ADVENTURES THAT INSPIRE ACTION
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​one chapter a day

Numbers 32

4/30/2020

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At first glance, it seems harmless for the tribes of Gad and Reuben to ask that their inheritance be the land already conquered west of the Jordan River. However, Moses points out how damaging this could be.

From the original promise to Abraham, the Israelites had cherished for over 400 years the Word that said God would bring them into the Promised Land. The land the Gadites and Reubenites wanted to claim was on the threshold of that promise.

Instead of pressing on, being faithful to God's calling and pursuing His promise, they wanted to settle for what they could see and hold today. I hope that strikes home with you as hard as it does for me. How often am I content with where I am and unwilling to go the extra mile toward what God has promised? I Timothy 6:6 tells us "Now godliness combined with contentment brings great profit." But there is an immense difference between being content with where God has you for a season, and being content to remain in that place rather than press on toward God's best for you.

Moses chastises them with the warning that their complacency could discourage their brothers and sisters. He warns them that the same unwillingness to follow God wholeheartedly caused the Israelites to wander for 40 years in the wilderness and cost that entire generation, save Joshua and Caleb, the opportunity to enter the Promised Land. I wonder if Moses was especially sensitive because the incident which cost him a home in the Promised Land occurred after they had turned back because of the discouragement of the spies. Their complacency personally cost him the Promised Land.

Our complacency may cost us the blessings God promised.

The Israelites complained time after time, "If only we could go back to Egypt . . . ." Are we crying out, "If only we could go back to a simpler time!" But for whom was it a simpler time? Was it really a simpler time when our brothers and sisters had to have a guide to show them where they might travel safely within our country -- THEIR country? http://library.sc.edu/digital/collections/greenbook.html​

God's promise to our nation is the creed that was given to our founding fathers. "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed."

Our forefathers didn't grasp the full breadth of this promise. They didn't understand that it applied to the natives of the land that they were dispossessing and committing genocide against. They didn't recognize that it applied to the Africans that they were importing and enslaving. And they didn't realize that it applied to "mankind" and not only men.

We understand that now -- at least most of us do. We can't be complacent and settle for the status quo where we have not yet entered the Promised Land. We all miss out on the blessing of God when we settle for what we have today instead of marching forward, united with our brothers and sisters.

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Numbers 31

4/29/2020

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It's always difficult to read the accounts of battle in the Old Testament. The brutality of the period is hard for us to understand, and even harder to reconcile with the loving mercy of God we know as followers of Christ. But God does not change, and there are important lessons from the battles fought by the Israelites that are relevant in a spiritual sense for us today.​

Sometimes the most dangerous attacks are not military ones. They are spiritual attacks. They come in attractive disguise - sex, money, fame, even peace. But the cost is abandoning God's Will and His purpose for our lives. Often our first "ante up" is so small, we don't recognize it for what it is. It's a white lie. A little peek. An extra bite. A rush of pride.

It doesn't overtake us immediately. Instead, it grows slowly. And we inevitably feed it well. At times we may notice that it is growing. We might even lock it in a closet and try to starve it for a while.

Then we miss it. We think maybe it wasn't all that bad after all. We crack the door to see how it is fairing.

Out it lunges with a terrifying leap, knocking us on our back.

Too late we realize we are at the mercy of the sin that seemed so harmless . . . like an attractive Midianite woman wandering into the camp of the Israelites.

It seems harsh to us to reflect on the vengeance taken against the Midianites, but it was God's mercy on the Israelites to destroy anything that would lead them back into sin. God calls us to apply this spiritually in our own life. We aren't called to take vengeance on other people, but to reflect on the sin we've allowed in our life and to take no prisoners. Fighting this battle in our own life leaves little time for pointing out sin in others. Or maybe that's just me?

As believers in Christ, we are free from the death our sin rightly deserves. Christ paid that debt for us. But we are not free of the lure or the consequences of sin in our lives. We choose each day, as the Holy Spirit convicts us of sin and of righteousness, whether we will obey God or not.

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Numbers 30

4/28/2020

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For modern women, a chapter that requires an unmarried woman's vow to be ratified by her father and a married woman's vow to be ratified by her husband goes against our grain. Like the verses in Ephesians that call for wives to submit to their husbands, it flies in the face of our modern understanding of equality.​

But our defensiveness against this concept isn't based in a full understanding of God's Word. Throughout Scripture, God assigns roles to various individuals, people groups, and nations. As Creator, God has the ultimate authority to determine our purpose and calling. Rebelling against God's plan for our lives is the root of the various first sin, and the root of every sin of every person since Adam and Eve. Sin is, at the heart, a belief that we know better than God.

When God assigns a role of authority, accountability comes with it. By assigning the role of headship in the family to the husband or father, God also lays on him the burden and responsibility for the family. He will be held responsible by God for their provision, protection, and leadership - especially spiritual leadership. God also will hold accountable all those He places in a leadership role in business, in government, and in the church. As Uncle Ben from Spiderman so aptly states, "With great power comes great responsibility."

