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The Heart of Man Yearns for True Hope

Posted on April 11, 2026April 11, 2026 By admin

How wisdom, worship, and suffering prepare us for Christ’s rule

What is Your Heart Truly Yearning For?

By now in this series we’ve seen:

  1. A good creation and a catastrophe that leaves us fallen and in need of rescue.
  2. God’s promise to bless all nations through Abraham and his people, Israel.
  3. Law, sacrifice, and God’s presence as God-given shadows pointing toward Christ.
  4. Prophets and kings awakening hope for a perfect Ruler and a new covenant.

But the Old Testament doesn’t only tell us what happened in Israel’s history. It also gives us a window into the inner life of God’s people—how they thought, felt, worshiped, doubted, rejoiced, and suffered.

That window is the wisdom and poetry books: Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and Song of Songs (often including Lamentations). These books don’t advance the timeline of redemptive history so much as they explore life inside God’s story.

They raise questions and desires that only Christ ultimately satisfies.

In this fifth blog, we’ll trace three big themes:

  1. Wisdom – the quest to live well in God’s world
  2. Worship – the honest language of prayer and praise
  3. Suffering – the riddle of pain in a world ruled by a good God

And we’ll see how Jesus, in His person and work, brings these threads together.


1. Wisdom: Living Skillfully in God’s World

The Old Testament wisdom books ask:

How do we live wisely in the world God made, especially in a world broken by sin?

Proverbs: The Shape of Godly Wisdom

The book of Proverbs paints wisdom in very practical colors:

  • Fearing the LORD is “the beginning of knowledge” (Proverbs 1:7).
  • Wisdom is like a path: walk this way, not that.
  • Wisdom leads to life, order, justice, and flourishing.

Proverbs often reads like the world as it should normally work:

  • Diligence tends to prosperity; laziness tends to poverty.
  • Truthfulness tends to trust; deceit tends to ruin.
  • The wise fear the Lord; the fool despises His ways.

You could summarize its message:

“God made the world with moral order. Live in line with that order by fearing Him, and it will generally go well with you.”

Ecclesiastes: When Life Doesn’t Add Up

But life is not always “Proverbial.” Ecclesiastes looks around and says:

“Vanity of vanities! All is vanity.” (Ecclesiastes 1:2)

The Teacher wrestles with:

  • The brevity of life
  • The injustice of the world
  • The apparent meaninglessness of work and pleasure if all ends in death

He tests everything “under the sun”—wisdom, work, wealth, pleasure—and finds that none can bear the weight of ultimate meaning.

Ecclesiastes exposes a deep ache:

If death has the last word, what’s the point?

Job: The Riddle of Righteous Suffering

Job complicates things further. Here is a righteous man who fears God, yet he suffers horrifically:

  • His wealth is stripped away
  • His children die
  • His health is shattered

His friends insist on a simple formula:
“Good things happen to good people; bad things happen to bad people. So if you’re suffering, you must have sinned.”

Job knows that’s not the whole story. He cries out, questions, laments, and yet clings to God.

Job, Proverbs, and Ecclesiastes together show:

  • God’s world does have moral order (Proverbs).
  • Yet in a fallen world, that order is not always visible or immediate (Job, Ecclesiastes).
  • Human wisdom alone cannot resolve the tension between God’s justice and the crookedness we see.

How Wisdom Points to Christ

The New Testament tells us that Jesus is not just a wise teacher; He is Wisdom personified:

“And because of him you are in Christ Jesus, who became to us wisdom from God, righteousness and sanctification and redemption.”
— 1 Corinthians 1:30

“…in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.”
— Colossians 2:3

Jesus answers the wisdom books’ longings by:

  • Revealing God fully (“Whoever has seen me has seen the Father” – John 14:9).
  • Teaching the true meaning of life in God’s kingdom (e.g., the Sermon on the Mount).
  • Showing that real wisdom often looks like foolishness to the world—a crucified Messiah who saves by suffering (1 Corinthians 1:18–25).

He also answers Ecclesiastes’ despair by conquering death. If Christ is risen, then:

  • Our labor in the Lord is not in vain (1 Corinthians 15:58).
  • Life “under the sun” is no longer closed off from eternity; resurrection breaks the ceiling.

And He answers Job’s riddle by being the truly innocent Sufferer who bears our sins, vindicated by God in resurrection glory.

In Jesus, wisdom is no longer just a principle; it’s a Person we trust and follow.


2. Worship: Honest Hearts Before a Holy God

The Psalms—Israel’s songbook—give us inspired words for every season of the soul:

  • Joy and praise
  • Sorrow and confusion
  • Repentance and confession
  • Fear, anger, hope, and longing

The Range of the Psalms

Some Psalms are exuberant:

“Let everything that has breath praise the LORD!” (Psalm 150:6)

Others are deeply troubled:

“How long, O LORD? Will you forget me forever?” (Psalm 13:1)

“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Psalm 22:1)

Some rejoice in God’s law (Psalm 1; 19; 119). Others cry out under oppression and injustice (Psalms 10, 73). There are Psalms of personal lament, national lament, royal psalms about the king, and messianic psalms that look beyond David to a greater Son.

