It's Not In Vain - General Preaching
The core conflict of the Christian life often mirrors the Psalmist’s struggle: "I tried to live right, but the outcome was wrong." We frequently fall into the trap of desiring a good outcome more than we desire to simply do what is right.
We have all experienced times when telling the truth or doing the right thing resulted in trouble. When a good deed yields a bad result, the human temptation is to think, "If doing right brings a bad outcome, then I don't want to do right." The Psalmist laments, "I have cleansed my hands in vain," because he looks at the world and sees the wicked prospering while the righteous suffer. His ultimate mistake was looking at the world instead of looking to God.
We must do what is right simply because it is right, leaving the final outcomes entirely to God. True righteousness is measured by our obedience, not by our immediate results.
When we look at scripture, doing the right thing rarely resulted in immediate comfort:
Joseph: He chose holiness in Potiphar’s house, and his reward was being falsely accused and thrown into prison. He could have thought, "I might as well have committed adultery," but he remained faithful.
Daniel: He continued to pray even after the decree was signed, choosing the lion's den over compromise because his heart was devoted to God.
The times we doubt God’s character—His sovereignty and His love—are almost always during our trials. But we must remember that God's plans, thoughts, and ways are infinitely higher than ours. He sees everything we do, and while our rewards are rarely immediate, He has promised to reward obedience.
The sermon shifts from the Psalmist's frustration to his ultimate testimony of God's goodness. When we shift our gaze from the worldly present to God's eternal timeline, everything changes.
There is coming a day when the first will be last, and the last will be first.
The worldly prosperity we envy today will one day be entirely destroyed.
As believers, our ultimate outcome is not found in earthly wealth or comfort; our reward is Heaven and eternal fellowship with God.
Be encouraged to keep doing what is right, even when it is difficult, thankless, or costly. God sees, God knows, and it is never in vain.