"Though I am blameless, I have no concern for myself; I despise my own life." (Job 9:21)
Job agrees with Bildad in principle: indeed I know that this is true - but how can mere mortals prove their innocence before God? Though they wished to dispute with him they could not answer him one time out of a thousand. His wisdom is profound; his power is vast. He moves mountains without their knowing it. He speaks to the sun and it does not shine. Job longs for an arbiter between them, someone to remove God's rod so that his terror would frighten him no more. Though I am blameless, I have no concern for myself; I despise my own life. It is all the same - he destroys both the blameless and the wicked. The earth is handed over to the wicked.
The Catechism identifies Job's longing for an arbiter as a dim anticipation of the Mediator, Christ Jesus, who stands between God and humanity not to weaken either but to reconcile them (CCC 618).
Brothers and sisters, Job longed for an arbiter who could lay his hand on both parties and bridge the vast distance between the suffering human and the inscrutable God. The Church's answer is: the Arbiter has come. He laid his hand on both, being fully God and fully human. Take your impossible case to the one who can bring it before the Father.
Lord Jesus, Arbiter between God and humanity, take our impossible case and lay your hand on both parties. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.