Serving God shouldn’t be akin to a full contact sport, and being in ministry should not have the intrigue, corruption, or betrayal of politics. Granted, confronting the devil can get you some scars and bruises, but there’s a difference between fighting the devil and fighting your own kind.
Being a pastor, you shouldn’t have to wake up every morning
wondering who’s about to stab you in the back or who’s planning on splitting
the church and taking half the congregation. Sometimes you guess right,
sometimes you’re blindsided, and the closer you are to the individual, the
greater the pain and disillusionment.
We could keep discussing this, but suffice it to say some
things shouldn’t be but are, so we must contend with the reality rather than
the ideal. Even though the attempt is always made to explain away the
viciousness and vindictiveness of a church split, or a ministry torn apart by
opposing parties, the underlying reason is always that someone wanted to be
elevated to a station they were never called to by God.
Although they’d never come out and say it, they sow division
because they want to be the top dog; they want the spot and not just a spot.
They want to be the leader and not a follower, and when all the fancy
self-serving words are peeled away, wanting something you have no claim to is
at the root of it all.
When you want to take from another something you had no hand
in building, it wasn’t God telling you to do it, no matter how much you insist
upon it. God would have had you build it yourself if it was meant for you to
guide, but if another put in the effort to start an outreach, a ministry, or a
church, and they’re being diligent in their calling, He won’t send you to tell
them to move along. If they are needed elsewhere, God will tell them.
This is why I don’t pay much attention to individuals who
appear out of nowhere and insist the Lord spoke to them that I should hand over
the reins of the ministry. Funny how the Lord did not confirm it with me, and it’s
never a third party I’m supposed to hand everything over to. It’s always
directly to them. Convenient, to be sure.
A squatter will never care for a home the way the homeowner
does. A squatter has no sweat equity, nothing invested, and no skin in the game
as far as they are personally concerned. If there’s anything to take, they’ll
take it, including busting through the walls to get at the brass pipes so they
can sell them for scrap. As soon as they’re done picking one place clean, they
move on to the next, always searching for that next opportunity they can
exploit.
As Solomon once mused, there is nothing new under the sun,
and man’s constant desire for more is one of those defects that has existed
since time immemorial.
Korah had a pretty sweet gig going. He was a Levite, set
apart to do the work of the Tabernacle of the Lord and stand before the
congregation and serve them. It wasn’t anything to scoff at, and the tribe of
Levi was well respected among the people.
Korah, however, wanted more, and he looked upon the calling
of Moses with jealousy and covetousness. Since he couldn’t make a go of it
alone, he incited others, some two hundred and fifty men in all, and came to
Moses and Aaron.
Numbers 16:1-3, “Now Korah the son of Izhar, the son of
Kohath, the son of Levi, with Dathan and Abiram the sons of Eliab, and On the
son of Peleth, sons of Reuben, took men; and they rose up before Moses with
some of the children of Israel, two hundred and fifty leaders of the
congregation, representatives of the congregation, men of renown. They gathered
together against Moses and Aaron, and said to them, “You take too much upon
yourselves, for all the congregation is holy, every one of them, and the Lord
is among them. Why then do you exalt yourselves above the assembly of the
Lord?”
When you parse out the words spoken by Korah and his minions,
you see the blueprint for attacking someone in authority while attempting to
get the people on your side. First, he seemed magnanimous, worried about Moses
and Aaron, fearful that they were taking too much upon themselves, but then pivoted
to bringing false praise on the people.
That a good chunk of them would later worship a golden calf
is a testament to my claim, but at the moment, it didn’t matter whether or not
he was lying as long as the people felt good about themselves and their achievements.
As long as you are getting praised, does it matter if the praise is honest,
true, and verifiable? If you’re honest, it does, but usually, flattery works,
and those doing the flattering rise a rung or two in your esteem.
You know it’s not true, the guy blowing smoke knows it’s not
true, but it makes you look good, it strokes your ego, and it impresses your
neighbors. You say nothing because it would endanger your newfound station, so
you’re happy to turn a blind eye.
A little girl tried the same play on Paul, but it didn’t work
quite so well as Korah’s rhetoric worked on the people of Israel. His
intentions were not sincere; he wasn’t interested in sparing Moses and Aaron’s
hardship; he wanted their positions, and for that to occur, they had to be
undermined and removed.
Moses knew he had been called of God; there was no shadow of
doubt in him regarding this, so he didn’t shy away, he didn’t cower or retreat,
but pushed back on Korah’s claims, as he ought. That’s the beauty of being
where God told you to be and doing what God told you to do. When the vultures
come, you won’t hesitate to stand your ground.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
1 comment:
Michael, thank you my brother for this.
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