Weary of Reproof

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Several months ago, one of my friends shared with me one of the best parenting lessons they had ever learned. The lesson was this – children need to be taught to mind the first time. This may seem obvious (and may be every parent’s dream) but the point was that there should be no “counting to three” or repeating the instructions until the child did what you asked. The child obeys the first time, or they are subject to discipline. The point wasn’t to be mean; the point was to teach the child that “delayed obedience is disobedience.” Additionally, if children think that they will be told multiple times to do something before obedience is expected, eventuality they will grow weary of hearing the instructions.  Because immediate obedience isn’t expected, they will have to be told the same thing time and time again and in their immaturity, they grow tired of the repetition until it stifles any attempt at obedience at all.

Unfortunately, this weariness isn’t limited to children. Adults as well often get tired of hearing the same instructions repeated to them. Whether it’s to exercise more or to eat better – after awhile their justifications and their ambivalence tunes out the well-intended advice. They no longer listen to it, or they get frustrated with the person they hear it from; not because the instructions are bad but because they have delayed in keeping them. That delay has built up a hardness in their heart so that the next time they hear the same thing, they glaze over it with an “I already know that” attitude, reinforcing their commitment to ignore the instruction given.

And this isn’t limited to advice on how to live a healthier life. The same thing happens in church. People will complain that they keep hearing the same thing from a pastor, and they are tired of it. Yet at least sometimes the reason that this has happened isn’t because what the pastor is saying isn’t biblical or because he is unnecessarily repetitious, it’s because the hearers have delayed putting the biblical command into action in their lives. They grow tired of hearing the same thing because they have yet to experience the blessings in obeying the directives of God. Their heart becomes hardened to the biblical instruction because they have made a decision to ignore it.

Proverbs 3:11-12 warns agains this.  Solomon writes to his son:

My son, do not despise the LORD’s discipline or be weary of his reproof,
for the LORD reproves him whom he loves,as a father the son in whom he delights. (ESV)

While it may be tempting to roll our eyes at biblical instructions, they are a product of His love. By giving them to us, God helps us know what it means to live a life that pleases Him. By holding us accountable to them, He further exhibits His affection. When we fail to see it this way, it is often because we aren’t doing what He’s commanded. Our disobedience prompts a weariness because instead of submitting to His authority, we are fighting against it.

Perhaps the next time we are tempted to sit in church and  think “I’ve heard that before,” we would be wise to ask ourselves whether we are doing what Scripture says. If we are, perhaps the instructions would cease to weary us, and instead we would find delight in doing what our Father says.

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First Words

Being at the receiving end of God’s discipline isn’t a fun place to be.

While there may be some comfort in knowing that “the Lord disciplines those He loves” there is also the realization that God will go to great lengths in order to prompt His children towards repentance and living a life that is pleasing to Him. He desires holiness. In His graciousness, He has provided His Spirit to believers in order to equip them towards such a high calling.  His desire is for us to live in right relationship with Him because that is what He has created us to do. When we live otherwise, He often uses the painful consequences of those decisions to bring us back towards a right relationship with Him.

However, while we may recognize that God can do good through it, most of us don’t like discipline. Most of us would rather forgo the painful consequences, and when we experience them, we often rail against the God who is using them for our good. Yet, this wasn’t Zechariah’s response (See Lk. 1:5-25; 57-66 for the complete report). When Zechariah was told he would have a son, he questioned the veracity of that statement, and he was disciplined for his distrust. The fact that God made him mute may have made it difficult for him to complain, yet he responded to this discipline in two very important ways. First – he obeyed. The angel of God had told him what he was to name his son, and he did so accordingly. Secondly, his very first words were ones that praised God. He could have opened his mouth and talked about how good it was to speak again, or how difficult it was to endure the time of discipline. However, he chose neither of these things. His first words were ones of blessing. He responded to correction with thanksgiving and praise.

Perhaps we would be inclined to think this was easy. After all, Zechariah had months to think about his response and to get his heart right before God. However, if we couldn’t speak for months, would our first words be ones of thanks? When we undergo God’s discipline, is our first response to give Him praise?

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