Numbers 16:41-18:32
Numbers
16:41-50
Vs. 41-43 Until
now, Korah's rebellion seems to have been a small problem involving the tribes
of Levi and Reuben. Now we see that all the other tribes became infected by the
criticisms against Moses and Aaron. The charge they brought against Moses
defies all reason. Moses didn't open up the earth and swallow those families,
and it wasn't Moses that brought fire out of the tabernacle to consume the 250
would-be priests.
But I've seen
this in churches, too. People will not recognize God's working or submit
themselves to leadership but will instead destroy churches and neglect the
harvest. I don't think we are any different than these people. Look at how
often Paul had to tell believers to submit to God's choice in giving gifts.
Without submission to Jesus and taking up our cross, as people called to die,
following Him in the harvest, we could all end up like this. This is why we
constantly, every day, need to be in the Word, allowing the Spirit to
"adjust" us.
When they faced
off against Moses and Aaron, the cloud moved. Didn't they see the cloud?
Vs. 44-46 Moses
and Aaron now both fell on their faces.
They knew this was going to cost people their lives. Moses somehow understood
that Aaron needed to get into the masses and make atonement for them.
Vs. 47-49 It is
interesting what the "right" man with a censer could do. I'm sure God
made a point in this that Aaron was the man whom He had chosen. Apparently
Aaron ran through the streets of this tent city spreading the incense
(symbolically, prayers) throughout the camp. At one point Aaron was standing
between dead people and living people. It is hard to imagine that 14,700 people
died on one day. And it was all the result of being infected by the
discontentment of a few.
Numbers 17
This chapter sets
the cause of the previous rebellions to rest as God Himself takes care of the
problem, stating this in v. 5.
As mentioned
yesterday, it seems that whenever there is an organization, we crave the lead
roles. This is true in the church in spite of Christ being the Head and in
spite of the church's mission being that of reaching a dying world. We are
still caught up with what we think of each other and who is the leader. God's choices in gifting and
giving one person more visibility than another don't seem important to us. We
look at the organization and forget the God who owns it. They forgot the cloud,
although it was in plain view.
With Israel,
and even with us, God gives gifts/offices. He makes the choice. Each of us is
to live and serve according to the measure of faith which God has assigned to
us (Romans 12:3). God gives and assigns and orders. We either go with it or
mess it up.
God would now
confirm the choice He had made again. Twelve staffs representing each tribe
would be put between the altar and the Holy Place. You see what happened to
Aaron's staff. It was a class "A" miracle, and the people couldn't
blame it on Moses.
Vs. 12 and 13
are the reaction of the people to their own rebellion and as a result you'll
notice that 18:1 begins with so.
Numbers 18
Vs. 1-7 So, in
the context of protecting the people, God clarified the special relationship of
the priests and the Levites. Aaron and his family were to protect the people.
The Levites were given to Aaron and his family to help them do this. Notice the
mentions of keep guard and gift.
Vs. 8-20 In
this section notice the words, gift,
given, and shall be yours. These
laws also show the privilege of Aaron and his sons having their needs met
through the offerings and sacrifices brought to the tabernacle.
Vs. 21-32 This
now was the privilege of the Levites. Notice that with the Levites and Aaron,
God was their inheritance on earth. They were to serve and God would supply.
This was all commanded by God but it ran on faith. If the people of the nation
loved God and saw the sacrifices as important in their relationship to God, and
if they obeyed the Lord, and if they understood that God wanted them to come to
Him through the ministry of Aaron, then all was well. If not, they would look
at Aaron and the Levites as "living off" them, as if by charity.
Notice that the
Levites were to tithe, too. They were to give the best when they tithed. Just
like the people were not supposed to hold back, the Levites were also to give
the best that they were given, to the Lord for the priests.
Some people
think that Cain's sin was not that he offered a sacrifice of his fields instead
of an animal offering, but that the fruit and grains he offered were not the
best. Instead of giving the best of his fruit, he gave the wormy stuff that he
wouldn't have eaten anyway.
One more thing
regarding these offerings and tithes - in Malachi these offerings become a
major issue. The people brought what was sick and blighted; because, hey, times
are hard and a blind animal is better than no animal, right? And the priests
accepted it because, hey, they had to eat, too. Obviously God didn't agree with
them.
This principle
of tithing extends over to the NT. You see Paul mentioning the command the Lord
gave, that those who proclaim the gospel
should get their living by the gospel. (Read 1 Cor. 9.) Again, this is
God's choice for things. If we see the Lord and the harvest as the center of
our lives, then it all works. Also, the ministry of Ephesians 4:11-16 is very
important and dependent on God giving certain men to the church, those men
being supported and the people submitting to God in following them. There is a
lot of faith involved in this too. If we are not here to be slaves of our Lord
Christ, we are in trouble. If we think "church" means something other
than binding together to serve Christ in the harvest, we get in trouble. I was
in a church where people said that both of my predecessors were lazy and never
put in an honest day's work. In the file drawers, I found time sheets from
them, logging in 55-hour work weeks. The real issue was that the people
"owned" the church, the building, to meet their needs. They weren't
getting what they paid for. What they really wanted was for themselves, so they
could stay isolated on a hill. Both "lazy" pastors burned out.
