By reason of  breakings
 they purify  themselves.
 Job 41:25
  
 Stick with me for an  extra minute or two today. I think you'll like this!
  
 I pull verses from a number of places. Some touch  my heart immediately. Others -- like today's -- are a complete mystery! Here's  was my process in trying to figure this verse out ...
  
 First, other translations weren't much help.  Combining different versions, they read ...
 1) At the crashing, thrashing, consternation,  and/or breaking ...
 2) some group of people -- identified  as either broken down, afraid ... or ... the strong, the mighty,  other gods, or angels --
 3) retreat, cower, run away, stand  there perplexed, are beside themselves, keep themselves free, and/or purify  themselves.
  
 Hmmm.
  
 Let's try a little more context ... 
  
 In perhaps the oldest book in scripture, Job's life  has been turned upside-down by tragedy. Job and his friends keep asking God  questions -- mainly, "WHY?!" Instead of answering directly, God asks Job a  series of questions. Chapter 41 is one of God's  final questions.
  
 In this question God talks about a beast that  is mightier than man -- some translations call him Leviathan (a mythical sea  creature), others envision him as a real creature (we'll use the  New Living Translation's crocodile) -- and the chapter goes essentially like this (today's verse -- in this and  other translations -- in bold) ...
  
 1 [THE  LORD SAY,] "Can you catch a crocodile with a  hook or put a noose around its jaw? 3 Will it beg you for mercy or  implore you for pity?    
 4 Will it agree to work  for you? Can you make it be your slave for life? 5 Can you make it a pet like a bird,  or give it to your little girls to play with? 
  
 7 Will its hide be hurt by darts, or its head by a  harpoon? 8  If you lay a hand on it, you will never forget the battle that follows ...!  
  
 10 And since no one dares to  disturb the crocodile, who would dare to stand up to Me?  
  
 12 "I want to emphasize the tremendous strength in the  crocodile's limbs ... 13 [And] who can ... penetrate its  double layer of armor -- [called it's] hide? 14 [And] who could pry open its jaws?  18 "When it sneezes, it  flashes light! 21 Its breath would kindle coals.  24 Its heart is as hard as rock. 25  When it rises, the  mighty are afraid, gripped by terror. [Indeed, the mighty -- even gods and  angels -- cower before its tail-thrashing turbulence.]  34 Of  all the creatures, it is the proudest. It is the king of  beasts."
  
 But ... says (or implies) God, I am king  of the king of beasts. If you won't confront a crocodile (much less a sea  monster), would you actually dare to confront me? Indeed,  "11 Who will confront me and  remain safe ? Everything under  heaven is mine."   
 And Job responds, "42:6 [Oops.] I take  back everything I said. 2 I know you can do anything. 6 I [will  just] sit [here now] in dust and ashes to show my  repentance."
  
 Because our God is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and  abounding in steadfast love, we try to tame him like a basset hound  puppy in a nickle pet store. But in so doing, we make our God much too  small. He is mightier -- by far -- than a mortal crocodile. He is God. He  doesn't submit to our human interpretations of justice. He is Justice. He  is Truth. He is Love. He is God. 
  
 God's  message to Job is: Even if you don't understand, just bow before me. Just  trust.
  
 In Christ's Love,
 a guy who loved to watch The Crocodile  Hunter
 (you always wondered how that guy didn't get  killed
 ... and then he did get killed.
 I want a God who is stronger than the crocodile
 ... and stronger than death.)