Encouragement from St. John Chrysostom
The quote below is of St. John Chrysostom on Job 21.
Perhaps you wonder, ‘Why are the wicked so joyous? Why do they live in luxury? Why don’t they have to strive like I do?’ The reason is that they who have not signed up to strive for the crown are not required to undergo the labors of the contest. Those who haven’t gone down to the track [of the arena] don’t smear themselves with oil, not get covered in dust. Trouble comes only to those on their way to glory. The perfumed spectators prefer to watch, not to join in the struggle, nor to endure the sun, the heat, the dust, the rain. So those who have devoted themselves to pleasures, luxury, robbery, gain or honor are spectators rather than combatants. They have the profit or labor but not the fruits of virtue. They love their ease. By cunning and wickedness they heap up riches. But they will pay the penalty of their iniquity, though it be late in coming. Their rest will be in hell, yours in paradise. Thus, Job said beautifully that they watch in the tomb (see Job 21:32), for they cannot have the calm of quite rest that he enjoys who shall rise again.