As disciples we
must understand that God left us here on earth on purpose. We could all have
been taken into heaven, "safe at home" the minute we trusted Christ.
The reason we are left here is to serve our Lord by following Him in the harvest.
We have no right not submitting to Him or to the structures He has set up to
get this done. Obviously not all churches are doing the job, but we don't
reject church or judge those who try to lead them. We still need to obey Him
and find a church where we can work in the harvest. When Paul wrote to the
Philippians notice how often witness
and being of one mind are mentioned.
The Church is to strengthen the harvesters, working together to glorify the
Father, by bearing much fruit and so proving that we are Christ's disciples.
Mark 16
Vs. 1-8 In
Mark's customary style, chapter 16 is short and crisp. Jesus is raised; the
angels say to go to Galilee; there are appearances and then the Great
Commission and Jesus' ascension. All the highlights and no detail.
V. 7 Do you
remember why the meeting in Galilee was significant? It was because of the
Great Commission.
Vs. 9-20 Now,
welcome to one of the biggest problems in the New Testament. This section of
Mark doesn't seem to be in the original first edition of the Gospel of Mark. In
a nutshell, the best, earliest manuscripts don't have these verses. Also, the
Greek doesn't seem to match up in style, word usage and grammar. If you want a
fuller explanation of this, read The Bible Knowledge Commentary - NT,
pp. 193-194.
Yet, since it
has been in most of the later manuscripts and was accepted by the group of
church fathers that established the canon, we are probably safe to quote it.
Just for your information, the story of the woman caught in adultery in John 8
is a similar problem.
Also, what is
said in this ending is verified by the other Gospels. It is a little different,
but that might actually show it is authentic. I would assume that either Mark
or Peter added the ending years later. Mark's Gospel is said to be the earliest
Gospel, written sometime before 54 A.D. Maybe later in his life, Mark got tired
of people asking him why he ended the story so abruptly, and so he quickly
wrote an ending on separate paper that went with some of the manuscripts but
not with others. We can ask the Lord when we get to heaven.
On the other
hand, if this is one of the most severe NT textual problems, it's really
nothing at all. Everything written here is validated by the other Gospels.
Vs. 9-11 This
is exactly what we find in the other Gospels, especially the doubt of the
eleven.
V. 12 Mark
alludes to the guys on the road to Emmaus. Luke will give the rest of the
story.
Vs. 15-16 Jesus
says, Whoever believes and is baptized
will be saved, but whoever does not believe will be condemned. The message
went out first to Jerusalem. Baptism wasn't necessary for salvation, but it did
supply a visual proof of true faith. Peter will say something similar to this
in 50 days when 3000 people will claim allegiance through baptism. In doing
this these Jews would be proclaiming the name of Jesus, whom some of them had
denounced, and whose name was a cause for them to be thrown out of the
synagogues in Jerusalem. Baptism has always been symbolic of death with Christ
and our public identification with Him, the coming King. It has never been
necessary for salvation. Notice also on the negative side of that verse, not
believing is the only cause of condemnation. Baptism doesn't save, but in that
culture, it sure did show who was really a disciple.
Vs. 17-18
Notice the accompanying signs. Then notice the key to this in v. 20. The signs
confirmed the message. These men had no Bible to point to like we do. How the
signs substantiated their word is easy to see in Acts.
I'm not wanting
to be divisive here, but just making an observation. Today, it is politically
incorrect to disagree with the statement, "all the gifts seen in the book
of Acts are normative for today and are still in use." I don't buy that.
To say that God can still do these things is fine. But the special nature of
the formation of the church, like the formation of the nation of Israel in the
OT, has to be given some honest evaluation.
Do we have
people getting snakebites and still living all the time? Is there anyone today,
whose shadow falling across a sick man heals him? Can God still do this? Yes.
Does God give any of us that ability? No. The time of the formation of Israel
and the formation of the church were very special times. God used wonders and
special exceptions to how things normally go. For example, in Acts you see
people who have accepted Christ but hadn't yet received the Spirit, until Jews
from Jerusalem showed up to lay hands on them. God did this so that the Jews
could see that Samaritans were being given the Spirit. It was a special visual
aid to help the Jewish Christians, at that time, get over their racial
prejudice. I think that was only for that time, not now.
