Is it too small a thing? (Numbers 16)
Are you content? Do you ever feel jealous of other
people? Are you striving to prove
yourself?
Maybe you have a brother
of sister who is considered more successful than you are. Maybe you have been passed over for promotion. Maybe you wish you were born in a different
family.
I would like to be
taller. I would like to be good at
sports. I am not very academic.
When I was in my early
twenties my pastor gave me a verse he felt I needed to take to heart. ‘Godliness with contentment is great gain’ (1
Timothy 6:6). I was talking to a friend
about contentment and he said that he likes the verse in the book of
Ecclesiastes that goes, ‘what is lacking cannot be counted’ (1:15). Once you start to think about all those things
you lack you will never reach an end point.
In this passage we see a
group of people who feel disappointed with God.
1.
People with too high a view of themselves
Two groups of people rise
up against the leadership of Moses and Aaron.
They were Korah, who was a Levite, but not a priest, and Dathan, Abiram
and On who were from the tribe of Reuben.
Along with them come two hundred and fifty community leaders. They complain against Moses and Aaron, ‘You have gone too far! For all in this congregation are holy, every
one of them, and the LORD is among them.
Why then do you exalt yourselves above the assembly of the LORD?’ When Moses heard it he fell on his face (3-4).
Their complaint says more
about themselves that about Moses. We
have already been told that Moses was the humblest man on the face of the earth
(12:3). I think they are projecting on
Moses what is true about themselves.
They are the ones seeking to be exalted!
A look at the location of
the people around the tabernacle helps us understand more about these two
groups. Korah is a Kohathite, who
ministered as Levites on the southside of the tabernacle. The tribe of Reuben was situated near them,
also on the southside. The east was
considered the most important place.
After that prominence went clockwise.
Both these groups are given prominent positions just below the top tier
of their society. But that is not enough
for them. They are jealous of anyone
above them.
We follow a very
different sort of man then these. Jesus
did not push for prominence. Jesus was pleased to wash His disciples’ feet. We are called to follow His example, and
gladly consider others more significant than ourselves. Rather than pushing for places of greater
prominence we are to be looking out for those that no one seems to notice and
be willing to associate with those the world looks down on.
Moses looks at that
privileged south-sider, Korah, and asks, ‘is it too small a thing for you that
the God of Israel has separated you from the congregation of Israel, to bring
you near to himself, to do service in the tabernacle of the Lord and to minster
to them, and that he has brought you near him … and you would seek the
priesthood also?’ (9-10). Korah mightn’t
have been among the priests, but he had been given the wonderful privilege of
ministering in the tabernacle and to God’s people.
I took these verses and
wrote something like this in the front of my Bible: ‘is it too small a thing
that God has made husband to Caroline, father to Anya, Ronan and Sian, that you
are called to pastor of Limerick Baptist Church, and yet you would seek to be
made more of?’
You might not be content
with the way that God has made you and the roles He has given you. You might want to be in an easier
family. You might want the brains, looks
or talents of someone else. But maybe
God wants to ask, ‘is it too small a thing that I have embraced you in My love,
forgiven your guilt and removed your shame, that I call you “beloved”, that I
promise never to leave you or forsake you, that I hold you in the palm of my
hand, that I have commissioned you as an ambassador of Christ? Do you demand that people make more of you
when I have made so much of you?’
2.
People with too low a view of God
Moses suggests that they
all approach the tabernacle and offer incense—a task that was reserved for the
priests. They have too small a view of
God. They do not realise that He dwells
in unapproachable light and is a consuming fire. They do not realise that they need the
priests to stand between themselves and God!
As Christians we know that we that we can approach the throne of grace
with confidence because we have a great High Priest, Jesus Christ!
Dathan and Abiram echo
Moses words. ‘Is it a small thing that
you have brought us up out of a land flowing with milk and honey flowing with
milk and honey, to kill us in the wilderness, that you must make yourself a
prince over us? Moreover, you have not
brought us into the land flowing with milk and honey, nor given us an
inheritance of fields and vineyards.
Will you put out the eyes of these men?
We will not come up’ (12-14). ‘Will
you put out the eyes of these men?’ seems to be an idiom saying something like,
‘you are pulling the wool over their eyes.’
But it wasn’t Moses who
brought them out of Egypt, it was God.
Egypt was not a land flowing with milk and honey, it was slavery. They hadn’t inherited vineyards and fields
because they had refused to trust God and enter the Canaan. They claim Moses was harsh and took advantage
of them, which was simply not true. The
truth is that when we get bitter it is not long before we lose our sense of
perspective. As we ruminate we start to
attribute false motives to people.
Ultimately, their view of reality is shaped by the fact that they
despise God (30).
Those who approached God
without the ministry of the priests paid a high price for their low view of
Him. They failed to recognise that He is
holy and we are sinful. They were burned
with a holy fire and the ground opened up and swallowed two hundred and fifty
of those associated with them.
A friend told Caroline
that she had given up on God. She has
been interested in spiritual things, but feels let down by Him. Isn’t it presumptuous that we judge God and
decide whether He is worthy of our allegiance?
They real wonder for the Christian is that God has not given up on
us!
Conclusion
While the line of Dathan,
Abiram and On came to an end, when we look at the census later in the book of
Numbers we see that some of the descendants were spared (26:11). How could that be? It must be that some of Korah’s family
repented and distanced themselves from his rebellion (Duguid). They changed sides and sided with Moses and
Aaron. You may come from a family that
has shown no real interest in Christianity for generations, but you can change
sides. In fact, it gets better. Turn to the title of Psalm 42 and you will
see that the descendants of Korah become musicians and worship leaders who
wrote at least eleven of the Psalms. God
still had great plans for the descendants of that wicked man Korah! He has plans for all those who love Him! Let us be content with how He has made and
what He has called us to do!