The Sin of Grumbling
James 5:9
Grudge not one against another, brothers, lest you be condemned: behold, the judge stands before the door.


Do Christian people quite sufficiently consider the sin of grumbling, the sin of being discontented with the allotment of Providence, as to the time and place of their birth; as to the family in which they were born; as to their environment, as well as their heredity? What a strange sight a grumbling Christian is! He is a man who believes that God hath forgiven his sins, that Christ hath borne them all away, that his Lord has gone to prepare a place for him, that in a short time he will be where neither pain nor persecution can reach him, where the load of life will be laid down, where the wicked shall cease from troubling, and the weary shall be for ever at rest. And yet he allows small and transient things to keep him awake in the night, to worry him and make him peevish and fretful and cross through the day. He makes his own burdens more distressing by fretting under them, and thus increases the burdens which his friends have to bear. How many Christians fail to put their grumblings into the category of their sins. But James's admonition, that we should not grumble lest we be condemned, ought to arouse us to the duty of being patient, and to the fact that all really true Christian faith increases a man's manliness.

(C. F. Deems, D. D.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: Grudge not one against another, brethren, lest ye be condemned: behold, the judge standeth before the door.

WEB: Don't grumble, brothers, against one another, so that you won't be judged. Behold, the judge stands at the door.




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