Fighting Temptation: Grumbling against God
Numbers
16:23–40
23The
Lord spoke to Moses: 24“Tell
the assembly, ‘Move away from the dwelling of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram!’” 25So
Moses got up and went to Dathan and Abiram. The elders of Israel followed him. 26He
told the assembly, “Move back from the tents of these wicked men. Do not touch
anything that belongs to them, or you will be swept away because of all their
sins!” 27So from every side, they moved away from the dwelling of
Korah, Dathan, and Abiram. Dathan and Abiram came out and stood at the entrance
to their tents with their wives, children, and little ones.
28Moses said, “This is how you will
know that the Lord has sent me to
do all these things and that all this was not just my idea. 29If
these men die a death like everyone else and if they suffer the same fate that
everyone does, then the Lord has
not sent me. 30But if the Lord
creates something unheard of and the ground opens its mouth and swallows them
up with everything that belongs to them, and they go down alive into the grave,
you will know that these men have treated the Lord
with contempt.”
31As soon as he finished speaking all
these words, the ground beneath them split open. 32The earth opened
its mouth and swallowed up everyone who was with Korah along with their
households and all their possessions. 33So they and everything that
belonged to them went down alive into the grave. The earth closed up over them,
and they disappeared from the midst of the assembly. 34Hearing their
screams, all the Israelites who were around them fled, because they said, “The
earth will swallow us up too!” 35Fire went out from the Lord and consumed the two hundred fifty
men who offered the incense.
36The Lord
spoke to Moses: 37“Tell Eleazar the son of Aaron the priest to
remove the censers from the burning debris and scatter the fire far away, for
the censers are holy. 38Make the censers belonging to those who
sinned at the cost of their own lives into hammered sheets for plating the
altar, because they presented them before the Lord,
and the censers are holy. They will serve as a sign to the Israelites.”
39Eleazar the priest
took the bronze censers, which had been presented by those who had been burned
up by fire. They hammered them into plating for the altar 40as a
reminder to the Israelites that no unauthorized person, who is not from the
descendants of Aaron, should come near to burn incense before the Lord and become like Korah and his
followers. Eleazar the priest did just as the Lord
said to him through Moses.
This week finally starts
soccer practice for our WLS girls. I’ve been coaching girls’ soccer for a long
time. I know how these fifth through eighth grade girls behave … and misbehave.
Eye rolls and deep sighs are
constant temptations for all pre-teen and teenage girls.
For warm-ups in our school gym,
I’ll have them do monster laps, which are running up the steps, across the
mezzanine, down the steps and around the gym floor. Already at our first
practice, I will warn the girls. If I see them roll their eyes, they get
another monster lap. If I hear them sigh, they get another monster lap. If I
even think I saw them roll their eyes or think I heard them sigh, they get
another monster lap. And if they disagree with what I think I saw or heard,
they get two more monster laps.
I am the coach. I will not put
up with eye rolls, deep sighs or disagreement. It is disrespectful of the
coach. It is grumbling against a leader. The result is more monster laps.
God is God. He does not put up
with jealousy, disagreement or rebellion. It is treating the Lord with
contempt. It is grumbling against God and his appointed leaders. The result for
Korah and his followers was “something totally new” (Numbers 16:30).
The children of Israel are
still in their wilderness wandering. Korah is a Levite. The Levites are
assistants to the priests in the tabernacle, the tent used for worship. Korah
is jealous of Aaron, who is the high priest over Israel. Since Korah is a
relative of Moses and Aaron, he concludes that there is no reason why he should
not serve as the high priest. He recruits Dathan, Abiram and On to his
conspiracy. He also persuades 250 leaders of Israel to join them in opposing
Moses and Aaron (Numbers 16:1-2).
They allege that Moses and
Aaron had set themselves up as the leaders of the Israelites (Numbers 16:3). They blame Moses for their wandering:
They accuse Moses of deliberately exposing the people to a slow
death in the desert. They insist that Moses is a tyrant who made them do their
bidding while he is living a life of ease. They sneeringly imply that Moses has
not kept his promises about the Promised Land (Numbers 16:13-14).
Although this rebellion is
opening directed at Moses as their national leader and Aaron and their high
priest and mediator, this is really a clear rebellion against the Lord! Moses
challenges the rebels, “It is against the Lord that you and your followers have
banded together. Who is Aaron that you should grumble against him” (Numbers
16:11)?
Only the priests, the
descendants of Aaron, are to burn incense in the tabernacle. Korah and his
Levite followers, however, defy God’s ordinance. They bring censers to the
entrance of the tabernacle to challenge God to accept their incense offerings
over that of Aaron, the high priest (Numbers 16:16-18).
But it isn’t only Korah and
his followers who are gathered in rebellion. They have been able to stir up the
people, so they sided with the rebels against Moses, Aaron and the Lord.
The glory-cloud of the Lord
appears among the entire assembly. The Lord orders Moses and Aaron, “Separate
yourselves from this assembly so I can put an end to them at once” (Numbers
16:21). The whole nation is guilty of grumbling against God, so God is going to
end the whole nation’s insolence at once.
Moses and Aaron serve as mediators,
falling face down and crying out, “O God, … will you be angry with the entire
assembly when only one man sins” (Numbers 16:22). They plead this, even though
the whole nation was guilty of rebellion. Out of his grace, God relents and
does not bring judgment on the entire nation.
The Lord does bring judgment
on the grumblers, though!
The Lord commands Moses, “Tell
the assembly, ‘Move away from the dwelling of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram’”
(Numbers 16:24)! As a Levite, the tent of Korah is close to the entrance of the
tabernacle. The leaders of the rebellion stand defiantly at the entrance to
their tents, challenging God to punish their rebellion.
