Friday, October 15, 2021

The Benefit of Singing Infallible Songs

Your statutes have been my songs 
in the house of my pilgrimage. (Psalm 119:54)

"I just feel like a lot of contemporary Christian music isn't good. It's either mindlessly repetitive, focuses too much on me and my feelings, or makes unbiblical statements." Thus said a young Christian man I spoke with in my favorite coffee recently. Perhaps you've heard a similar sentiment in your own life. Many evangelicals, especially young people (as I have found), are seeking something more profound, rich, and meaningful than the latest 12-song cycle on K-Love. In our discussion on Christian music, I asked this young man, who had grown up in the church his whole life, if he had ever once sung a Psalm in worship. Unsurprisingly, his answer was, "No." (Funny aside, when I first asked him, he assumed I meant a hymn, which he had sung a few of. When I explained that I actually meant a Psalm from the Bible put to music, it was almost like he'd never even thought of that!) 

In an effort to escape the commercialism and sometimes unbiblical nature of the Contemporary Christian Music industry (CCM), young Christians, like this young man I was speaking with, go the exact opposite direction. They embrace avant garde worship, imagining that authentic Christian worship is just taking the hipster approach to music and baptizing it. While this may be less commercial than the typical CCM approach, it still often suffers from the same issue: how do I know if this music is good? How do I know that this music is reflecting actual truths and not just how I'm feeling?

This is one of the unseen benefits of singing psalms in worship. Unlike K-Love, CCM, or even avant garde music just dripping with 'authenticity', singing psalms actually represents a radical departure from the norm. When we sing psalms, one thing we are doing is dying to ourselves. We put our own desires to death and subject ourselves to the words of God. Much of CCM consists of us telling God how we feel. When we sing psalms, we let God tell us how we should feel. 

Additionally, you never need to wonder if the Psalm you are singing is true, good, or godly. Because you are singing God's very words, you are always singing truth! You know that these words were not first approved by an executive, packaged for radio, and blasted out through the corporate machine. They were approved by God, not man! They were packaged by the Son of God! And the Holy Spirit blasts them out as God's own word, which shatters the idols of culture and time.

I am not advocating here for the position known as "exclusive psalmody," as if it were wrong to sing anything but the 150 Psalms of Scripture. But what a joy it is to pick up your Psalter in worship on the Lord's day, and know that you are singing songs which the Spirit Himself sent down! To know that you are singing God's word back to Him in faith, singing the same songs that Jesus Himself sang and still sings in heaven. What a joy to have the infallible book; what a joy to sing infallible songs!

Friday, September 3, 2021

You Don't Need to Earn a Hearing!

"No one cares how much you know until they know how much you care." Maybe you've heard that saying before. It's a popular one and there's a lot of truth in it! Generally, it means that if I want to speak into someone's life, situation, or story, they are much more inclined to listen if they know I am genuinely interested in their well-being.

In contemporary American Christianity, this idea gets expressed in phrases like "earning the right to be heard." As Christians, we know that we are commanded to share the gospel; to tell others about what Jesus Christ has done in His cross and resurrection. "But," the supposed wisdom says, "people will be much more likely to hear us out if they know we care about them. If we've developed a relationship and demonstrated our sincere love for them, they will be more open to hearing us talk about Jesus." This is also sometimes referred to as relational evangelism, evangelism primarily accomplished through developing relationships with non-Christians. 

Let me just be up front and say I have no problems with relational evangelism. Just as Jesus ate and drank with sinners, developing relationships with them and investing His life into theirs, so we should have non-Christian relationships that we pour into with sincere love. It is true that unbelievers are often way more inclined to give you a hearing when talking about Jesus if they know you aren't just there to berate them. If they know that you are actually trying to tell them the truth in love (Eph 4:15), they are more open to hearing you out. 

