Numbers 1
The Lord took Israel out of Egypt and led them into the
promised land. He did not transport His people to Canaan directly.
When God brought His nation out of bondage, He led them into the
wilderness. There He spoke to them through Moses.
The Lord commanded Moses to count the people, but not
each and every human being, only the males who were twenty years old
and older who were able to go to war. The census was to be done
company by company within the tribal structure of the Israelites.
The men of Israel were to be heads of households,
leaders in warfare, and part of the fighting force that the Lord
would use in bringing His people through the wilderness and into the
promised land. At the head of each tribe was a leading man with a
God-given responsibility. His name was listed in these records, and
he was to be with Moses in the numbering of that tribe.
These men were each named by their given names that
identified them particularly, but they were also named by their
father's names, and by their tribal affiliations. There was a context
within which their leadership was granted. Elizur, mentioned in verse
5 was not just Elizur the independent man all by himself. Elizur was
the son of another man, Shedeur, his father. This was significant in
terms of the way he was to understand himself and the way others were
to view him. This sense of belonging was not only a family matter.
Elizur the son of Shedeur was of Reuben, the first son of Jacob. He
was also a part of the people of Israel. The Israelites were the
people of God.
Identity was not only individual for this man. It was
familial, tribal, and beyond the limits of humanity. Elizur was a
part of the people of God.
You are to be a part of a fighting force, not with the
weapons of this world, but under the banner of Jesus Christ, the
only-begotten Son of God who died for your sins and rose for your
justification. In Him you are part of the household of God. You are
not just an individual. You are part of a family, a family with a
mission to overcome evil with good.
Your identification with your Captain, Jesus, should be
more precious to you than any other affiliation that you can imagine.
Apart from Him you still have human dignity, but you do not have a
true future and a hope in the eternal promise of God. But you are in
Him through faith.
The leaders, we are told in verse 16, were the ones
“chosen from the congregation.” How were they chosen? That was
not important for us to know. Whatever the method may have been, we
should see the sovereign hand of the Almighty as He worked according
to His own will.
Tribe by tribe, the number of males able to go to war
was determined in the presence of the leaders. Judah, the one from
whom David and the Messiah would come, was the largest of the tribes.
All together there were over 600,000 fighting men in Israel.
Only the tribe of Levi, the tribe of priests and
tabernacle servants, was left out of the census. The Levites were to
put to death any outsider who came near the holy things of the Lord
in their charge. They were to keep guard over the tabernacle of the
testimony.
Would your ancestors have been welcomed into the
presence of God in that day about 1500 years before the birth of
Jesus Christ? Unless they were Israelites, unless they were Levites,
unless they were descendants of Aaron, there would have been a point
beyond which they would have traveled at the cost of their lives.
But we who were once far off from Israel have been drawn
near because of our adoption into the household of God. Not only do
we have the rights and privileges of the sons of God, we have been
numbered among the congregation as those who have a sacred mission to
go forth and to make disciples of all nations. We are a force that
will not easily be eliminated, not because of our own ability or
wisdom, but because of the One who died and rose again. He is our
great leader and our hope. We will not deny Him.
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