Betrayals. Disappointments. Constant conflict. Second-guessing everything you say. Griping.
This week a pastor texted to say while he was out of town the deacons met to revise the bylaws and make the preacher answerable to them. They conspired not to tell the pastor about this until he returned home. But someone thought he ought to know, called him, and now it’s all hit the fan. The chairman of deacons is saying if the pastor pushes his opposition to this it will split the church and will be his fault.
You feel like banging your head against the wall. How crazy is this!
It wears preachers down.
Most church members have no clue that the constant murmuring (the KJV’s favorite word for it) among the flock is offensive to the Heavenly Father, upsetting to the good people in the congregation, and burdensome to the minister.
Moses is a great case study for us. For forty years–think of it!–he gave faithful leadership to the people of God who, far from appreciating him, were relentless in their eroding, grinding, burdening undermining, questioning, and outright opposition. Scripture gives a reason for this: Throughout the flock was a group of strangers, aliens to the faith.
These people were the root of the problem.
Scripture says when they left Egypt’s slavery, a mixed multitude went up with them (Exodus 12:38). Some translations call them “rabble.” Since the Hebrews were not the only slaves of Pharaoh, when God threw off the shackles it must have been like a massive jailbreak. All who wanted to leave Egypt joined the Exodus. And since this Moses fellow seemed to have a glorious destination in mind, with no other place to go, the “mixed multitude” decided to accompany the Hebrews.
This bunch became the source of a thousand headaches for Moses.