"Psalm 73. Struggling with envy and injustice. Perspective changes everything in God's presence. Psalm 73 gives us a deeply honest look into the internal conflict of someone trying to reconcile faith with reality. The psalmist begins with a truth he knows—“Surely God is good to Israel”—but quickly admits that his own experience seems to contradict it. He sees the wicked prospering: becoming successful, carefree, and even arrogant, yet they seem untouched by consequences. Meanwhile, the righteous often face hardship, discipline, and struggle. This tension creates a crisis in our faith.
But the psalmist doesn’t hide his envy—he confesses it. He admits that he almost slipped, almost abandoned his trust in God because life didn’t seem fair. This is what makes this and other psalms so relatable: it gives language to thoughts to many of us who are afraid to say out loud.
Turning Point:
Everything shifts in verse 17: “until I entered the sanctuary of God.”
The circumstances haven’t changed—but his perspective has. In God’s presence, he begins to see beyond the surface. He realizes that the prosperity of the wicked is temporary and ultimately unstable. What once looked like success is revealed as fragile and fleeting.
More importantly, he recognizes what he does have: his nearness of God.
“Whom have I in heaven but you?” becomes the anchor of his soul. The comparison that once fueled envy is replaced with communion that produces contentment"