The problem is when we think that relational evangelism is the ONLY way to share the gospel. I recall a specific conversation I had in the last few years with another minister: we were discussing the merits/downsides of street preaching. His main objection was that, in street preaching, I had no relationship with the people I was preaching to. To use the phrase: I had not "earned the right to be heard" with the people passing by. In his mind, this made it an unacceptable way to share the gospel. He instead recommended I have non-Christians over to my house for dinner. (Something I also love doing!)

Do Christians need to earn a hearing? If the question is necessity, the answer is no! Consider Paul's words, "Now then, we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God were pleading through us: we implore you on Christ's behalf, be reconciled to God." (2 Corinthians 5:20) An ambassador is someone who is sent to represent their country. They don't go on their own authority; they are sent. And they are not answerable to the land to whom they are sent: they are answerable only to the one who sent them. 

Paul also uses the image of a herald: someone who is officially sent to spread a message publicly. "And how shall they preach unless they are sent? As it is written: 'How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the gospel of peace, who bring glad tidings of good things!'" (Romans 10:15) A herald in the old days was sent out under an authority (a duke, a king, a government, etc.) and his job was simply to publish a message. He was not responsible to first develop relationships with everyone in the town he went to: he simply proclaimed the news! 

Christian, you have been sent under authority. When Jesus Christ called His Church to preach the gospel to all the world (Matthew 28:18-20; Mark 16:15) He wasn't giving you an option. He is the King of kings, and He sends you into the world as a herald of His victory. You are not sent on your own authority, but you speak on behalf of the King. There is nothing more that Jesus needs to do to earn a hearing from the world. He demands to be heard. If they will not hear, that's their problem. Your job, Christian, is to herald Him. Tell the world about Him. Don't wait until you've reached some arbitrary relational milestone to tell your neighbor, your coworker, your loved one about Jesus. Tell them now! AND show them you care through loving action and sharing life together. 

May our bold proclamation of Jesus, matched by the evidence of His transforming power in our lives, produce an abundant harvest of disciples for His kingdom. He is worthy of it all!

Thursday, June 24, 2021

On the Backbone-Strengthening Power of Psalm Singing

Let the saints be joyful in glory;
Let them sing aloud on their beds.
Let the high praises of God be in their mouth,
And a two-edged sword in their hand,
To execute vengeance on the nations,
And punishments on the peoples;
To bind their kings with chains,
And their nobles with fetters of iron;
To execute on them the written judgment—
This honor have all His saints.

Praise the Lord! (Psalm 149:5-9 NKJV)

One of the unique things about my congregation, as well as a number of other good Reformed churches, is our practice of regularly singing biblical psalms in worship, usually at least one every service. We might sing a psalm relevant to the sermon text, we might sing a portion of a psalm as a confession of sin, or even as a preparation to hear and receive God's word. Regardless, at least one portion of psalm singing takes place each Sunday. Usually more than one, if we can help it!

If that practice is just a nice tradition, or something we do just to distinguish ourselves as Reformed believers, it'd be pretty stupid. But I am increasingly convinced that psalm singing is not just an interesting tradition, or something done for the sake of separating ourselves from evangellybeans and their limp-wristed contemporary songs. No, singing God's songs must be so much more than that! 

One aspect of singing psalms that is sometimes overlooked is that singing psalms makes very clear the nature of spiritual warfare. The Bible is crystal clear that there is a war raging around us, even if we can't always see it. The war between God's kingdom and the powers of darkness. It is not an equal fight. The powers of darkness: the world, the flesh, and the devil, are all rebels within the sphere of God's sovereign power. They can go no further than He allows. But He does give them leash to run with. And with that extra leash length they wage war against His kingdom and servants. 

There are not many contemporary worship songs that deal with spiritual warfare. If anything, they will address it along the lines of "The enemy wants to make me feel bad, but I overcome through God's power and I feel good about myself again." Not a bad statement, just not sufficient to capture the fullness of what's happening. The Christian, as a soldier of Jesus Christ, joins the kingdom of God in warring against the powers of darkness (Eph 6:12). 

