The brief account in Job 40:3 — 'Behold, then Job opens his mouth to answer Yahweh' — places us before a decisive moment: not merely an exchange of words, but the encounter between the creature who cried out for explanations and the Creator who spoke. 'More' is the tension that pulses here: we want more answers, more justice, more light; the text reminds us that above all comes the encounter with the One who calls for a response.
When God speaks, our speech must be modulated by reverence and a hunger for His face. To answer Yahweh does not mean demanding theological frameworks that suit us, but opening the mouth to confess our limits, to ask for more of His presence and to let His word shape us. In Job we see that the divine speech leads the man to the recognition that the 'more' he seeks — meaning, vindication, direction — is only found in communion with the Lord.
In pastoral practice, this implies concrete habits: setting aside time to hear the Word, confessing what still binds us to pride, praying not only for explanations but for more intimacy and sanctification, and obeying the small steps of faith that God reveals. The hunger for 'more' is fed in attentive silence, in the humble reading of Scripture and in the courage to answer the Lord with confidence, even without receiving all the answers.
Therefore, open your mouth today to answer Yahweh with a simple and sincere request: 'More of You, Lord.' May this word guide your actions — patience in waiting, readiness in obedience, hope in divine faithfulness. Go ahead, ask for more of God and trust that He, who spoke to Job, transforms our lack into communion and our restlessness into rest.