PSALM 73*
The Trial of the Just
How good God is to the upright,
to those who are pure of heart!
I
my steps had nearly slipped,
when I saw the prosperity of the wicked.a
their bodies are healthy and sleek.
they are not afflicted like others.
violence clothes them as a robe.
evil thoughts flood their hearts.b
from on high they utter threats.c
their tongues roam the earth.
and drink deeply of their words.
“Does the Most High have any knowledge?”d
always carefree, increasing their wealth.
II
washed my hands in innocence?e
chastised every morning.
I would have betrayed this generation of your children.
it was too difficult for me,
and came to understand their end.*
III
you hurl them down to ruin.
utterly undone by disaster!
dismissed like shadows when you arise.f
IV
and my soul deeply wounded,
I was like a brute beast in your presence.
you take hold of my right hand.g
and at the end receive me with honor.*
None beside you delights me on earth.
God is the rock of my heart, my portion forever.
you destroy those unfaithful to you.
to make the Lord GOD my refuge.
I shall declare all your works
in the gates of daughter Zion.*
* [Psalm 73] The opening verse of this probing poem (cf. Ps 37; 49) is actually the psalmist’s hard-won conclusion from personal experience: God is just and good! The psalmist describes near loss of faith (Ps 73:2–3), occasioned by observing the wicked who blasphemed God with seeming impunity (Ps 73:4–12). Feeling abandoned despite personal righteousness, the psalmist could not bear the injustice until an experience of God’s nearness in the Temple made clear how deluded the wicked were. Their sudden destruction shows their impermanence (Ps 73:13–20). The just can thus be confident, for, as the psalmist now knows, their security is from God (Ps 73:1, 23–28).
* [73:9] They set their mouths against the heavens: in an image probably derived from mythic stories of half-divine giants, the monstrous speech of the wicked is likened to enormous jaws gaping wide, devouring everything in sight.
* [73:10] The Hebrew is obscure.
* [73:17] And came to understand their end: the psalmist receives a double revelation in the Temple: 1) the end of the wicked comes unexpectedly (Ps 73:18–20); 2) God is with me.
* [73:24] And at the end receive me with honor: a perhaps deliberately enigmatic verse. It is understood by some commentators as reception into heavenly glory, hence the traditional translation, “receive me into glory.” The Hebrew verb can indeed refer to mysterious divine elevation of a righteous person into God’s domain: Enoch in Gn 5:24; Elijah in 2 Kgs 2:11–12; the righteous psalmist in Ps 49:16. Personal resurrection in the Old Testament, however, is clearly attested only in the second century B.C. The verse is perhaps best left unspecified as a reference to God’s nearness and protection.
* [73:28] In the gates of daughter Zion: this reading follows the tradition of the Septuagint and Vulgate.
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