Is there anything worse than having to get out of bed and go back downstairs for something after you’re settled in for the night?
Probably. But in the moment, I couldn’t name one thing. I
forgot the monitor, so we can hear Jo wake up. Emily wanted me to bring up a
cup of water for her. The cat starts wailing, because—I don’t know, a door is
shut (that he doesn’t want to walk through, but he doesn’t want it
closed, either)—and it’s time for him to go stay in the guest room. I didn’t
make sure the house was locked before I came up. Whatever the reason, it is invalid
and intolerable, because I’m already in bed. It is the worst thing imaginable.
And I’m going to tell the world about it.
A lot of y’all may
not have witnessed this, but in the right setting, I am an expert complainer. I don’t
appreciate things upsetting my plans, stealing my precious free time, or requiring
me to move when I’m not planning to move, and I know how to express it. After
all, most of my job is finding words. I have some experience expressing myself.
I also have some experience with the Bible, and, while I was
reflecting recently on the latest grounds for griping, I remembered something
in said Bible about all of this. It’s from Philippians 2:
Do everything without grumbling or arguing, so
that you may become blameless and pure, “children of God without
fault in a warped and crooked generation.” Then you will shine among them
like stars in the sky… (2:14-15)
“Do everything without grumbling or arguing.” That line
itself is liable to set a grumbler grumbling. At best, by the grace of God, you’ll
roll your eyes and say, “Fine!”
But as much as I need to hear those words sometimes, it’s
the lines after them that really got me thinking: Do everything without
complaining or bickering, so that you may become children of God without fault
in a warped, crooked generation. Then, Paul adds, you’ll shine like stars
before the watching world.
In this passage, Paul points to our contentment and our ability
to be interrupted and inconvenienced without grumbling as what sets Christians
apart from the world around us. If you want to be different, a child
of God in a warped generation, you can start by putting a lid on those gripes.
But if you complain every time you have to get out of bed and go downstairs,
congratulations: you’re acting just like any self-avowed heathen might. You’re
not shining with any light from Christ in the world. It’s when you bite your
tongue, when you stop demanding your own ease and fishing for sympathy, that you
shine.
(Paul also points to arguing as a mark that
distinguishes someone as a child of God. I don’t have time to get into that
now, but how’s that going for you? How’s that going for any of
us?)
The next time your schedule, your expectations, or your
comfort get disrupted, and you suck in some air for carrying your gripes out
into the world, I hope you remember: you have two options in that moment. You
can tell the people around you things they don’t want to hear anyways, or you
can shine a light into the dark of discontent and anger that we live in every
day.
I hope you—I hope I—will choose the light.
Listen to this devotional right here:
3 comments:
I love you man, not a complaint but a moment to remember you and rejoice that I have memories of you. Peace
Needed this today! Thank you!
Excellent ‼️thank you 🙏
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