Requiring the father's or husband's active or passive approval of their daughter's or wife's vow placed the responsibility on him to see the vow carried out, and the consequences were his if it was not. This sheds new light on the tradition of the father giving his daughter's hand in marriage. In essence, he is affirming her vow and committing himself to be accountable for her to fulfill the marriage vows.

Hebrews 13:17 states, "Have confidence in your leaders and submit to their authority, because they keep watch over you as those who must give an account. Do this so that their work will be a joy, not a burden, for that would be of no benefit to you."

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Numbers 29

4/27/2020

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The sacrifices described here for the Feast of Trumpets, the Day of Atonement, and the Feast of Tabernacles required a total of 1,086 lambs, 113 bulls, 32 rams, more than a ton of flour, and some 1,000 bottles of oil and wine. These were only the sacrifices made on behalf of the nation of Israel as a whole; they did not include individual sacrifices by Israelites for their own sin or fellowship offerings.​

For each of these times, they were to hold a sacred assembly, but for the Day of Atonement, it was not a day of celebration. It was a day of national remembrance of their sin. A day to somberly consider both their personal sins and the sins they committed collectively as a nation.

God calls us also to reflect on our personal and national sins, especially in times like these. We are called to repent of the acts of violence committed against our brothers and sisters by our nation as well as our complicity when we remain silent in the face of injustice. God wisely instructed the Israelites to dedicate a day to reflect on their lives, to turn away from their previous ways, and to follow Him.

We must acknowledge that we, as a nation, have failed to live up to the God-given creed that "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness." Perhaps if we will reflect on our nation's failures as thoughtfully as we celebrate our achievements we would understand the need for healing and reconciliation. If we consider our own personal shortcomings in our treatment of one another, and seek forgiveness, we can move toward peace.

The plethora of sacrifices offered by the Israelites did not remove their sin, but simply pointed to the One who would, finally, cleanse them of sin. For those who live in the light of Christ's sacrifice for us, we must remember His calling on our lives in Matthew 22:37-40 when He was asked what the Greatest Commandment is: "Jesus replied: “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.”

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Numbers 28

4/26/2020

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This chapter recounts all the various sacrifices that are to be made daily, weekly, monthly, or annually. It's significant that sacrifices were made each day, twice a day, first thing in the morning and last thing in the evening. This stresses the idea of beginning and ending our day with the awareness of our need for God, and especially, for atonement.

The monthly sacrifices described here devolved into the New Moon feasts God later rejected in Isaiah 1:13-14:

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13"Stop bringing meaningless offerings!
    Your incense is detestable to me.
New Moons, Sabbaths and convocations--
    I cannot bear your worthless assemblies.
14 Your New Moon feasts and your appointed festivals
    I hate with all my being.
They have become a burden to me;
    I am weary of bearing them."

God rejected the sacrifices He had commanded because they had become empty ritual. Instead of rending their hearts and turning from sin, the people treated the sacrifices as if they were a license to sin. The feasts that were intended to celebrate the goodness and generosity of God had become opportunities for debauchery and self-indulgence.

When we gather to worship, do we focus on repenting from the sin that impedes our fellowship with God or on where we are going for Sunday lunch? Do we treat lightly the sacrifice that God made once and for all to put an end to sin? God detested the mockery the Israelites made of the sacrifice of lambs and bulls. What will His wrath be toward those who mock the sacrifice of His Son by continuing to indulge in the sin that He died to free them from?

We are not perfect, and even after the blood of Christ has been applied for our salvation, we will still sin. Turning from sin is not about gaining perfection, but recognizing the price that was paid for our forgiveness.

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Numbers 27

4/25/2020

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In the time period in which it took place, in a patriarchal society, this chapter was revolutionary. Moses presents the issue of five daughters who are the only surviving descendants of their father to the Lord, and God directs that they should receive their father's inheritance. ​

Today, in Yemen, 52% of women are given in marriage before age 18. In Honduras, a woman is killed every 18 hours on average and 90% of the perpetrators get off with no punishment. In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, over 60% of women age 15-49 have experienced violence or sexual assault, half of them within the past year, and many at the hands of military personnel as a form of terrorism to force citizens to submit to their rule. In Egypt, 80% of women undergo female genital mutilation, and there are no laws to protect women from domestic violence. In Saudi Arabia, women cannot drive or go out in public without a male relative as a chaperone.
(https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/worst-places-woman-yemen-congo-saudi-arabia/)

Just as all nations, tribes, and people groups were created in the image of God and are equal in God's love as well as in His judgment for sin, so men and women are equal in God's sight. God has assigned varying roles, as the New Testament describes the church as the body of Christ, one is called to be a hand and another a foot. Yet all must work together to achieve God's purpose for the body. One role is not superior to another, just as one ethnicity or one gender is not superior to another.

Our pastor mentioned God's choice of Israel this morning and said, (paraphrased) "God did not choose them because they were superior. He chose them especially because they were so weak and powerless, so that all the nations might be blessed through them, because all the nations who saw what God did through Israel would know that it was not in Israel's strength, but in God's power."