If you have never sung psalms before, one thing that will quickly strike you is how many times you will sing about enemies who speak evil against you, or who seek your life. The psalmists are often engaged in battle, crying out to God for victory against their enemies. They are fitting songs to sing as Christians in an increasingly hostile climate. They are good songs to sing every day as you wrestle personally with the temptations of the flesh. They are stirring songs that move you into battle against the sinful world and its powers of darkness. They are triumphant songs that remind you that, although the devil and all his demonic powers oppose you, Jesus Christ has and is gaining the victory over them (Col 2:15). 

So, if you don't already, start singing psalms! These are the war cries of faithful Christians engaging in the struggle. They are the victory songs which Jesus your King sings over you and invites you to sing with Him. Fill your mouth with God's praises, take up the two-edged sword of the Spirit in hands of faith, and prepare to do battle. The Captain of your salvation fights for you, Christian! Won't you take up His battle cries and fight at His side?

Friday, May 21, 2021

The Problem with "Shepherdess" Teams

It seems to me that a growing number of (otherwise) biblical, confessional, Reformed churches are embracing a new ministry innovation. Correctly understanding that the Bible teaches that only called, qualified men are able to hold office in the Church (minister, elder, or deacon), but with a stated desire to better care for the women of the churches, they create what are often called "Shepherdesses". These are women with demonstrable wisdom, of good standing in the local church, who are appointed (not called or installed) to come alongside the pastor and elders to better oversee the spiritual wellbeing of the women in the church. From the outside this option appears as an attempted middle ground between the outright ordaining of women to authoritative church offices (which would clearly violate God's word), and the supposed ignoring of women's needs, who are instead forced to suffer under inattentive male leadership in the church without any female mediator between them.

What is apparently happening is that women, like the Greek-speaking widows of Acts, are being neglected in the daily distribution: not of food, but of spiritual care and oversight from their sessions. Because of the difficulties in communication and trust between men and women, Christian women in the churches need to be shepherded by their pastors and elders through the added medium of a female companion. So, let's say a wife in the church needs to bring a situation before the session. Are we really going to expect her to go sit alone before the tribunal of men and be truly heard and feel cared for? Of course not! Men aren't that good at listening, right? The wisdom then following says that what she needs is an advocate, a female mediator between her and the session who can (like Jesus) lay hands on both parties: she has the benefit of being female, therefore being better acquainted with female needs and desires; but she is also wise and able to understand the session's duty of care, oversight, and discipline. Thus, we get the shepherdess. 

Let it be said that the Bible does have plenty of room in the church for wise female leaders who can help serve the needs of women. In Titus 2, Paul says these words about older men and women in the church, none of whom (in the context) are authoritative church officers, just wise older saints: "But as for you, speak the things which are proper for sound doctrine: that the older men be sober, reverent, temperate, sound in faith, in love, in patience; the older women likewise, that they be reverent in behavior, not slanderers, not given to much wine, teachers of good things--that they admonish the younger women to love their husbands, to love their children, to be discreet, chaste, homemakers, good, obedient to their own husbands, that the word of God may not be blasphemed." 

Clearly, when it comes to people pouring wisdom and direction into the lives of women in the church, Paul envisions more parties than simply the pastor and elders. Women can teach women. Women need to help in the discipleship of other women. Older women in particular must come alongside younger women in the church and advise them in life. Of course, it's very interesting that the older women are to exhort younger women to be loving wives and mothers, to be homemakers, and obey their husbands. I have a sneaking suspicion that many shepherdess teams don't have this enshrined as their mission statement!

So, Keith, what problem do you have with the idea of the "shepherdess"? Well, the problem isn't that women are being ordained to church offices (they aren't). And the problem isn't that women are being heard in the church! Women, as much as men, are Christians and have a right to the care and oversight of their sessions. They are not second-class Christians, nor are their concerns less deserving of consideration. The main problem I see with the shepherdess idea is that it introduces an unnecessary and biblically foreign concept into the functioning of the local church. 

