Psalm 73: Why Do Good People Have It So Bad?

15 01 2012

An edited journal excerpt from May 1991

“Whom have I in heaven but you?
And earth has nothing I desire besides you.
My flesh and my heart may fail,
but God is the strength of my heart
and my portion forever

(Psalm 73:25-26).”

I find a lot of heart echoes in this psalm as I read it. It captures a lot of what has been happening in me.

Verse 2-12 describes a deep jealousy that Asaph was experiencing over the apparent prosperity of the without-God people around him. It looks to him like many of them have it easier and are doing better than the with-God people.

In verse 13-16, Asaph expresses his frustration, feeling like he has been wasting his time being faithful to God in his way of life. Trying to living in harmony with God’s will has left him where his life feels plagued. He feels punished for doing right. Why stay in relationship with God if this is the outcome? Thankfully, he realizes that he would betray his with-God community if he took action on these frustrated feelings. (vs. 15).

Asaph was overwhelmed by the hardness of his with-God life in the face of the apparent trouble-free ease of those who sniffed their nose at God. How will he gain some perspective? Where will he find wisdom? How will he make his way through such a place? When life doesn’t seem fair, when God’s good people suffer and wicked people seem to succeed, the only place to find perspective is in the presence of God (17). In God’s presence, I see with eternal eyes. I see those living in disregard of God in His presence as well, but not standing in His favor.

Like Asaph, I will feel grieved at heart and embittered in spirit (21) in the face of such temporary unfairness. I may respond to such hardship like a brute beast, ignorant and senseless (22).

I’m invited to remember the presence of God. I’m show that I am always with God and God is always with me. I am faithfully held on to in God’s gracious favor (23) and guided by perfect and wise direction (24a). My end, unlike the desperate end of the without-God one, is in the presence of God’s glory (24b).

Rather than letting my grief embitter me as I seek to remain in God in the hard places, I can recognize the lasting reality that only God can truly, deeply satisfy me to the depths of my being (25). The ways the world around me tries to satisfy the soul aren’t enough for me. This is a reality I must face and a choice I must make. My heart and my body may be weak, but God is my strength in all of this (26a). He is my portion—all that I need (26b). What is truly best for me is the simple nearness of God. (28). God is my refuge.

When I find myself in dry places, I often feel tempted to envy the what I see as a life of ease for others around me. God, help me remember that the dryness is helping me remember that nothing in creation is big enough to satisfy my soul. Being near You is my only source of true satisfaction. 

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Approaching a Throne of Grace

7 02 2011

Recently, I was reading Susan Phillip’s book, Candlelight. She talks about common Christian theodicies. A theodicy is basically an explanation of God’s justice in the face of suffering and evil.

A popular, personal theodicy goes like this: “I’ve sinned and God is punishing me.” Whereas it is true that God disciplines His beloved sons and daughters, providing redemptive pain to protect from the future pain of sinful consequence, it doesn’t help to have a vision of God as primarily punitive. There is a very young part of me that continues to secretly believe in such a God.

I have this hidden fear or anxiety that God is displeased with me to a degree that I cannot recover from. At a conscious adult level, of course I know better. I can focus on the fact that there will always be some sin to confess, some failure to acknowledge, some shortcoming to admit. I am bent from living in a bent world. But how do I bring this broken me into the presence of the Holy? How do I find mercy and grace in this time of need? This question makes me think of a good word from Hebrews:

“Let us then approach the throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need. (4:16)”

I remind myself that the throne I approach, the place of God’s kingdom reign, is a throne of grace. I can come before such a throne with confidence instead of fear. I can come deeply trusting that here I will always find grace and receive mercy that helps. The One Who sits on a throne of grace knows my need and is able and willing to meet me there. He does not grow weary, but has limitless resources of mercy and grace that will always be greater than my greatest need. What grace and mercy do you feel need of this day?

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Looking Back: My Problem of Evil

22 07 2009

Here’s a past post on the tendency to ask questions about the problem of evil from a philosophical and theoretical perspective, rather than from a relational and even personal perspective:

LINK: “My Problem of Evil








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