The Hebrews had an opportunity to reflect
upon the scene that they had witnessed in the visitation of God's
wrath upon the most prominent ones in this great rebellion. The
goodness and mercy of God were displayed in not completely exterminating
this ungrateful people when His wrath was kindled against the
most responsible ones. He gave the congregation who had permitted
themselves to be deceived, space for repentance. The fact that
the Lord, their invisible Leader, showed so much long-suffering
and mercy in this instance is distinctly recorded as evidence
of His willingness to forgive the most grievous offenders when
they have a sense of their sin and return unto Him with repentance
and humiliation. The congregation had been arrested in their
presumptuous course by the display of the Lord's vengeance; but
they were not convinced that they were great sinners against
Him, deserving His wrath for their rebellious course.
It is hardly possible for men to offer
a greater insult to God than to despise and reject the instrumentalities
that He has appointed to lead them. They had not only done this,
but had purposed to put both Moses and Aaron to death. These
men fled from the tents of Korah,
Dathan, and Abiram through fear of destruction; but their rebellion
was not cured. They were not in grief and despair because of
their guilt. They felt not the effect of an awakened, convicted
conscience because they had abused their most precious privileges
and sinned against light and knowledge. We may here learn precious
lessons of the long-suffering of Jesus, the Angel who went before
the Hebrews in the wilderness.
Their invisible Leader would save them
from a disgraceful destruction. Forgiveness lingers for them.
It is possible for them to find pardon if they will even now
repent. The vengeance of God has now come near to them and appealed
to them to repent. A special, irresistible interference from
heaven has arrested their presumptuous rebellion. If they now
respond to the interposition of God's providence they may be
saved. But the repentance and humiliation of the congregation
must be proportionate to their transgression. The revelation
of the signal power of God has placed them beyond uncertainty.
They may have a knowledge of the true position and holy calling
of Moses and Aaron if they will accept it. But their neglect
to regard the evidences that God had given them was fatal. They
did not realize the importance of immediate action on their part
to seek pardon of God for their grievous sins.
That night of probation to the Hebrews
was not passed by them in confessing and repenting of their sins,
but in devising some way to resist the evidences which showed
them to be the greatest of sinners. They still cherished their
jealous hatred of the men of God's appointment and strengthened
themselves in their mad course of resisting the authority of
Moses and Aaron. Satan was at hand to pervert the judgment and
lead them blindfolded to destruction. Their minds had been most
thoroughly poisoned with disaffection, and they had the matter
fixed beyond a question in their minds that Moses and Aaron were
wicked men, and that they were responsible for the death of Korah,
Dathan, and Abiram, who they thought
would have been the saviors of the Hebrews by bringing in a better
order of things, where praise would take the place of reproof,
and peace the place of anxiety and conflict.
The day before, all Israel had fled in
alarm at the cry of the doomed sinners who went down into the
pit; for they said: "Lest the earth swallow us up
also." "But on the morrow all the congregation of the
children of Israel murmured against Moses and against Aaron,
saying, Ye have killed the people of the Lord." In their
indignation they were prepared to lay violent hands upon the
men of God's appointment, who they believed had done a great
wrong in killing those who were good and holy.
But the Lord's presence is manifested in
His glory over the tabernacle, and rebellious Israel are arrested
in their mad, presumptuous course. The voice of the Lord from
His terrible glory now speaks to Moses and Aaron in the same
words which they were the day before commanded to address to
the congregation of Israel: "Get you up from among this
congregation, that I may consume them as in a moment."
Here we find a striking exhibition of the
blindness that will compass human minds that turn from light
and evidence. Here we see the strength of settled rebellion,
and how difficult it is to be subdued. Surely the Hebrews had
had the most convincing evidence in the destruction of the men
who had deceived them; but they still stood forth boldly and
defiantly, and accused Moses and Aaron of killing good and holy
men. "For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness
is as iniquity and idolatry."
Moses did not feel the guilt of sin and
did not hasten away at the word of the Lord and leave the congregation
to perish, as the Hebrews had fled from the tents of Korah, Dathan,
and Abiram the day before. Moses lingered; for he could not consent
to give up all that vast multitude to perish, although he knew
that they deserved the vengeance of God for their persistent
rebellion. He prostrated himself before God because the
people felt no necessity for humiliation;
he mediated for them because they felt no need of interceding
in their own behalf.
Moses here typifies Christ. At this critical
time Moses manifested the True Shepherd's interest for the flock
of His care. He pleaded that the wrath of an offended God might
not utterly destroy the people of His choice. And by his intercession
he held back the arm of vengeance, that a full end was not made
of disobedient, rebellious Israel. He directed Aaron what course
to pursue in that terrible crisis when the wrath of God had gone
forth and the plague had begun. Aaron stood with his censer,
waving it before the Lord, while the intercessions of Moses ascended
with the smoke of the incense. Moses dared not cease his entreaties.
He took hold of the strength of the Angel, as did Jacob in his
wrestling, and like Jacob he prevailed. Aaron was standing between
the living and the dead when the gracious answer came: I have
heard thy prayer, I will not consume utterly. The very men whom
the congregation despised and would have put to death were the
ones to plead in their behalf that the avenging sword of God
might be sheathed and sinful Israel spared.