Walking the dog around the neighbourhood it struck me
that most of our neighbours seem to think that God is somewhat irrelevant. But our God claims incredible things for
Himself. Our God claims the right to
give life and take it. Our God commands
all people everywhere to worship Him.
Our God says that He is the one and only God. Our God will judge all people at the end of
time, and people will be assigned to heaven or hell on the basis of their
relationship with Him. Our God is
anything but irrelevant.
Since chapter 11, the people of Israel have been grumbling
against Moses and Aaron. Behind their grumbling
lies the fact that the despise God (16:30).
God is about to put an end to their grumbling.
1. Our
God is inapproachable
As we saw last week, Korah lead a rebellion in which
he claimed all people had the right to approach God without a priest. He was saying that we do not need a priest to
stand between ourselves and God. He saw
God as approachable. But when Korah and
his followers approached God to offer incense—a task reserved for the priests—they
were burned with holy fire and swallowed up by the ground.
Eleazar the priest then took the bronze censors which
had held their incense offerings and hammered in into the alter that was in the
courtyard of the temple to remind people that only the priests could approach God
in this way. We must not be presumptuous
before God!
The last church I worked in was a Methodist church in
Richhill, County Armagh. It was a lovely
church with great people who loved the Lord.
At one stage I asked each of the small groups to feed back on what attributes
came to their mind when they thought of God.
Rightly each small group included the fact that God is love. But there was one glaring omission. No one mentioned that God is holy. We live in a time and culture that can have a
very casual attitude towards God. We
know God as friend, but sometimes forget that He is also King. It is in the New Testament that we read God
dwells in unapproachable light and that He is a consuming fire.
If you have been swallowed up in the love of Christ
and are seeking with His strength to live for His glory then you are invited to
approach the throne to find grace and mercy in your time of need. But the only reason you can approach this
throne is because you have a priest, our High Priest Jesus, who has prepared
the way for us to come before God.
2. Our
God is dangerous
You would have thought that the people would have
learned to take God seriously after watching the ground swallow up Korah and
his followers. But no, the next day they
continued their grumbling. They say to
Moses and Aaron, ‘you have killed the people of the Lord’ (16:42). It wasn’t Moses and Aaron who had sent the
holy fire and opened up the ground.
Their complaint was against God!
The Lord then appeared to Moses and Aaron saying that
He was going to consume all the people.
But Moses and Aaron fell on their faces and pleaded for them. Moses told Aaron to stand between the people
and the Lord. A plague from God had already
started to consume the people. But as
Aaron stood between the dead and the loving the plague stopped. Can you see the picture of Jesus here? Jesus stands between ourselves and the
judgement we deserve. Jesus has satisfied
the demands of justice. Without Him we
have no hope in the face of the judgement of God!
These verses portray a different understanding of God
than many in our society believe. Our God
is more dangerous than they imagine. In ‘The
Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe’, Susan is about the meet Aslan when she is
told that Aslan is a lion. ‘I’d thought
he was a man. Is he quite safe? I feel rather nervous about meeting a lion.’ ‘Safe?’, asked Mr. Beaver, ‘who said anything
about safe? Course he isn’t safe. But he’s good. He’s the king, I tell you.’ Our God is dangerous, but he is good!
One of the things that struck me about these verses is
how gracious God is to Aaron. Aaron has
the privilege of being the High Priest.
Yet, unlike our High Priest, Jesus, Aaron knew what it was to sin. After all it was Aaron who had supervised the
construction of the golden calf when Moses was up on Mount Sinai receiving the Ten
Commandments. Our holy God loves to
forgive, He loves to restore, He loves to take guilty people like you and me, wash
us and make us clean and use us in His service.
3. God
wants to bless you
I was thinking about these two chapters and I
wondered, ‘what does God think about these people?’ Think about it. At one stage He says that He is going to
consume them in His anger. They are a
wicked people. Yet, in chapter
seventeen, we see His greatest desire is actually to bless them.
In our reading we see that God moves to put an end to
their grumbling. Twelve leaders, one
from each of the twelve tribes but a staff before the ark. A staff for the tribe of Levi, with Aaron’s
name inscribed on it, is also placed there.
The staffs are left overnight, and in the morning Aaron’s staff has produced
buds, blossoms and ripe almonds. We are
probably to see that some parts were in bud, other parts in blossom and still
others had produced fruit (Wenham). This
is full of symbolism.
It demonstrates that God brings life to the dead. Aaron’s staff has been resurrected. The Christian message is one of
resurrection. We were dead in our
transgressions and sin, we have been made alive in Christ. He is the one who can make our lives
fruitful.
Almond blossoms came early in spring, and tell us that
fruit is coming. A harvest is to
follow. God blesses, and His blessings
increase. He rescues us, forgives us and
embraces in His love. But it gets better. As we lean on Him He makes us more like
Jesus. Then will come a harvest day when
those in Christ will receive resurrection bodies like Jesus and an end to death,
loneliness, pain and sin. The almond
blossom tells us we have a lot to look forward to.
But, maybe most of all, the almonds would have
reminded the people of the lampstands in the tabernacle. The lampstands in the tabernacle contained
almond shaped cups. Remember that the
lampstands shone its light onto the twelve loaves on the table. This pictured God’s desire to turn His face
towards His people, be gracious towards them and give them peace.
Our God is holy and unapproachable.
Our God is dangerous. It is a
fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God. But our God wants to be gracious towards you
and give you peace. He tells us that He
takes no pleasure in the death of the wicked but would rather that we repent
and live. Who are these people that God
wants to bless? They are the very people
who had despised Him and grumbled against the leadership that He
appointed. There is more mercy in Him
than there is sin in us.
It has been pointed out that while sin provokes God to
righteous anger, God is love. His anger
is in settled and holy response to evil.
His love is the core of His very being.
He wants to show love to those who are by nature the subject of His
wrath.
Conclusion
A friend of ours is into ‘spiritual’ things. But recently she told Caroline that she has
given up on God. When Caroline told me,
I couldn’t help think that that is a bit presumptuous. In our society we think that we can stand
over God and judge Him. We seem to think
that we are doing Him the greatest of all favours to believe in Him. But God does not need us, and one day it is
Him who will stand in judgement over us.
Give up on God? I am just glad
that God has not given up on me, and He will never give up on you if you belong
to Jesus.
The unfruitful rods were given back to their
owners. The fruitful rod of Aaron was
kept before the ark. It is a reminder
that we need a High Priest. In love God
has given us a greater High Priest than Aaron.
Jesus Christ didn’t just offer sacrifices for His people, He Himself
became our sacrifice. On that cross
Jesus said, ‘it is finished.’ No matter
how guilty you may be, and no matter how holy God is, we can now come to the
throne of grace to find help in our time of need. Never forget what a privilege you have.
Now look at how the people respond. They are not grumbling. They are terrified. Korah had thought that anyone could approach God,
without the ministry of a priest, and his and his followers were swallowed up
by the ground. He was presumptuous. Now the people move to the opposite
extreme. They are simply terrified. ‘behold we perish, we are undone. Everyone who comes near to the tabernacle of
the Lord, shall die. Are we to perish?’ (12-13).
They have failed to see that the unapproachable God wants to bless them
and bringing them close to Him. That is
why He had given them a High Priest.
What should be our attitude towards God? Not grumbling but gratitude. Not servile fear but confidence that Jesus
has done it all—He has dealt fully with all that would separate us from God. Not contempt but love that is simply a
response to His greater love to us.