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Grumbling
From very early on I've heard questions about Jesus'
comment
concerning Judas Iscariot: "Did I Myself not choose you,
the twelve,
and yet one of you is a devil?" (John 6:70).
What did Jesus mean? Was Judas genetically a devil and not
a man?
(Jesus didn't say Judas had a devil; He said he was a
devil).
Can a devil actually live among people as a human?
While I am no scholar in ancient Greek, I think truth is
better served
reading the literal translation of this verse. The word
translated as
"devil," diabolos, is the same word translated elsewhere
in the New
Testament as "slanderer" or "malicious gossip"
(see 1 Tim. 3:11; 2 Tim. 3:3).
When Jesus says that Judas is a devil, He is saying one of
you is
a "false accuser," a "slanderer," a "malicious gossip."
Judas could not keep his negative perspective to himself.
Remember, just before Judas delivered Jesus to the
Pharisees,
he was offended that Jesus allowed a expensive ointment to
be
poured upon His hair.
Judas indignantly complained: "Why was this perfume not
sold for
three hundred denarii, and given to poor people?" (John
12:5).
His words spread strife among the other apostles as well
(Matt. 26:8).
Judas said, in effect, Who permitted this thoughtless
luxury?
Well, it was Jesus. The woman had anointed Him for His
burial.
Yet, to Judas this was an extravagance that Jesus
shouldn't have
taken. In the angry mind of Judas Iscariot, here was
justification
to go to the chief priests.
He had grounds to break ranks with Christ (Matt.
26:14-15).
God Has a Problem With Grumblers
Betrayal is never a sudden thing; rather, it is an
accumulative
response to the unresolved anger and disappointment one
feels
toward another.
The offenses we do not transfer to God in surrendered
prayer
inevitably decay and become a venom we transfer to others
through
gossip. In the process, we embrace slander, but we feel
justified.
We become malicious gossips, but in our minds we're only
communicating a "truth," a character flaw, that we
self-righteously
"discerned."
To understand Judas' betrayal of Christ, we must unearth
its source:
Judas Iscariot was a grumbler.
When we lose sight of the many things for which we should
be
thankful, we become murmurers and complainers, increasingly
darkened by a thought-life engendered by hell.
Beware when your anger toward another Christian has led
you to
gossip about him or her, especially if you are embittered
and are
now sowing criticisms about him to others. Yes, beware:
you are
no longer being conformed to Christ, but are actually
becoming
more like Judas than Jesus.
Grumblers Everywhere
Of course, this grumbling attitude was not isolated to
Judas' betrayal
of Jesus. Many would-be disciples and Jewish leaders were
also
infected with murmuring. Consider: there were miracles
everywhere
and Christ had just fed the 5000 when a very large crowd
of His
disciples began to find fault.
Yet, even though Jesus warned, "Do not grumble among
yourselves"
(John 6:43), still the crowd persisted.
Remember, these were Christ's disciples, and they were not
grumbling at a sinner, but the only sinless man who ever
lived!
"But Jesus, conscious that His disciples grumbled at
this," asked,
"Does this cause you to stumble?" (John 6:61).
And then, the grumbling spirit continued until "many of
His disciples
withdrew, and were not walking with Him anymore" (John
6:66).
Incredibly, Jesus Himself suffered a type of "church
split."
Grumbling caused people to stop seeing and appreciating
miracles.
It caused disciples to be offended by Jesus' teachings and
stop
walking with Him.
As it was then, so it is today. Grumbling will ultimately
cause you
to stop walking with Jesus. It is a killer. You see, not
only were
the Pharisees and Judas Iscariot critical of Jesus, even
His closest
apostles grumbled at times. Heaven itself was manifest in
their
midst, yet all they saw was what they perceived was wrong.
That's what a grumbling attitude can do.
This poison of ingratitude is prevalent in the church
today.
Paul warned that "in the last days . . . men will be
lovers of self,
lovers of money, boastful, arrogant, revilers, disobedient
to parents,
ungrateful, unholy, unloving, irreconcilable, malicious
gossips"
(2 Tim. 3:1-9).
You get the point: "men will be . . . malicious gossips"
or devils.
They will be given to destroying one another with their
words.
The Thankful Heart
Personally, I've declared war on grumbling.
An unthankful heart is an enemy to God's will.
Can you join me in this?
Can you crucify a murmuring spirit?
We have received too much from God to allow ourselves
opportunities for ingratitude and unbelief!
We have received too many gifts and privileges to allow
grumbling to disqualify us from our destiny.
The thankful heart sees the best part of every situation.
It sees problems and weaknesses as opportunities to grow.
My prayer is for each of us to possess the abundant life
that Jesus
came to give us. I want to drive that little, ugly,
grumbling demon
away from our hearts and replace it with a living
awareness of the
goodness of God!
Paul warned,"Nor let us . . . grumble, as [Israel] did,
and were
destroyed by the destroyer" (1 Cor. 10:9-10).
The "destroyer" (called Abaddon in the Hebrew and Apollyon
in
the Greek) is actually the prince over the bottomless pit
of hell
(see Rev. 9).
Listen well: the moment we open ourselves to grumbling, we
simultaneously open up to destruction.
Thus, Paul tells us to fix our minds on the things above
(Col. 3:1).
Elsewhere he says, "Whatever is true, whatever is
honorable . . .
is right, whatever is pure . . . lovely . . . of good
repute, if there is any
excellence and if anything worthy of praise, let your mind
dwell on
these things" (Phil. 4:8).
Remember, Paul was writing to people in the ancient Roman
world.
It was full of evil, full of injustice, full of reasons to
grumble and be
upset; but instead, God calls His people to a higher
realm, where
we dwell on the things that are above.
You say, "Who then will point out all the things that are
wrong
with life?" Oh, there are plenty of volunteers for that
task.
Better to ask, "How can I attain the blessed life Jesus
came to
give me?"
You say, "But the world is wicked.
We need to decry and defeat evil." Yes, and I totally
agree.
I often decry evil myself. But I must live and offer a
better life
if I am going to defeat evil.
God doesn't want His people to be grumbling about the
difficult
conditions of existence. He wants us to be mercy-motivated,
redemption-orientated, prayer-empowered ambassadors of
Heaven.
If we are merely complaining about what's wrong with the
people
around us, we should beware: we may actually be more like
followers of Judas rather than Jesus.
Blessings
Tom@glorynow.com
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