NUMBERS
CHAPTER 14.
The Insurrection of the People and Its Consequences.
joshua and caleb endeavor
to quench the dissatisfaction. —
V. 1. And all the congregation lifted up their voice and cried; and the
people wept that night; they moaned and shrieked and shed bitter tears and behaved altogether like men and women whose last hope in life is
dead. And the galling grief of despondency was followed by an embittered
feeling against the leaders of the host. V.2. And all the children of Israel
murmured against Moses and against Aaron, with a threatening note; and
the whole congregation said unto them, Would God that we had died in the land of
Egypt! Or would God we had died in this wilderness! Their lament was: If
only we had died before starting out on this fool journey, or if we at least had
died before matters had reached this stage!
V. 3. And wherefore hath the Lord brought us unto this land, to the
borders of this so-called
Land of Promise, to fall by the sword, that our wives and our children should
be a prey, be taken captive and thus be at the mercy of their victorious
enemies? Were it not better for us to return into Egypt?
V. 4. And they said one to another, Let us make a captain, choose some
determined man as leader, and let us return into Egypt. So the cowardly
dissatisfaction of the people was rapidly turning into open rebellion. V. 5. Then
Moses and Aaron, after endeavoring in vain to give the people the proper
courage, by reminding them of the promises of Jehovah, Deut.
1, 29-31, fell on their faces before all the assembly of the congregation
of the children of Israel. Their object was to bring the situation to the
attention of the Lord and to implore Him to
interfere. V. 6. And Joshua, the son of Nun, and Caleb, the son of Jephunneh,
which were of them that searched the land, Caleb having registered his protest even the day before, chap. 13,
30, rent their clothes, in the excess of their grief over the stubbornness
of the people; v.
7. and they spake unto all the company of the children of Israel, saying, The
land which we passed through to search it, is an exceeding good land. They
emphasized the exceptional merits
of the land very strongly. V. 8. If the Lord delight in us, then He will
bring us into this land and give it us, a land which floweth
with milk and honey. They had so many evidences of God's grace and mercy in
the fulfillment of His promises to them that even an implied doubt of His
inability to help them in overcoming the enemies was an insult to His majesty.
V. 9. Only rebel not ye against the Lord, by such open disobedience, neither
fear ye the people of the land; for they are bread for us, they can be
devoured,
overcome with ease; their defense is departed from them, literally,
"their shadow, in which they were safe,
has left them," and the Lord is with us; fear them not. In the
Orient the shadow, which protects against the excessive heat of the sun,
is a type of protection and refuge, Is. 30, 2. The Canaanites had filled up the measure of their sins, and the Lord had now fully
determined to exterminate them, Ex. 34, 24; Lev. 18, 25; 20, 23. V. 10. But
all the congregation bade stone them with stones, for the people were beyond
the point where a sensible appeal could make any impression upon them; they were
filled with stubborn spite. And the glory
of the Lord appeared in the Tabernacle of the Congregation before all the
children of Israel. It was a mysterious manifestation by which the Lord
indicated that He was about to render judgment in this matter. We have here a
picture of the manner in which the unbelievers reject the proofs of God's
goodness and mercy and repudiate the warnings and admonitions of God's faithful
witnesses. But God will not be mocked; from time to time His judgments come upon
the world with impressive exhibitions of
His majesty.
moses intercedes
for the people. —
V. 11. And the Lord said unto Moses, How long will this people provoke Me?
as they were now doing with their insulting rejection, and how long will it
be ere they believe Me, for all the signs which I have showed among them?
They rejected God, they did not accept the evidences of His power and of His
mercy; and His patience was at the point of being exhausted. V. 12. I will
smite them with the pestilence and disinherit them, cut them off from the
promised inheritance by exterminating them, and will make of thee a greater
nation and mightier than they. Cp. Ex.
