Psalm 73
This is one powerful and applicable Psalm. Written during the Babylonian captivity, it is applicable for anyone, at any time, who has been faithful to God and has struggled in life while watching wicked people prosper. We see evil people living a life of ease, comfort, and wealth while the godly barely make it. And it prompts us to question Divine justice. The psalmist asked the kinds of questions we might ask, and in his own thinking considers the answers painful.
But the solution is found in verse 17. This was painful: “...until I went into the sanctuary of God, then I understood their end.” We cannot be at peace in this world until we worship God and, in that relationship, understand both now and eternity. All peoples have found the success of evil people a problem. The ancient Greeks said, “The prosperity of the wicked is a reproach to the gods.”
It is only in the worship and understanding of God that we can make sense of the fact that our lives, as a result of that faithfulness, can at times be difficult.
“Lord, in worshiping You, help me find meaning for both time and eternity. AMEN.”