Do you desire to
be a leader Dr.
Jack L. Arnold
Lesson 15
Moses
Disobeys God
Numbers 20:1-13
Do
you desire to be a leader in some capacity in Christendom? Perhaps you aspire
to becoming an elder or a deacon in the local church. You may want to be a part
of the missions committee or the school board. You may sense that your
leadership desires are in the area of Sunday school teaching, womenÕs
ministries, leading a home Bible class, or being a teacher in a Christian
school. Whatever leadership position God may give you, large or small, Numbers
20 has something to say to you.
Those
who are placed in positions of leadership are more accountable to God for how
well they lead Christians. The Bible teaches that with much light comes much
responsibility, and with responsibility comes the greater discipline from God.
Numbers 20 tells us what happens falls into unbelief and disobeys God.
This chapter, in my opinion, is one of the saddest and most sobering passages
in all of Scripture, and it should strike fear into all who are in any position
of leadership in Christendom.
FORMING
A NEW GENERATION - Numbers 20:1
ÒThen
the sons of Israel, the whole congregation, came to the wilderness of Zin in
the first month; and the people stayed at Kadesh.Ó This event took place in the fortieth
year of IsraelÕs wanderings.
Thirty-eight years before this event, Israel, after being delivered from
Egypt and being tested in the desert to prepare them for war and to trust God,
came at that time to Kadesh-barnea, which was on the border of Canaan, the
Promised Land. That generation of
Jews refused to believe God, disobeying GodÕs promises, and they failed because
of unbelief to enter the Promised Land.
God then told Moses to send the Israelites back out into the desert
where they would roam aimlessly for thirty-eight years, waiting for that adult
generation of unbelieving Jews to die off. Because of their rebellion at Kadesh-barnea, that older
generation carried, as it were, its sentence of death back into the desert until
those long, tiring and aimless years were completed. But Numbers 20 tells us
that once more a new generation (those twenty and under at the time of the
rebellion and those born since the rebellion) was again at Kadesh, which is
probably a reference to Kadesh-barnea. From the very spot where the older
generation had miserably failed God thirty-eight years before, God now makes a
fresh start with a new generation. God is faithful to His purpose. If GodÕs
directive will for Israel was interrupted, it was by manÕs unbelief and rebellion,
not by failure on GodÕs part. When God resumed His work, it was exactly
where it had been broken off.
This was a new, fresh, and virgin generation and the
expectancy for them to believe Jehovah was very high, but what we are
going to find is more unbelief just like their fathers.
ÒNow Miriam died there and was buried.Ó The last
of the older generation was dying out. Apparently all had died but Miriam,
Moses, Aaron, Joshua, and Caleb. These were all holdovers from the older
generation, and only Joshua and Caleb were promised entrance into the land.
Miriam, who hid Moses in the bulrushes (Ex. 2:4), who was a prophetess in
Israel, and who praised and danced before God after the crossing of the Red
Sea, died like all the rest of the unbelieving Jews in the desert. Why did she
not get to enter the land? She at one time had entered into a plot against
Moses (Num. 12:1) and had failed to believe God when it was time to enter the
land. Miriam, a true believer, died and went to heaven, but she never saw the
Promised Land. She was disciplined for her unbelief.
FAILURE OF THE NEW GENERATION - Numbers 20:2-5
ÒAnd there was no water for the congregation; and they
assembled themselves against Moses and Aaron.Ó This was
a new, untested generation who had to learn afresh the ways of Jehovah-God.
While in the desert for thirty-eight years, probably much, if not all, water
was supplied by supernatural means. As this new generation of at least two
million Jews gathered in the one area of Kadesh, there would be a water
shortage. This new generation would be tested just as the older generation was
tested at Rephidim (Ex. 17). This young, new generation knew of the wonders of
the Lord by hearing only, not by sight, but now they too would be tested, as
were their fathers. There was no water, and instead of trusting the Lord and
casting all their cares on Him so as to experience the peace that passes all
understanding, they revolted in unbelief. They faced a crisis situation and
failed to believe God.