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Numbers 26

4/24/2020

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Chapters with a census or genealogy can seem pretty dry, but there is always an important lesson hiding behind the repetition and unpronounceable names. The zinger in this chapter comes in the final two sentences: "Not one of them was among those counted by Moses and Aaron the priest when they counted the Israelites in the Desert of Sinai. For the Lord had told those Israelites they would surely die in the wilderness, and not one of them was left except Caleb son of Jephunneh and Joshua son of Nun."​

The total count when we drew our cross in the sand was 603,450, the final count now is 601,730. In their forty years in the wilderness, God had struck down every man over twenty years of age, the entire generation who refused to trust Him and enter the Promised Land, and He had replaced them with a new generation. At this point, Joshua, Caleb, and Moses are the only men over age sixty.

What a horrible price to pay for their lack of faith! What a hard lesson for their sons to watch played out. And what am important lesson for us to consider and apply to our lives.

If we fail to step forward boldly when God calls us, trusting NOT in our ability, skill, or knowledge, but in the One who has called us, God may choose to use someone else, the next generation, to accomplish His purpose. We may not get a second chance for Him to call us. We might not die in the desert, but we also will miss out on the incredible blessings our Father longs to give us.

Hebrews 3:15: As has just been said:

“Today, if you hear his voice,
    do not harden your hearts
    as you did in the rebellion.”

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Numbers 25

4/23/2020

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It's really important to understand this chapter in light of other references to Balaam, even though his name is not mentioned in the chapter. When we look at Numbers 31, we understand that the enticement to sin both sexually and spiritually by participating in the pagan worship practices of the Moabites was instigated by Balaam when he was unsuccessful in cursing the Israelites.

God's command for Moses to put to death the leaders illustrates a concept that is seen again with the prophet Eli and his sons. We see the value and responsibility of leadership again in the New Testament in Luke and James “From everyone who has been given much, much will be required; and from the one who has been entrusted with much, even more will be asked” (Luke 12:48b).

"Not many of you should become teachers, my brothers and sisters, because you know that we will be judged more strictly."(James 3:1).

Leaders are held to a higher standard and are held responsible for the sin they tolerate, especially because their tolerance encourages those who follow them to engage in sin.

But what if you aren't really in a position of spiritual leadership?

We all have a leadership role in one way or another. As a parent, as an older sibling, in our career, or in our marriage, we all have someone who may be looking to us as an example. Are we an example of godliness? An example of the fruit-filled Spirit?

What sin are we tolerating in our home? What sin are we condoning because we view it as entertainment on our TV or our computer?

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Numbers 24

4/22/2020

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Balaam is finally overcome by the Spirit of God and prophesies all that God has planned for Israel, ending with those who bless Israel will be blessed and those who curse Israel will themselves be cursed. Balak is naturally irritated because his whole plan has backfired and he is now the one receiving the curse he planned for Israel.

Oh, me. How often do we wish for someone to get what we think they deserve, neglecting to contemplate what we deserve? We complain that God's justice seems far off from someone who has wronged us, but ignore that His mercy is withholding the justice we deserve as well.

Balaam describes his prophecy as "the prophecy of one whose eye sees clearly, the prophecy of one who hears the words of God, who sees a vision from the Almighty, who falls prostrate, and whose eyes are opened." In fact, he uses this description of his prophecy twice - once in blessing Israel and again as he proclaims God's coming judgment through Israel on the surrounding nations.

I love that description. When we hear the words of God and understand them, when God opens our eyes, we have no other option but to fall prostrate before Him. When we understand the magnitude of who God is and how infinitesimal we are, and yet how great His love for us is, it brings us to our knees. It brings to mind Psalm 8 that says,
"When I consider your heavens,
the work of your fingers,
the moon and the stars,
which you have set in place,
what is mankind that you are mindful of them,
​human beings that you care for them?"


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Numbers 23

4/21/2020

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Have you ever felt a little like Balaam? God gives you an answer that you don't like, so you try to maneuver to a different spot, ask the question a different way in the hope of getting a different answer.​

Maybe God has called you to do something that seems impossible or uncomfortable. So you keep "praying about it" hoping that God will change His mind. Or maybe you've gotten into a relationship that you know isn't healthy. But you keep praying for God to bless the relationship, to somehow make it healthy.

Why did Balaam go with Balak when he already had God's answer? Why did he move to three different spots, offering sacrifices and trying to change God's mind?

The temptation of the reward from Balak was very great. We're faced with the same temptations. Maybe it is to do something we know is unethical in the workplace, but our boss insists we do it to keep the job. Maybe the temptation is to violate God's standards in a relationship.

We waste so much time and energy straining to get a different answer than the one God has given. All the while, we miss the blessing of simply obeying and trusting that God's answer is going to be for our best.

In the New Testament, Jude condemns those who are motivated by profit as following the error of Balaam. Instead, he urges believers to earnestly pray and follow God: (Jude 20-21) "But you, dear friends, by building yourselves up in your most holy faith and praying in the Holy Spirit, keep yourselves in God’s love as you wait for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ to bring you to eternal life."

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