Bible Book Club

Job 28-31 Job: Where Can I Find Wisdom?

Susan Merrill & Heather Rubio Season 18 Episode 9

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0:00 | 28:20

When life falls apart, where do you look for help?

Job has survived three rounds of debate with friends who had all the answers but none of them right. Now the arguments are over, and the crowd goes quiet. What Job does next is unexpected. Instead of demanding justice, he goes searching for something deeper. Something we all want when life doesn't make sense. Wisdom.

What unfolds across Job 28–31 is one of the most breathtaking poems in all of Scripture spoken by a grieving man who refuses to let go of God, even when God seems to have abandoned him.

What you'll learn:

  • The Wisdom Poem (Job 28): You can't mine for wisdom, you can't buy it, and you can't find it in the land of the living. There's only one true place it comes from.
  • The great twist: God already declared three times that Job has wisdom, but Job doesn't even know it yet.
  • The "but now" moment (Job 30): Job looks at everything he's lost—his reputation, his health, his community—and he lets himself grieve.
  • Job's final oath (Job 31): Job signs his name to his own defense with 19 "if" statements and dares God to answer him. It is bold.
  • What we have that Job didn't: Through Christ and the Holy Spirit, the wisdom Job spent four chapters searching for is now freely available to us. All we have to do is ask. 

Group Discussion Questions for Job 28–31

  1. Job found that wisdom cannot be mined, bought, or discovered in the land of the living. It belongs to God alone. Can you think of a time when you were searching for wisdom in all the wrong places? What was the result?
  2. Job describes a ministry of caring for people that brought him great joy. In Chapter 30, he deeply mourns its loss. Can you relate to Job here? Has there ever been something in your own life that brought you joy but then suffering or circumstance took it away?
  3. Job signed his name to his innocence and demanded God answer him directly, not the crowd. Have you ever found yourself going to people for approval or justice? How could you turn to God for clarity and insight next time instead?

This podcast episode is part of our ongoing Bible Book Club series, Season 2: The Book of Job.

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