Moses tells the people, “If
these men die a death like everyone else and if they suffer the same fate that
everyone does, then the Lord has
not sent me. But if the Lord
creates something unheard of and the ground opens its mouth and swallows them
up with everything that belongs to them, and they go down alive into the grave,
you will know that these men have treated the Lord
with contempt.” (Numbers 16:28-30).
God certainly bring a new
judgment on those who had made themselves enemies against God! The ground
beneath the rebels split open. “The earth opened its mouth and swallowed up
everyone who was with Korah along with their households and all their
possessions. So they and everything that belonged to them went down alive into
the grave. The earth closed up over them, and they disappeared from the midst
of the assembly” (Numbers 16:32-33). They are literally wiped off the face of
the earth … by the earth.
The 250 leaders of Israel who
had joined in the rebellion, now join in their judgment. They are at the
entrance to the tabernacle when “fire went out from the Lord and consumed the two hundred fifty men who offered the
incense” (Numbers 16:25).
The very next day, the
Israelite community grumbles against Moses and Aaron, “You have killed the
Lord’s people” (Numbers 16:41)! So God sends a plague that kills 14,700 people.
He puts an end to their grumbling!
Grumbling. We all do it.
Students grumble when their teachers give them a social studies fair assignment
over spring break. Employees complain about the layout of the warehouse or the
inefficient assembly line. Teenagers mutter under their breath as they storm
out of the house. Spouses hold onto quiet resentment over hurt feelings.
We grumble about the weather.
Grumble about the long checkout lines. Grumble about the roads, traffic and
politicians.
We grumble about not having
young families in church. Then we grumble about crying kids in church. We
grumble about the worship music being too slow or too fast. We grumble about
the sermon being too short and the service being too long.
We sure do grumble a lot!
Like Korah and his followers,
we often immerse ourselves in our grumbling so that it easily becomes a habit
that stays with us through life – home, school, work, sports, travel, church,
etc. When we grumble and complain about our situation in life, we are showing
ingratitude for all the Lord does and gives to us. St. Paul gives the
Corinthian Christians a stern warning that also applies directly to us: “Do not
grumble, as some of them grumbled, and were destroyed by the destroyer. All
these things that were happening to them had meaning as examples, and they were
written down to warn us, to whom the end of the ages has come” (1 Corinthians
10:10-11).
We learn from the account of Korah and his rebellious
followers that God is patient. But, we should never mistake his patience with
acceptance. He is merely allowing us time to repent. We dare never consider God
as some white-haired grandfather in the sky who will always give, but never
scold; who will always comfort, but never correct; who will always be patient
and loving and accepting. No, he is a Father who disciplines those he loves
(Hebrews 12:6).
If we think that grumbling against our pastor, child’s
teacher, President of the United States or whomever isn’t that big of a deal,
then think again. If we think we don’t have a problem with grumbling … that is
proof we do. When we stop being kind and considerate, humble and gentle, we
stop being children of God. When we don’t see the need for confession and
repentance, then we are putting ourselves in danger of being punished like
Israel of old. St. Paul again warns the Corinthians and us: “So if you think
you are standing firm, be careful that you don’t fall” (1 Corinthians 10:12)!
We are shocked when we see God dealing so harshly with
sin! The earth swallowing people whole! Fire consuming people leaving only
ashes! A plague wiping out thousands of people!
We should never ask, “Why does God deal so harshly
with sin?” Instead, we should thank God that he has not dealt with us harshly,
as our sins deserve. God should send a plague for every dissatisfaction. God
should send fire from heaven to consume for every complaint. God should have
the earth swallow whole for every resentment.
But God doesn’t do that. And
why not? Because He did all that to Jesus.
As Moses and Aaron pleaded for
the sinful Israelites and served as their mediators, so Jesus is our mediator
between a righteous God and we wretched sinners. Jesus intervened to save us. Jesus
was stricken, smitten and afflicted so we would not be. The crown of thorns on his
head, purges the sinful thoughts from our minds. The nails in his hands and
feet sanctify our hands and feet for service to him. The cup of God’s wrath was
poured out on him so God’s grace could be poured out on us. The stripes across his
back removed the punishment we deserved. The blood that poured from his pierced
side washes away our continual, pet sins.
Jesus is the refuge of the
lost. He is the Lamb of God who was wounded for sinners. He is the sacrifice
who cancels our guilt. Our sins pierced him, but the deepest stroke that
pierced him was the stroke that God’s justice gave. In his love, God punished his
Son so that he would not have to punish us.
We may face discipline,
hardship and heartache because of our grumbling thoughts, our complaining words
and our ungrateful actions. Yet, God still gives grace. God gave grace to Korah
and his followers to give them until the next day to repent. Instead, Korah
used that time to gain more rebels. Dathan and Abiram stood stubbornly in front
of their tents expecting nothing to happen to them. Grace was shown in Moses
and Aaron pleading for the people. Grace was God not punishing the whole
assembly for they, too, had grumbled and complained against God and his chosen
leaders.
Grace is shown to us every day
we remain alive. Grace is God holding off his anger by pouring out that anger
on his Son. Grace is God allowing us time to repent and return to him.
Don’t abuse that grace. Use it
to fight the temptation to grumble.
I tell the girls I’m coaching
to fight their teen and pre-teen temptations. If they think they might roll
their eyes, close their eyes. If they feel like they might sigh, then hold
their breath. Fight it. Don’t go through with it.
Before you utter another
grumbling word or complaining thought, consider God’s grace. Shut your eyes to
what makes you unhappy. Open your eyes to see God’s grace on the cross. Shut
your mouth to your unhappiness. Open your mouth to praise God for his grace
given to you through his Son. Amen.
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