The Psalms teach us:

  • God welcomes honest prayer, not sanitized clichés.
  • Real faith can wrestle, question, weep, and still cling.
  • Worship is not just what happens when life is good; it’s how we bring all of life to God.

How the Psalms Point to Christ

Jesus steps into the world of the Psalms in several ways:

  1. He prays and sings them.
    As a faithful Israelite, Jesus would have worshiped with the Psalms. On the cross He quotes Psalm 22:1: “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Matthew 27:46)
  2. He fulfills the royal and messianic Psalms.
    • Psalm 2’s Son and King of the nations
    • Psalm 110’s priest-king at God’s right hand
    • Psalm 72’s righteous ruler bringing justice and peace
    These find their true fulfillment in Jesus, the Davidic King whose reign never ends.
  3. He embodies the righteous sufferer.
    Many laments—especially Psalms like 22 and 69—describe a righteous person surrounded by enemies, falsely accused, and suffering deeply. They fit David, but they fit Jesus most fully.

When we pray the Psalms as Christians, we pray them:

  • With Jesus – our sympathetic High Priest who knows our weaknesses.
  • Through Jesus – whose blood gives us bold access to God.
  • In Jesus – whose story frames our own joys and sorrows.

The Psalms give us language for worship that is Christ-shaped: honest about suffering, anchored in God’s promises, and oriented toward God’s King.


3. Suffering: Pain, Patience, and Hope

Suffering shows up everywhere in the wisdom and poetry books:

  • Job’s agonizing losses
  • Laments in the Psalms
  • The Teacher’s frustration with injustice in Ecclesiastes
  • The grief of Lamentations over Jerusalem’s destruction

These books refuse to give shallow answers. They:

  • Acknowledge the depth of pain.
  • Affirm that God is still sovereign and good.
  • Often leave us in a place of trust without full explanation.

This tension cries out for resolution.

Christ: The Center of the Bible’s Theology of Suffering

In Jesus, suffering is not explained away; it is entered into and transformed.

  • He is the truly righteous one who suffers not for His sins but for ours.
  • He experiences abandonment, mockery, injustice, and physical torment.
  • He takes the curse of sin upon Himself (Galatians 3:13).

The cross shows:

  • God is not distant from our pain; He has stepped into it.
  • Our suffering cannot mean God doesn’t love us; the cross is proof that He does.
  • Suffering can have redemptive purpose—even when we don’t see all the reasons, we know God can bring resurrection out of crucifixion.

The resurrection then guarantees that:

  • Suffering and death do not have the last word.
  • Our present sufferings are “not worth comparing with the glory” to come (Romans 8:18).
  • One day, every tear will be wiped away (Revelation 21:4).

The wisdom and poetry books ask the questions; the cross and empty tomb give the decisive answer of hope.


4. Desire and Love: Song of Songs and Our Deepest Longing

At first glance, Song of Songs seems to stand apart—a collection of love poetry celebrating the joy, longing, and delight of romantic love.

But even here, the Bible is teaching us something deeper:

  • Human love, in its purity, is a good gift from God.
  • The longing for intimate, faithful love resonates with our deeper longing to be fully known and fully loved by God Himself.

Throughout Scripture, God often describes His relationship to His people in marriage language:

  • The LORD as husband, Israel as bride (Hosea, Isaiah 54:5).
  • Christ as bridegroom, the church as His bride (Ephesians 5:25–32; Revelation 19:7).

Song of Songs, at the very least, gives us a picture of love that hints at the greater love Christ has for His people:

  • Jealous, faithful, covenantal
  • Delightful and joyous
  • Costly and committed

In Jesus, all our deepest desires—for love, security, belonging, joy—find their true home.


5. Putting It Together: The Inner Life that Only Christ Completes

The wisdom and poetry books show us:

  • The mind asking, “What is wise? What is true? What is the point?”
  • The heart asking, “Can I really bring all this to God—my joy, my doubt, my anger, my despair?”
  • The soul asking, “Where is God in my pain? Does He see? Does He care?”

Christ answers not just with propositions, but with His presence:

  • As Wisdom, He shows us what life is really about and leads us through both the order and the mystery of God’s world.
  • As the true object of Worship, He gives us a way to come honestly to God, with confidence in His grace.
  • As the one who suffers and rises, He transforms our suffering from meaningless pain into a pathway of fellowship with Him and future glory.
  • As the ultimate Lover of our souls, He satisfies the deepest longings beneath every other longing.

These books invite us to bring our whole selves to God—and in Jesus, God gives His whole self to us.


6. Where We Go Next

So far, we’ve seen how the Old Testament:

  • Establishes our need (Creation and Catastrophe)
  • Unfolds God’s plan (Promise and a People)
  • Provides shadows and patterns (Law, Sacrifice, Presence)
  • Raises the hope of a perfect King and Prophet (Prophets and Kings)
  • Gives voice to our questions, desires, and pains (Wisdom, Worship, Suffering)

All of this builds anticipation for the moment when the Word becomes flesh.

In the next part of this series, we’ll step into the New Testament and see how Jesus arrives as the fulfillment of the Old Testament story—the One in whom all God’s promises find their “Yes.”

Coming next in this series:
Blog 6 – The Coming of the King: Jesus as the Fulfillment of the Old Testament

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