ÒThe people thus contended with Moses and spoke,
saying, ÔIf only we had perished when our brothers perished before the LORD!ÕÓ When
these Jews faced this crisis of no water, it seemed as though the prospect of
entering the land was hopeless, and they were destined to suffer the same fate
as their fathers. They complained that divine justice should have taken their
lives in the wilderness like it did the older generation of Jews. These Jews
lost all perspective, for instead of giving thanks for deliverance from Egypt
and divine protection for forty years, they wanted to die. Unbelief that gives
way to fear always causes one to take his eyes off the Lord and put them on
circumstances. The result is always to put eyes on self and great self-pity
obsesses oneÕs thinking and one says, ÒI wish I was dead!Ó
ÒWhy then have you brought the LORDÕS assembly into
this wilderness for us and our beast to die here?Ó Their
thinking was all jumbled up because they were looking at life from a human
viewpoint. In one breath they said, ÒWe want to die as our fathers in the
wilderness,Ó and in the next breath they said, ÒYou, Moses, brought us out into
the wilderness to die, and we donÕt want to die.Ó
ÒAnd why have you made us come up from Egypt, to bring
us in to this wretched place? It is not a place of grain or figs or vines or
pomegranates, nor is there water to drink.Ó So out
of fellowship were these Jews that they called the promised
land which was flowing with milk and honey, a Òwretched placeÓ or an Òevil
place.Ó This new generation wanted to go back to Egypt because they had
forgotten what God had done for their fathers and for them. They despaired of
any success and wanted to give up and go back to Egypt. They preferred slavery
to liberty and the house of bondage to the land of promise. When believers get
out of fellowship the old, unsaved life always looks better than it
actually is.
Where did this new generation get this complaining
spirit so that they would call the Promised Land a wretched place? Was it just
that they had an evil heart? No, they did have a depraved heart, but many of
their attitudes were learned from their parents who died in the wilderness
because of their complaining, griping, and unbelief. That older generation
griped, complained, moaned, and groaned for forty years, and this new
generation followed the example of their parents. Negative, critical, and
bitter spirits are not genetically inherited but are environmentally received,
and the sinful heart basks in a negative way of life. Behavior is so much a
matter of acquired habits. These children learned to complain in their homes.
They learned defeatism from their parents. ParentsÕ values and attitudes are
transferred to children who have a depraved mind and heart. If positive
attitudes of parents are communicated to children, then this will restrain sin
and cause a positive response. If negative attitudes are communicated, then
this will feed the sin nature already inherent in children, and they may well
be more negative and critical than their parents. For instance, if parents are
materialistic in spirit, then this may well show up in a double portion in
children because the sinful heart is ready to pick up on anything that feeds
the flesh. All Christian parents must realize that children are going to
respond more to what parents are and do than what they say. A positive life for
Christ by parents is worth ten thousand words in affecting our children for
Christ.
FAILURE OF MOSES - Numbers 20:6-11
ÒThen Moses and Aaron came in from the presence of the
assembly to the doorway of the tent of meeting, and fell on their faces. Then
the glory of the LORD appeared to them . . .Ó Moses and Aaron said nothing but fell on their faces before God in prayer.
Surely they were making groaning that cannot be uttered, patiently waiting for
God to give them orders. They knew they could never calm this angry crowd so
they turned the mob over to the Lord.
ÒÉAnd
the Lord spoke to Moses saying, ÔTake the rod; and you and your brother Aaron
assemble the congregation and speak to the rock before their eyes, that it may
yield water. You shall thus bring forth water for them out of the rock and let
the congregation and their beasts drink.ÕÓ Moses was told specifically that he was to speak to the rock.
Thirty-eight years before this time at Rephidim (Ex. 17) under similar
circumstances God told Moses to strike the rock, but here he is only to speak
to the rock.