32, 10. But Moses stepped into the breach as the mediator and the champion of
the people. V. 13. And Moses said unto the Lord, Then the Egyptians shall
hear it, (for Thou broughtest
up this people in Thy might from among them,)
v. 14. and they will tell it to the inhabitants of this land. The
Egyptians themselves had received unmistakable evidence of the fact that it was
the one true, the almighty God, who had led His people forth from their country,
from the house of bondage, and they had
brought the report to the Canaanitish
nations. For they, all the nations
here concerned, have heard that Thou, Lord, art among this people, being
in their very midst, that Thou, Lord, art seen face to face, appearing
here in a visible manifestation, and that Thy cloud standeth
over them, and that Thou goest before them,
by daytime in a pillar of a cloud, and in a pillar of fire by night. The
report concerning all these wonderful happenings had been carried into the
entire surrounding country. V. 15. Now if Thou shalt
kill all this people as one man, as the Lord had just threatened to do, then
the nations which have heard the fame of Thee will speak, saying, v. 16. Because
the Lord was not able to bring this people into the land which He sware
unto them, therefore He hath slain them in the wilderness. Cp. Ex. 32, 11-13;
34, 6.7. The intercession of Moses urged that the honor of the Lord would suffer
if He carried out His threat, for the heathen nations would not accept the true
reason, alleging instead that the God of Israel was, after all, unable to
fulfill His promises. Having urged this one point, Moses immediately added a
second motive why the Lord should execute mercy rather than justice. V. 17. And
now, I beseech thee, let the power of .my
Lord be great, He should reveal and prove Himself as great in mercy, according
as Thou hast spoken, saying, v. 18. The Lord is long-suffering and of
great mercy, forgiving iniquity and transgression, and by no means clearing the
guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third
and fourth generation. Cp. Ex. 34, 6. 7. That is the manner of effective
prayer: it takes hold of the Word and promises of the Lord and urges His truth
and mercy until He must confess Himself overcome. V. 19. Pardon, I beseech
Thee, the iniquity of this people according unto the greatness of Thy mercy, and
as Thou hast forgiven this people, from Egypt even until now. It is the
prayer of faith which does not allege merit and worthiness, but pleads only for
mercy, for forgiveness, for pardon. V. 20. And the Lord said, I have pardoned
according to thy word; He had been vanquished by the appeal of Moses, by the
two great reasons urged by this bold champion of the people. V. 21. But as
truly as I live, a most solemn oath by His
own life, all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord, as a
result of the measures which the Lord
intended to take in punishing the people for their sins. He did not purpose to
destroy Israel as a people, according to His first threat, but He did intend
to punish the transgressors, the insurrectionists.
V. 22. Because all those men which have seen My glory and My miracles
which I did in Egypt and in the wilderness, and have tempted Me now these ten
times, and have not hearkened to My voice, v.
23. surely they shall not see the land which I sware
unto their fathers, neither shall any of them that provoked Me see it; in
bringing His judgment to pass upon this generation, the Lord would contribute to
the spreading of His glory through all the earth;
v. 24. but My servant Caleb, because he hath another spirit with him, not
one of disobedience and rebellion, and hath followed Me fully, trusted
absolutely in the merciful guidance of Jehovah, him will I bring into the
land whereinto he went; and his seed shall
possess it. V. 25. (Now the Amalekites
and the Canaanites dwelt in the valley.)
The part of Canaan over which Caleb would have dominion extended from the region
of the Amalekites down to the lowlands where the Canaanites lived. Tomorrow
turn you and get you into the wilderness by the way of the Red Sea; they
were to turn their faces back to the desert
and its desolation, until the punishment of the Lord would have gone into
effect. In the same way the unbelievers that
scorn the promises of God concerning the inheritance of the saints in light will
find themselves excluded for all eternity from the blessings which they would
not accept.
the judgment pronounced.
— V. 26. And the Lord spake unto Moses and unto
Aaron, saying, v. 27. How long shall I bear with this evil congregation
which murmur against Me? being
incorrigible in their dissatisfied opposition to the ways of the Lord's
dispensation. I have heard the murmurings of
the children of Israel which they murmur against Me, for they were
continually engaged in grumbling of this
kind. V. 28. Say unto them, As truly as I live, saith
the Lord, as ye have spoken in Mine ears, so will I do to you, cp.
v. 2: v. 29. your carcasses shall fall in this wilderness; literally,
"in this very wilderness shall fall your
dead bodies"; and all that were numbered of you, according to your whole
number, from twenty years old and upward, which have murmured against Me, v.