Let's think about just one implication of introducing the shepherdess into the churches, namely, that the session is no longer seen as fully capable and sufficient to handle the oversight of all church members. The men whom Christ has appointed in the Church to rule, oversee, and shepherd are not able to sufficiently do the job. Maybe we think that, because they are men, they cannot sufficiently oversee the souls of women without female mediation. Does that mean they also cannot sufficiently oversee the spiritual needs of children without a child mediator? Could a Hispanic elder truly shepherd a black man in the church without a black mediator? Where does the line fall, and why? 

I wonder what we would think about Christ's relationship to His female followers. Jesus Christ came into the world as a man, a male. He remains a man. He is still male. Is Jesus able to care for women's souls? Or is His ability to understand them limited by His maleness? If you say, "Yes, but Keith, Jesus is sinless. He is able to perfectly care for His female disciples, in spite of His maleness, because He is without sin." Ok, so if that's the case then the problem is ultimately sin, women being asked to submit themselves under the leadership of sinful men. This issue is not resolved by putting shepherdesses in place, as those women would be just as sinful as any man. 

Maybe we think about situations where women have been abused by men, spiritually, physically, or emotionally. Should those women really be subjected to the oversight of an all-male session without official female mediation? Again, I would point to the previous point about the male nature of Jesus Christ. If a woman who has suffered abuse cannot be entrusted to the care of the men Christ has chosen without female mediation, can she entrust herself to Jesus? Maybe the Romanists are on to something and women could find mediation with Jesus through Mary! After all, Jesus is a man, and you know what men are like! Furthermore, one of the chief qualifications for an elder in the church is the quality of gentleness (1 Tim 3:3). If a man is not gentle enough to biblically handle the spiritual needs of an abused woman, he is not gentle enough to be an elder. I would stress that word "biblically", though. Jesus Christ is the determiner of whether a session has handled something biblically, not the party involved. Just because a woman (or any man, for that matter) doesn't feel like she has been heard and cared for, doesn't mean that she hasn't been. 

Much more could and should be said about this. I think the main point to come back to is the headship of Jesus Christ over His Church. He is the King and Head of the Church, and He is the one who raises up godly men into authoritative office to lead His people. When Jesus established His church and gave us the church's structure, He put three offices in place: ministers, elders, and deacons. It's clearly been shown that there is a place for strong women of faith to help serve the needs of other women in the church. I simply feel that the practice of official shepherdess teams, acting as mediators between the women of the church and the session, is unnecessary at best. In the worst case, it is a springboard for the unbiblical practice of ordaining female church officers and the further erosion of biblical practice in American churches. 

Are elders perfect? Of course not. Pastors aren't perfect either. But Christ has ordained that all Christians, male and female alike, need the imperfect leadership of their pastors and elders. They need the unfiltered exhortation and conviction of God's word, given straight from the mouths of their leaders. Men need it, which we see every year around father's day, with biblical exhortations given from the pulpit. Men are soundly rebuked for their shortcomings and sins, and exhorted to pursue greater righteousness as men. I wonder how many mother's day sermons there were this year on the sinfulness and failure of women, exhorting women to repent and serve Christ better as wives, mothers, and sisters in Christ? Women, you need the unfiltered truth of Christ, straight from the mouths of those whom Jesus Himself has put over you, to care for your souls. 

May Christ Himself be pleased to help us increasingly pursue this true and better life together, according to His instruction and desire, and to the good of our souls and the glory of His name. 