Psalm 55
The intro to
this psalm says, "with stringed instruments." It should read,
"with stressed instruments." J
David is
expressing a deep sense of betrayal here. Some think that this might have to do
with Absalom's rebellion and Ahithophel's betrayal. Maybe. But David was a
son-in-law of King Saul and had many friends in the palace. Everyone David knew
who was close to Saul, except Jonathan, betrayed David. Either situation would
fit. My personal feeling is that I don't think David wrote too much after he
hurt himself with Bathsheba.
Vs. 1-8 When we
read this we need to remember that God is OK with our needs, our weaknesses and
our sufferings. It doesn't mean we have sinned or are far from Him. This is
what God uses to draw us to Him. He wants us to cry out. He let David go
through this, so it could be expressed to us.
Vs. 9-15 In
this betrayal, there is a connection to Jesus being betrayed by someone close
to Him. When you see Jesus at the Passover supper, He is saddened because of
Judas. Jesus doesn't express Himself quite like this, but He does warn Judas
that he would wish he were never born if he betrayed Him.
Vs. 16-19 This
is what God was teaching David. This is what He teaches us also. We need Him
more than we know. My heart is encouraged with these verses saying that we can
cry to the Lord and He will hear us.
Vs. 20-21 When
we are suffering because of others and they seem to be prospering, that makes
it doubly hard to go on. But as disciples we have the harvest and a Savior to
follow. We need to focus on Him and His work and leave the rest to Him.
V. 22 says it
all. This is the verse that Peter used for 1 Peter 5:7, and that's probably
where Psalty, the singing songbook, got the song, “I Cast All My Cares Upon
You.” If you know that song, I'll bet you wondered where it originated.
Proverbs 11:7
Just a couple
things to say here.
First, the hope
of the person without God doesn't take into consideration that our 70 years on
earth are like walking into the entry of a building. This is not all of
reality. He can't see beyond this little place called earth, and he has no
hope, beyond what he can buy and enjoy. Our hope is in the Lord and our
treasure is in heaven. The question for us as disciples is, "Are we
willing to forgo heaven on earth for the sake of the Lord and the harvest and
heaven?" That is where we can chill.
Second, the
word "wealth" can also be translated "strength." I think
the NIV has the best translation, When a
wicked man dies, his hope perishes; all he expected from his power comes to
nothing.
This verse has
good parallelism and it is true. Men hope their power and accomplishments will
somehow translate into getting position or blessing in heaven. Alexander Dumas
(The Count of Monte Cristo) said that if he got to heaven and found that
he was out of step, he would just tell them a little story and perhaps it would
open doors for him in heaven as it did for him on earth. Harry Houdini said he
would find a way out of the afterlife, just like he found ways out of things
here on earth. We haven't seen Harry since he died, and I doubt Alexander is
telling anyone stories where he is.
If you’re reading along and don’t have a One
Year Bible, click on this link http://oneyearbibleonline.com/weekly-one-year-readings/?version=47&startmmdd=0101. This version is set to the ESV but you can reset this to a different
version or different language.I'm writing these comments to and for those who are following a One Year Bible and interested in growing deeper as a disciple, following Jesus in the harvest. My hope is to see the growth of a discipleship culture in the church. Groups of 3-4 disciples, meeting weekly, encouraging each other to follow Christ and work to reach out and make disciples who make disciples. The Bible itself is the most universal manual we have and key to our growth and service in Christ. Nothing keeps us more focused on why we are here or what we are to be doing. My comments are only meant to provide some explanation of the events or to show the flow of God's plan of redemption. My comments are in no way exhaustive, but are designed to keep us focused on Christ and our role in His harvest. My hope is that the people in these groups will grow in Christ and be willing, after a year, to find 3 others to meet with and encourage in their growth as disciples, disciples making disciples in the harvest.
If you would like a complete description of this model of being and making disciples you can find it in my book: Simply Disciples*Making Disciples. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B011WJIDQA?*Version*=1&*entries*=0
If you would like a more descriptive commentary that is still readable and concise, I'd recommend the Bible Knowledge Commentary. It's keyed to the NIV, so the result is the commentators are constantly telling you what the Greek or Hebrew is. That never hurts.
I am not endorsing any particular One Year Bible; in fact, I read something you don't, die revidierte Lutherbibel 1984.
Anyone reading along with us is welcome to do so and is encouraged to take their own notes and make their own observations. If the comments made do not agree with your particular tradition or understanding, that's OK. Nothing I've written is meant to criticize any point of view, but only to express the truth of what God has written to us, as I understand it. Send comments or feedback to dgkachikis@gmail.com.
If you would like documents containing an entire month of the Reading Notes, go to https://sites.google.com/site/dlkachikis/reading-notes. You can download these to use on your computer or to print.
No comments:
Post a Comment