ÒSo Moses took the rod from before the LORD, just as
He had commanded him; and Moses and Aaron gathered the assembly before the
rock. And he said to them, ÔListen now, you rebels; shall we bring forth water
for you out of this rock?ÕÓ Moses was told to speak to the rock but
instead he spoke to the people. Moses was disgusted with the Jews. He became
angry. He had just gotten rid of one generation of rebels and now he inherited
another. Moses probably sighed and said, ÒHere we go again!Ó This was too much
for Moses. Moses and Aaron were weary, worn pilgrims and they were tired of
fighting the rebels. Moses was battle fatigued and idealistically was hoping
for a time of relief from hand-to-hand combat with rebels in this new
generation. Moses also had another problem. He began to feel his own importance
to GodÕs work, forgetting he was but a servant and instrument of God. He
said, ÒShall we bring forth water for you?Ó Moses could do no miracles.
God did the miracles, but Moses began to think himself more important to the
plan of God than he actually was, for God could take the people into the land
without him.
ÒThen Moses lifted up his hand and struck the rock
twice with his rod; and water came forth abundantly, and the congregation and
their beasts drank.Ó Moses, discouraged, fatigued and
embittered, became sinfully angry and struck the rock twice and did not speak
to it as God had commanded. Surely Moses had reason to get angry, but he was
the leader in Israel and was held responsible to keep his cool. Dissatisfied
people, unhappy people, always hammer away at leadership. It is a constant
phenomenon that rarely lets up, and it can become most trying to the nerves of
a leader. Moses was disobedient to the direct command of God, for God said to
speak and he struck the rock.
This shows us how important it is to follow GodÕs
commands in every detail. When God said, ÒSpeak,Ó He meant speak, and to
willfully violate GodÕs command is a serious matter. GodÕs Word is sure,
accurate, true, and authoritative, and is to be obeyed. Moses simply did not
feel like doing what God told him to do, and he gave way to his own passions.
Moses was determined to do it his own way and he paid a heavy price for his
disobedience. This may have been the only time in Moses leadership over Israel
that he gave way to his feelings, but it cost him dearly. This whole incident
seems very trite and insignificant by modern-day standards, but it is a serious
matter to disobey God.
Moses was a leader, a mature believer, yet he failed
to follow instructions. Being the most mature believer in all of Israel,
God expected more from him. A less mature believer in Israel may have gotten
away with this kind of disobedience (at least there would have been a lesser
discipline) but not Moses. God held him more responsible. Moses, being a
leader, received a double portion of discipline for his actions. ÒLet not
many of you become teachers, my brethren, knowing that as such we shall incur a
stricter judgmentÓ (James 3:1).
Notice carefully that water came out from the rock in
spite of MosesÕ disobedience. Why? Because God did not want to embarrass
Moses in front of the people so as to cause them to lose respect for him. God
graciously gave the water and He would discipline Moses, but He disciplined
Moses in private. The principle here is that leadership is primarily to be
disciplined in private and not in public. Moses still had to lead the people
and have authority over them even though it would only be for a short while
longer.
FRIGHTFUL DECISION OF GOD AGAINST MOSES
AND AARON—Numbers 20:12-13
ÒBut the LORD said to Moses and Aaron, ÔBecause you
have not believed Me, to treat Me as holy in the sight of the sons of Israel,
therefore you shall not bring this assembly into the land which I have given
them.ÕÓ Moses and Aaron had a deeper problem
than just disobeying GodÕs explicit command to speak to the rock. Their real
problem was that they failed to believe God. Their confidence, trust, and faith
were shaken by unbelief so that they, in their own way, became like the
children of Israel. They failed in their unbelief to treat God as holy or
separate; that is, they failed to glorify God in their actions before the
nation of Israel. Moses and Aaron both fell into the same sin as the sons of
Israel, only in a different direction. The people despaired of success by
rebelling in unbelief against leadership, feeling that they could never
get into the Promised Land with Moses and Aaron as their leaders. On the other
hand, Moses and Aaron also despaired of success and rebelled in unbelief
against the people. Moses and Aaron came to the place where they were convinced
that God would never let these rebellious Jews into the land. In both cases, it
was unbelief. Israel failed as the people of God. Aaron failed as the high
priest, and Moses failed as the mediator for the people. Moses, for the first
time, staggered at the promise of God, and for his unbelief he was forbidden to
go into Canaan, the land of promise. Both Moses and Aaron were left to die in
the wilderness, Aaron at Mount Hor and Moses at Mount Nebo. Moses was put on
the shelf because, as a leader, he sinned against God. This was a clear case of
Moses, a true believer, whose ministry was shortened and his physical life
taken because of the sin of unbelief. Moses lost his life but not his soul. God
has promised salvation to all true believers and He is true to His
covenant.