Friday, April 16, 2021

Rule or Be Ruled: AKA Why Christian Children Don't Belong in Government Schools

There's an interesting section of Scripture in 1 Corinthians 6. The apostle Paul is writing to the Corinthian Christians, all of whom seem to be having a rough go of it. There's division, superiority complexes, sexual immorality, and selfishness running rampant in the churches. Paul gets to chapter 6 and shames the Corinthians: in their selfishness, the Corinthian believers were suing each other, taking one another to court before the secular judges. "Dare any of you, having a matter against another, go to law before the unrighteous, and not before the saints?" (1 Cor 6:1)

The problem isn't just that the saints are taking each other to court before the ungodly, thus making Jesus look bad in the eyes of the world, but they are also forgetting who they are in Christ. "Do you not know that the saints will judge the world? And if the world will be judged by you, are you unworthy to judge the smallest matters?" (1 Cor 6:2-3) Jesus Christ is King of kings, and His saints are ruling and reigning with Him from heaven. Christ, through His Spirit, has equipped believers with wisdom beyond any worldly judge. For the Corinthians to go to court before unbelievers is to effectively say that there is more wisdom among the ungodly than among the saints of Christ, as if there were more wisdom in the secular books of law than in God's own word the Bible. 

Paul further clarifies where the problem comes from: the selfishness and unruliness of the Corinthians. "Now therefore, it is already an utter failure for you that you go to law against one another. Why do you not rather accept wrong? Why do you not rather let yourselves be cheated? No, you yourselves wrong and cheat, and you do these things to your brethren!" (1 Cor 6:7-8) The Corinthians are ruled by their own sins and selfishness. They are not ruling over their own lives in Spirit-led self-control, but are directed by their own lusts, living like they were still slaves of sin. And because they won't rule themselves in wisdom, they will be ruled by anything else. 

Now, all that considered, you might wonder at the title of this post. What does any of this stuff have to do with getting Christian children out of the government school system? The reality is that for generations American Christians have entrusted the education of their kids to the public school system. We viewed the school system as a neutral place, somewhere our kids could get a decent, generic education, which we could supplement with church attendance, Bible reading, and youth group. Increasingly it has become obvious that this is not the case. It doesn't work that way. We cannot hand our children over to an increasingly ungodly, anti-Christian state education system and then be shocked when they come home from college rejecting the faith we taught them. As pastor Paul Washer once said, "Your children will go to public school and they will be trained for somewhere around 15,000 hours in ungodly secular thought. And then they'll go to Sunday School and they'll color a picture of Noah's ark. And you think that's going to stand against the lies that they are being told?" 

If we want to see a change in our children's future we have to start by taking responsibility for them again. We cannot continue to hand them over to the state for education 40 hours a week. The church of Jesus needs to make use of all our resources, doing everything we can to ensure a true Christian education for our children. We need to take charge of our children's future. If we do not, someone else surely will, but our kids will be all the worse for it. And through His Spirit, God has equipped us for it! Paul didn't want the Corinthians taking each other to court before unbelievers because there should be enough wisdom among the churches to judge their own issues. A faithful Christian mom, equipped with a Bible, a willingness to learn, and a desire to truly teach her kids, is a more competent teacher than any ungodly person with every letter imaginable behind their name. At least, if your goal is to raise children who love Jesus, love learning, and are actually prepared to be competent adults. If you really want your kids to be able to name all 700 genders, feel guilty for a host of imaginary sins they've never actually committed, or apologize to the house plants for their carbon footprint, then yeah, keep sending them to the government school. 

A few closing clarifying points:

1. This is not a condemnation of faithful men and women who teach in the government school system. If you are in that position and able to use the wisdom God has given to you to truly teach and help kids in that environment, then God speed! Your position may very quickly become a missional position, bringing the light of God's love to the spiritually dark places of our society. But there is a world of difference between sending an equipped, maturing Christian into that environment, and sending an impressionable, immature child. There's a reason the First Crusade was a general success and the Children's Crusade ended in tragedy and loss. You don't send untrained children to do a mature believer's work! 

