Seeking While You Wait

Seeking Hope in the Midst of Sorrow (Daily Refresh, 1-24-26)

Lamentations is a book of sorrow, written in the aftermath of Jerusalem’s destruction. The city lay in ruins. Grief covered the people like dust. But right in the middle of this lament, something remarkable happens: a word of hope.

“The Lord is good to those whose hope is in him, to the one who seeks him.”
Lamentations 3:25 NIV

Jeremiah, who scholars believe is the likely author of Lamentations, writes this verse not because everything was good, but because he knew God is good, even when life is not. This kind of hope is a deliberate choice to seek God’s presence when things seem dark. It’s trusting in His character when circumstances don’t make sense.

The verse highlights two actions: hoping and seeking. Hope in God fixes our eyes forward, on what He will do. Seeking Him draws us inward into relationship with the God who is already near.

Verse 26 continues the theme: “It is good to wait quietly for the salvation of the Lord.” The Hebrew word for “wait” here is “yachal,” which carries the idea of hopeful expectation. It’s not a passive sitting still—it’s an active, trusting posture of the heart. In this context, waiting isn’t doing nothing; it’s doing the hard, soul-level work of trusting in God’s timing even when answers feel delayed.

Waiting means continuing to pray, to obey, and to believe, even in silence or sorrow, because we know the Lord’s salvation is worth the wait. Just as a farmer waits for the harvest after faithfully sowing seed, so we wait with purpose, believing God will bring restoration in His perfect time.

In his waiting, Jeremiah didn’t deny the pain. He brought his pain to God. And in that place of honest dependence, he reminded himself—and now us—that God is still good, still faithful, and still worth seeking.

My Thoughts

The devotional today made me pause and take a hard look at how I am waiting for God’s answer. My response is an honest, “not too well.” I have been impatient, demanding and outright rebellious at times as I wait for God to answer my prayers for relief from the pain in my shoulder. God is always patient, always waiting for me to quiet my heart and then listen. And when I finally did this morning, His words to me were that He is right there, walking through this time with me. He has provided caregivers, a doctor, a physical therapist and a spouse an a granddaughter who show me how much they want me to get better. They are mirroring God to me. So, I continue to pray and believe, knowing that God is always faithful and always worth seeking. It is in the seeking that I find the hope that I thought I had lost.