Most of us know what it's like to come to God when things fall apart. We reach out, we ask, we wait. And that's not wrong — bringing our pain and need to God honestly is good and right.
But there's a harder question: when things are okay, do we show up at all? When the crisis passes and the prayer gets answered — do we go quiet?
Praise isn't a feeling that arrives when life is good. It's a practice that reshapes us when life is hard. The last six psalms in the book weren't placed there by accident. They're not a tidy bow on top — they're a map for what it looks like to intentionally fix your eyes on something bigger than your circumstances.




