Showing posts with label Grumbling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grumbling. Show all posts

August 02, 2008

Grumbling (continued)

To grumble is to murmur or begrudge something. To dispute is a debate, argue or reason through, i.e. leaning on how you understand things.


Paul says, “don’t”. The next verse gives his rationale. That you may prove yourself to be…


The importance of the word ‘prove’ is that it isn’t that you do it to prove to people you are a Christian i.e. “a witness” but rather, this is an assayer’s term meaning to become. It is that the circumstance, that you would normally grumble about, is there to cause you to become blameless and innocent…


Paul used this term because he was aware of the assayers work and the result of his efforts. An assayer would take soil and put it in a crucible. Intense heat would be applied. Impurities would rise to the top and be be skimmed off then it would be allowed to cool down. The process would begin again, seven times, until the dross (impurities) had been eliminated and a perfect bar of silver remains. (Psalm 12:6; 66:10)


God's desire is that you become blameless and innocent. He does this through trials.


This verse, re-written, might sound like this: Do all things without grumbling or reasoning through the circumstances so that its result will be that you will become blameless and innocent…


Ponder the act of grumbling and how it affects your relationship with others and with God.

July 27, 2008

The Hallmark of the Believer: Grumbling

Do all things without grumbling or disputing;

that you may prove yourselves to be blameless and innocent, children of God above reproach in the midst of a crooked and perverse generation, among whom you appear as lights in the world… Philippians 2:14-15

Sadly, next to gossip, grumbling is the most common characteristic of the believer.

As the Rebellion of Korah, grumbling describes one's belief in God. When we grumble, we are saying, “I don’t believe God knows what he is doing. I don’t believe God has his hand in this. I don’t believe all things work together for good”.

The rebellion of Korah was just that, they did not believe that God brought them out of the land of Egypt. They discounted the symbolism and miracles He performed through Moses. They did not trust in the Lord with all their heart but rather leaned on their own understanding. Pr. 3:5