Numbers 25
God had spoken amazing words of triumph for Israel
through the mouth of Balaam, a man who did not love the Lord or the
descendants of Jacob. The king of Moab was unable to crush Israel
through the words of this sorcerer. Yet, “the people began to whore
with the daughters of Moab.”
There is more than one way to bring trouble upon the
church. That which could not be accomplished through incantations,
came to pass, at least in part, through immorality.
The immorality was not only sexual, it was religious.
The men of Israel became entangled in Baal worship.
This spiritual adultery brought about the fierce anger
of the Lord against His beloved. God instructed Moses to put the
chiefs of Israel to death publicly. Moses sent out the judges as
agents of divine judgment against all those who had joined themselves
to a false god.
One man, Phinehas, the grandson of Aaron, zealously
obeyed the Lord's call for justice, and his story is recorded in this
chapter. Because of this one man's dedication to the Lord, a plague
that killed twenty-four thousand people was stopped.
Phinehas killed one man and his Midianite partner with a
single spear, piercing them both for their tansgression. That one act
brought a “covenant of peace” to him and to his descendants.
The story of Phinehas is a story of divine justice
through the death of the guilty. The story of Jesus is the account of
an innocent man being pierced for our transgressions.
The death of Jesus brought about a much more extensive
covenant of peace for the Lord's people. A plague of far more
devastating dimensions was ended for us in the death of our perfect
Substitute.
What motivated Christ in this great battle against sin?
Zeal for the Lord's house consumed Him. We are that house, the
beloved bride of our faithful Redeemer.
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