Numbers 11
Up to this point in the book of Numbers the story has
been one of order and blessing. The book now turns to the
disappointing history of the people of God during their wilderness
wanderings. When we look at the history of Israel, when we read about
the New Testament churches, when we consider the testimony of church
history, and when we make an honest assessment of our lives, we are
reminded of our need for a Savior.
Numbers 11 begins with the words, “and the people
complained.” There is ample room in our relationship with the Lord
for an honest lament before God. He knows our weakness, and He hears
our cries for help. The problem was that instead of bringing their
helplessness to the Lord in faith, the people complained “in the
hearing of the Lord.” They were complaining about their lives and
about God, and God heard it.
What was the result? The fire of the Lord burned among
them and consumed some outlying parts of the camp. What put out the
fire? The people cried out to Moses, and Moses prayed to the Lord,
and the fire died down.
The people were hungry in the wilderness, not only for
food, but for their former way of life in Egypt. They wept and they
complained to one another, remembering the former days, maybe
forgetting that they had cried out to the Lord for help when they
were slaves in Egypt. They remembered life in Egypt as if it had been
a great and varied banquet. The miracle manna that God was sending to
them for their sustenance provoked no thanksgiving from their lips.
People were weeping. God was blazing hotly in His anger.
Moses was displeased too. He talked with God, and he wanted to die.
God's solution to this crisis was multifaceted. He
brought aid to the covenant mediator, and He disciplined His covenant
community with a plague from the very meat for which they longed.
God's aid to the covenant mediator was through the gift
of Spirit-touched leaders in a wonderful anticipation of the New
Testament age and even of the fullness of heavenly life. The gift of
the Spirit was for service. These men would bear the burden with
Moses.
The discipline of the Lord sounded like a great
provision; a month of meat. Moses did not believe such a thing was
possible. He would learn that the Lord's arm was powerful, but the
quail would not be a blessing.
Meanwhile, the glory cloud of God came upon the seventy
elders that Moses gathered, and even on two who were not with the
larger group. Joshua was alarmed that these two men were prophesying
in the camp. Moses words in reply were prophetic, not only of the
coming New Testament era, but of the day when resurrection life would
be full in the kingdom of heaven. He said, “Would that all the
Lord's people were prophets, that the Lord would put his Spirit on
them!”
For now the Lord would send more quail than the people
of Israel could have ever dreamed of. But with it came God's wrath as
He “struck down the people with a great plague.”
When we long for some old life that we imagine to be
better than it really was, we insult the Christ who died on the cross
for our sins. He took the plague of God's wrath that was rightly
directed against us. He suffered that we might have abundant life.
Can't we trust Him in this present hour? May He fill us even now with
His Spirit, that we might speak the oracles of God and live the life
of love.
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