q1: When was the last time you stopped and let creation remind you how big God is — the sky, the ocean, a storm rolling in? What happens to your problems in that moment?
Job was a righteous man all along. God said so from the very beginning. But he had been asking God to explain Himself. Wanting to understand the plan before he would accept the process.
And when God finally speaks, Job doesn’t get an explanation. He gets a revelation.
That is often how it works. We want answers. God gives us Himself. And somehow, that turns out to be enough.
I have come back to Jeremiah 29:11 again and again through the hard seasons of my life: “For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.” The key word is I know. Not “you will understand.” Not “it will be explained to you one day.” God knows. That is the promise. And Romans 8:28 shows us that He is working all of it — all of it — for good.
Job’s story is the proof. He went through the hardest stretch of his life without a single explanation. And at the end of it all, God restored everything — double what he had before.
Q2: Is there something right now that you have been asking God to explain? What would change if you stopped asking for the explanation and started trusting the One who holds it all?
The most honest thing Job says in the whole book might be this: “Things too wonderful for me to know.” He is not saying God was wrong. He is saying God is bigger than his ability to understand — and that is actually good news. Because a God who fits inside my understanding is not big enough to carry what I am asking Him to carry.
I really have no idea what the future holds. All I know is what I see right now. But God knows. And that has always been enough.
Q3: Can you say honestly — not as a performance — “Lord, You know things I don’t, and I trust You with what I cannot see”? What is the hardest part of meaning that right now?
🌿 REMAIN IN HIM
Take a moment before you move on. This isn’t a to-do. It’s an invitation to stay.
Reflect honestly: What is the question you keep bringing to God that He hasn’t answered yet? Name it. Don’t dress it up. Bring it as it is.
Bring it to Jesus: Sit quietly and offer that question back to Him — not asking for an answer, but choosing to trust. “Lord, I don’t understand this. But I know You do. And I’m choosing to trust You with it.”
Trust the Gardener: The branch does not need to understand every pruning cut to trust the Gardener. It just needs to stay connected. The Vine holds the knowledge. The branch holds the connection. Stay.
🙏 PRAYER
Father, thank You for speaking through Your Word today. Like Job, I have spoken of things I did not understand. I have asked for explanations for seasons where You were simply asking me to trust You. Forgive me. Help me to look at Your creation and be reminded how big You are — and how small my problems look against that. You know the plans You have for me. You are working all things for my good. I choose to trust You with what I cannot see. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
💡 MEMORY VERSE
Job 42:3 (NIV) — “Surely I spoke of things I did not understand, things too wonderful for me to know.”
This post is part of the Abide in Him Daily devotional series — reading Scripture through the lens of John 15:1–17. The branch doesn’t manufacture the fruit. It bears it because it stays connected to the Vine.
