Deuteronomy 28
What would Israel have been like if the people had
listened to the voice of God through Moses? There would have been
blessings everywhere in the land.
Imagine living there... Yet even the most scrupulous
following of the Law by God's people could not have overturned the
curse of death from Adam's sin.
Despite the looming fact of mortality, the nation of
Israel would have experienced the Lord's blessings in ways that would
have set them above all the other nations of the world. The Lord
would have given them a marvelous life militarily, economically,
demographically, agriculturally, environmentally, and spiritually.
Moses set these blessings before the people. They needed
to obey the Lord's commandments and reject entirely the worship of
other gods in order to experience these wonderful gifts.
But what did the Lord warn concerning their disobedience
and idolatry? The land would be full of the Lord's curses. “The
LORD will send on you curses, confusion, and frustration in all that
you undertake to do, until you are destroyed and perish quickly on
account of the evil of your deeds, because you have forsaken me.”
Sickness, drought, defeat, madness, blindness, and
misery would be their portion rather than health and peace. All the
horrors of life under an oppressive enemy and all the pains and scars
of living in exile and slavery would be their portion.
These curses would not be the random result of chance,
but the direct sanction of the Lord their God. Why? Because they had
not served the Lord with joyfulness and gladness of heart.
Moses described to the conquest generation the horrors
of living under an enemy siege with alarming detail even before they
had set foot in the land. He told them that if they did not obey the
voice of the Lord, they would be scattered among all the peoples of
the world, and that they would serve gods of their own making and
live in fear.
These words offered a stark contrast for the people of
God. The way of obedience and true worship would have brought them
the greatest blessings, but the rejection of the Lord and His Word
would bring horror and degradation.
“When I survey the wondrous cross
on which the Prince of glory died,
my richest gain I count but loss,
and pour contempt on all my pride.”
What happened to the Lord on the cross? He took the
curse that we deserved; not just the curse that was upon Israel for
their disobedience and idolatry, but the curse that was upon creation
and humanity because pf the sin of Adam and because of our own
rebellion. He did this for us.
What happened to us as a result of that cross? All our
sin was atoned for.
The curse of God against us was a many-headed beast from
which we could never have escaped. Christ has destroyed that enemy.
The curse can no longer have a hold on us.
We have not obeyed the Law of God, but Jesus has, and He
did that for us. What has His righteousness won for us? In Him we
have the fullness of every blessing of God in the perfect land of
resurrection glory.
“Were the whole realm of nature mine,
that were a present far too small;
love so amazing, so divine,
demands my soul, my life, my all.”
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