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What the Bible says about Grumbling against God
(From Forerunner Commentary)

Numbers 11:1-6

When we start complaining about our plight, it is usually because our focus has shifted off the Lord, who is leading us, and onto our problems, the details of life. It usually involves something we think we ought to have but do not, so we feel as if He has given us the short end of the stick.

For instance, we think we would be happy or satisfied if we only had more money, a bigger home, a better job, better health, or some other advantage. So, we focus on these details and become ungrateful, dissatisfied, and bored with spiritual things or God's purposes. God tells us in Deuteronomy 8:3-5 that He fed Israel with the manna to discipline and train them so that they might understand an important truth, but their focus and desire were only on what they were missing and thought they needed. So they complained.

Manna was a perfect food and precisely what Israel needed at that time. It was healthy and nutritious, and it was not bland since it could be cooked in many ways. It also provided a perfect spiritual picture, representing Jesus Christ, the true Bread from heaven (John 6:32-35), the only One who can give abundant life. But because the people were focused elsewhere and thought happiness came from things like cucumbers and garlic, they considered it boring, becoming ungrateful for this miraculous food from God.

Do we get bored with the spiritual food we receive? Think about it. Complaining is generally the first sign that we are concentrating on our problems or the details of life rather than on Jesus Christ and His Kingdom.

Clyde Finklea
Consequences of a Wrong Focus (Part One)

Numbers 14:1-4

With their eyes on the problem instead of God, the people become angry with God. They display their contempt for what He is doing by grumbling against Him, His purposes for them, and the leadership that He had given them, Moses and Aaron. When we concentrate on the problem and fail to refocus on God and His Kingdom, we soon develop contempt for those associated with our trials.

Contempt regularly manifests itself in bad feelings and wrong attitudes against the source of the problem and against God and the purposes He seeks to accomplish through the trial. Our contempt may come in the form of envy, jealousy, anger, bitterness, resentment, or depression. However it manifests itself, we begin to view the problem negatively rather than as an opportunity to see God at work in our lives. We may even feel contempt for God's methods. We doubt His wisdom, purpose, and goodness. We may say, "How could God do this to me? He must not really love me." Or, as the Israelites allege, "He simply brought us out here to kill us."

If unchecked, this attitude continues to spiral downward in some form of self-preservation via our own solutions. We will come up with some contrivance to solve the problem our way. Notice the Israelites' solution in Numbers 14:3-4: "'Would it not be better for us to return to Egypt?' So they said to one another, 'Let us select a leader and return to Egypt.'" Their contempt for their situation causes them to take another step away from God, which is seeking a carnal solution in rebellion against His purposes. They will find their own way out of their mess.

Human beings constantly seek ways both to defend themselves and to escape their problems using their own human devices and cover-ups. They may run away to avoid the problem or seek to change their circumstances somehow. Within the church, people typically leave one church and join another. We are so clever at making excuses and rationalizing our situation in ways that seem so convincing and logical to us. The Israelites rationalized by saying, "Our wives and our little ones will suffer. Would they not fare better back in Egypt?"

A change of scenery is not the only "solution" we might take. We may also retaliate to get even or to protect our overly sensitive egos. Frequently, we will take to the road of criticism and run someone down, making ourselves look better by comparison at the other's expense.

When we resist God's leadership and seek to take matters into our own hands, we act just like the world. Rather than using the problem as a tool to "grow in the grace and knowledge of . . . Jesus Christ" (II Peter 3:18), we conform to the world's approach to life. When faced with a problem, a trial, a burden, or something just plain difficult, it tests our faith and distracts us from a Godward focus. We are then faced with a choice: Where will we place our focus and trust? With God or with this world?

Clyde Finklea
Consequences of a Wrong Focus (Part Two)


 




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