2. The fact is that, even if Christians faithfully pursue this good work, there will be many kids in our communities left behind for a time. This is the sad state of our reality. Remember that a parent's first responsibility is for their children, not their neighborhood (1 Tim 5:8). A church's first responsibility is for their covenant children, not the children in their community (Gal 6:10). The fact that we can't yet give every child a quality Christian education shouldn't prevent us from starting by giving our kids a quality Christian education. 

3. This is not an endorsement of any one method of education over another. Homeschooling is great. Private Christian schools are great. Classical Christian schools are great. The point is to get started in the right direction, which starts by taking responsibility for our kids and not giving them up to the state.

Friday, March 26, 2021

The Glory of Watering the Sacrifice

"Work smarter, not harder." Maybe, if you're like me, you grew up hearing this regularly. It's a bit of household wisdom passed down and usually applicable in any situation. Make your life easier by thinking through the job, rather than just throwing your back into it. Why would we ever not want to follow this wise counsel?

How strange it must have seemed to Israel, then, when Elijah the prophet was preparing his sacrifice on Mount Carmel (1 Kings 18). If you don't know the story, Elijah is a faithful prophet of the LORD. But Israel is under the domination of ungodly leaders. The people, while giving lip service to the true God, are also worshiping Baal, a chief god of the Canaanites. Elijah decides to challenge 450 prophets of Baal to a duel: both parties will prepare a sacrifice, but not light the fire. Whichever deity sends fire to consume the sacrifice will be recognized as the true God. The unspoken penalty for whichever prophet fails is death. Elijah has a lot riding on this challenge!

Given all this, you would think that Elijah wants to make things as simple for the LORD as possible. Pick the driest wood for the fire. Pick a small, easily consumed animal. Maybe wait for a dry day. Work smarter, not harder, Elijah. But that isn't what the prophet does. 

First of all, he allows the prophets of Baal to go first. He's got a lot of confidence that Baal is NOT going to answer. In fact, Elijah lets them go all morning, until noon and even then he doesn't start! He just begins to mock the false prophets of Baal. (1 Kings 18:27) Like some arrogant boxer boasts before even setting foot in the ring, Elijah throws down the gauntlet to Baal's men.

After waiting a long time and mocking his opponents, Elijah finally gets to work. He prepares the altar, digs a trench around it, and gets the wood and sacrifice ready. Then he does something crazy. He orders his servants to get a bunch of water, four pots full, and dump it all over his preparations. The sacrifice and the wood are all drenched in water. Then he orders them to do it again and a third time. Three times Elijah has his sacrifice covered in water. I don't know if you've ever tried to start a fire with wet wood, but it's a pain. It's challenging enough just to get the stuff to catch flame, never mind make a big enough flame to consume a whole animal!

He's purposefully making God's job "harder"! Apparently his parents never taught him about working smarter instead. Elijah goes before his drenched sacrifice and wood and offers a simple prayer to the God of Israel: no showiness, no elaborate ceremonial dance, (1 Kings 18:26) no cutting himself to get God's attention (1 Kings 18:28). A simple prayer to God...and the God of heaven sends the fire to consume the sacrifice. The wet wood instantly ignites in a roaring fire. It burns up the animal sacrifice, and even vaporizes the water in the trench around the altar. Why does Elijah do it this way?

The prophet is deadset (literally) on showing the supreme power of God. If the challenge is going to be completed, he wants there to be no doubt that it was the God of Abraham who did it. God must get all the glory! In the eyes of Israel there must be no question that the LORD alone is God. And it works! The people see the miraculous power of God, fall on their faces, and worship. In a demonstration of their renewed loyalty to God alone, the 450 prophets of Baal are taken down to the brook Kidron and executed. No false gods and no phony prophets will be tolerated in Israel anymore. 