ÒAll that the Father gives Me shall come to Me; and the one who comes to Me I will
certainly not cast outÓ (John
6:37).
ÒMy sheep hear My
voice, and I know them, and they follow Me; and I give eternal life to them;
and they shall never perish, and no one shall snatch them out of My hand. My
Father, who has given them to Me, is greater than all; and no one is able to
snatch them out of the FatherÕs handÓ (John 10:27-29).
Yet God must discipline His own children in loving
kindness.
This incident in MosesÕ life shows us that even though
he was the most meek and humble man on the face of the earth, yet under stress,
he gave way to his passions. The lesson for us is ÒWherefore let him that
thinks he stands take heed lest he fall.Ó
Another lesson for us to learn is that God does not
judge sin as man would. It seems to us that the punishment did not fit the
crime, but God holds high standards for His people in leadership. The closer a
person is to Christ, the more spiritually mature a person is in Christ, the
more God is grieved by his sins.
Lastly, this incident shows that God does discipline
even the highest servants because He hates sin. Yet, He always disciplines the
believer out of love and not wrath, for He is a loving Heavenly Father.
ÒÉAnd you have forgotten the exhortation
which is addressed to you as sons, ÔMY SON, DO NOT REGARD LIGHTLY THE
DISCIPLINE OF THE LORD, NOR FAINT WHEN YOU ARE REPROVED BY HIM: FOR THOSE WHOM
THE LORD LOVES HE DISCIPLINES, AND HE SCOURGES EVERY SON WHOM HE RECEIVES.Õ It
is for discipline that you endure; God deals with you as with sons; for what
son is there whom his father does not discipline? But if you are without
discipline, of which all have become partakers, then you are illegitimate
children and not sons. Furthermore, we had earthly fathers to discipline us,
and we respected them; shall we not much rather be subject to the Father
of spirits, and live? For they disciplined us for a short time as seemed best
to them, but He disciplines us for our good, that we may share His holiness.
All discipline for the moment seems not to be joyful, but sorrowful; yet to
those who have been trained by it, afterwards it yields the peaceful fruit of
righteousnessÓ (Heb. 12:5-11).
ÒThose were the waters of Meribah, because the sons of
Israel contended with the LORD, and He proved Himself holy among them.Ó ÒMeribahÓ
means Òcontention,Ó Òstrife,Ó or Ògriping.Ó In spite of the Jews rotten
attitude, God dealt with them in grace. He gave them water when they deserved
nothing because God is a gracious, compassionate, merciful, and loving
God. ÒIf we are faithless, He remains faithful; for He cannot deny
HimselfÓ (2 Tim. 2:13). God is true to His covenant even when we are
not true to ours, for He is an immutable, unchanging God.
CONCLUSION
We see how God must deal with sin, even in the life of
a true believer, because He is a holy, righteous, and just God who hates sin.
If God was so severe with Moses, what will be His judgment against those who
reject His Son, Jesus Christ? God will judge rejecters of Jesus Christ for all
eternity. Why? Because they have no Savior to forgive their
sins and give them a righteous standing before God.
How can you escape eternal wrath against sin? Believe
in Christ. Accept Him as your Savior. Bow to Him as your
Lord. Christ died for sinners that they might have their sins forgiven,
be given a perfect standing before God, and be granted eternal life.
What
must you do if you are going to be saved? You must stop trying to work your way
to heaven and trust only in Christ for your deliverance from sin. Once it was
asked the Apostle Paul by the Philippian jailor, ÒWhat must I do to be
saved?Ó Paul did not say he was to join the church, be baptized, do
good works, be confirmed or turn over a new leaf. Paul said, ÒBelieve on
the Lord Jesus and you shall be savedÓ (Acts 16:31).