30. doubtless ye shall not come into the land concerning which I sware,
by a solemn lifting up of the hand, to make you dwell therein, save Caleb,
the son of Jephunneh, and Joshua, the son of
Nun. They would see for themselves whether the oath which the Lord had now
sworn by His own life would be fulfilled ;
they would find out whether a single one of the dissatisfied murmurers
would reach the Land of Promise. V. 31. But your little ones, which ye said
should be a prey, v. 3. them will I bring in, and they shall know the
land which ye have despised. V. 32. But as for you, as the Lord here
repeats for the sake of emphasis, your carcasses, they shall fall in this
wilderness. V. 33. And your children shall wander in the wilderness
forty years, sustaining themselves as nomads with their herds in the wastes
of the Sinaitic Peninsula, and bear your
whoredoms, to expiate, in a way, the spiritual unfaithfulness of their
fathers, until your carcasses be wasted in the wilderness, until the desert
had consumed even the last of them. V. 34. After the number of the days in
which ye searched the land, even forty days, chap. 13, 25, each day for a
year, shall ye bear your iniquities, even forty years, and ye shall know My
breach of promise; they would experience what it means when the Lord turns
from a people in anger, being obliged to withdraw or to change His original
promise. V. 35. I, the Lord, have said, I will surely do it unto all this
evil congregation that are gathered together against Me; in this wilderness they
shall be consumed, and there they shall die. V. 36. And the men which
Moses sent to search the land, who" returned
and made all the congregation to murmur against him, by bringing up a slander
upon the land, by misrepresenting the facts about Canaan and exaggerating
the difficulties of conquering its people, v. 37. even those men that did
bring up the evil report upon the land, died by the plague before the Lord;
the punishment struck them very suddenly, and struck them down as the first
among the rebellious people. V. 38. But Joshua, the son of Nun, and Caleb,
the son of Jephunneh, which were of the men that went to search the land, lived
still, their preservation, in the circumstances, being all the more
remarkable, and substantiating the word of the Lord. The judgment upon such as
were leaders in the Church and abused the trust placed in them by leading their
people astray, will be especially harsh.
the disobedience of the people punished. — V. 39. And Moses told these sayings unto all the children of Israel, he announced to them in what manner the Lord intended to punish them; and the people mourned greatly. Although they were now standing on the threshold of Canaan, they were denied entrance into the Land of Promise, and all by their own fault. But the measure of their trespass was not yet full, for their repentance now turned them to presumption, since it was not connected with true humility. V. 40. And they rose up early in the morning, and gat them up into the top of the mountain, with the object of forcing their way through the pass to the opposite side of the mountain range and beginning the conquest of Canaan on their own responsibility; it was a reaction from the extremities of despair which plunged the people into foolhardiness, saying, Lo, we be here, and will go up unto the place which the Lord hath promised; for we have sinned. That simple statement was to undo the happenings of the past two days. V. 41. And Moses said, Wherefore now do ye transgress the commandment of the Lord? But it shall not prosper. He predicted certain defeat to the self-willed people, who presumed to set aside the word of the Lord. True repentance bows in humility under the will of the Lord, no matter in what manner He chooses to make it known. V. 42. Go not up, for the Lord is not among you; that ye be not smitten before your enemies. V. 43. For the Amalekites and the Canaanites are there before you, their armies having probably been mobilized to resist the threatened invasion, and ye shall fall by the sword; because ye are turned away from the Lord, therefore the Lord will not be with you. Two days before, in unbelief, they had refused to take up arms against the inhabitants of Canaan, and now again, in unbelief, because they refused to accept the word of Moses concerning the seriousness of God's judgment, they intend to undertake the conquest; to the old sin of unbelieving despair came the new sin of presumptuous self-confidence. V. 44. But they presumed to go up unto the hilltop; nevertheless the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord and Moses departed not out of the camp. V. 45. Then the Amalekites came down, and the Canaanites which dwelt in that hill, eager to meet the invaders, and smote them and discomfited them, even unto Hormah. Having put them to flight, they pursued them with relentless fury, Deut. 1, 44, attacking the individual bands again and again, until parts of the Israelitish army were scattered far into the land of the Edomites. The behavior of the Israelites is a picture of the despair and the deceit of man's natural heart, which insists upon going its own ways. But God resisteth the proud, and giveth grace unto the humble. This is true both in spiritual and in temporal matters.