I was meditating on this story while thinking about ministry the other day. In many ways, the little ministry that God has entrusted to me has a lot of water on it. My congregation meets in a funeral home (ick!); we have a simple worship service, primarily focused on the explanation and application of the Bible (snoozer!); we don't even have acoustic guitars (yet!). We sing from a hymnal and even psalms from the Psalter (who even does that!?). There are many reasons why, from a worldly perspective, this thing just shouldn't work. Too much water!

But I delight that these things are the way they are! Lord willing, as my little congregation continues to grow, there will be no doubt that it is God doing the work. The only way this sacrifice is burning up is if the fire of God's Holy Spirit falls on it and sets us on fire for the Lord! God willing, 10 years from now, when we've seen lost sinners saved and brought to faith in Christ; when we've seen families redeemed and children discipled into mature Christian adults; when we've seen an impact made by this ministry, there will be no doubt in anyone's mind that it was God who did it. It wasn't the preacher (he's a bit of a dunce). It wasn't the programs (we didn't have any). It wasn't the building. It had to be the Lord alone. In that day my prayer is that I will see the glory that came from watering the sacrifice; not glory for me, the church, or anyone else, but glory for God the LORD, the only one who can give the fire from heaven. The only with power to consume completely all the wet sacrifices we bring Him.

Friday, February 26, 2021

Speaking, Not Striking

Ever felt like you've totally lost control of a situation? I know I have! The reality is that we aren't ever really in control of anything that happens, but we like to act and think as if we were. Moses was put in one such situation in Numbers 20. The people of Israel have been going through the wilderness, complaining pretty much the whole journey, and they end up in a place called Kadesh. Kadesh made for great camping, except that it didn't have any water! Numbers 20:2 says, "Now there was no water for the congregation; so they gathered together against Moses and Aaron. And the people contended with Moses and spoke, saying, 'If only we had died when our brethren died before the LORD!" When the people complain, Moses and Aaron initially act wisely: they go to the Lord. V.6 says, "So Moses and Aaron went from the presence of the assembly to the door of the tabernacle of meeting, and they fell on their faces. And the glory of the LORD appeared to them." 

The best response to a crisis is always to first turn to the Lord! And God appears to Moses and Aaron in His glory. He gives them the answer to the people's needs: "Take the rod; you and your brother Aaron gather the congregation together. Speak to the rock before their eyes, and it will yield its water." God has an answer ready for the people's need: they will receive water from the most unlikely place. The rock at Kadesh will be split open and pour out enough water to satisfy the millions of Israel and their animals! But Moses is only going to speak to the rock. Just as he laid hold on God's presence by simply seeking God in prayer, so he will receive God's provision by simply speaking to the rock. It is God's power, not his own, that will split the rock and provide for the people.

But Moses is frustrated! He has had enough of the Israelites and their accusations against him. So instead of approaching the situation as God directed him, Moses gathers the people and says, "Hear now, you rebels! Must we bring water for you out of this rock?" Then Moses lifted his hand and struck the rock twice with his rod". Moses' good start in going to God in prayer is now ruined by his angry attitude toward the people. He not only gets angry at these "rebels", but he sinfully puts himself in God's place. Notice how he asked, "Must we bring water for you out of this rock?" GOD is the one who provides the water, not Moses or Aaron. On top of that, Moses expresses his self-glorifying attitude by striking the rock (twice!) instead of speaking to it, as God had commanded. 

When we're thrown into those out-of-control situations, our sinful instinct is to always try to fix the problem ourselves. We see that we aren't as "in charge" as we imagined and we want to reclaim our imagined sense of control. Instead of looking to God to split the rocks for us, we speak of bringing water out ourselves. Instead of speaking to the rock, we strike hard in our own strength. 

When Jesus was teaching about not being anxious and trusting God instead He said these words, "Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you." (Matt 7:7) God knows everything that you need, Christian, and He has promised to provide for everything you need. The water is going to pour out of the rock! But receive the water by asking, not demanding. Don't strike the Rock, but speak to Him. He will answer the one who asks Him in faith.