Numbers 16:48, "And he stood between the dead and the living; and the plague was stayed."
Whether we are talking about man in the beginning of time or
man in this present hour, there is a common ground that we all stand upon, and
that ground is the place of rebellion. Adam stood in that place while in the
Garden of Eden and became a “Rebel” against the commandment of the Lion of the
Tribe of Judah, defying the Word of his Creator and declaring that he would not
live under the Law of his God.
Modern man does the same thing. He declares, either by word
or deed, that he will not bend his knee, bow his head, or reverence and fear
the God of all Creation. A quick look at the news of our day will show the
defiance in the hearts of men against God Almighty. Humanity is so filled with
pride and selfishness that the heart still drives mankind to Rebel against the
Lion of Judah, and very few are willing to confess that Jesus Christ is Lord!
Even in the very House of God, among His Adopted Children,
there is often a spirit of rebellion: rebellion against the Word that convicts
for sin, rebellion against authority that God ordains, and rebellion against
anything or anyone who tends to try to change us to become anything other than
what we already believe is good enough.
There is a story in the Book of Numbers, Chapter 16,
concerning the Children of Israel in their march through the wilderness under
the leadership of Moses. God had wrought miracle after miracle in their
deliverance from Egyptian bondage. Yet, the Children of Israel continually
found themselves in a state of rebellion against the leadership that God had
placed over them and, indeed, against the God that had delivered them.
Understand this: God had already brought them out of bondage,
and that bondage in Egypt is a type, a representation in Old Testament form, of
the pit of miry clay called sin that every one of us was born in. When each new
generation was born in Egypt, they didn’t have to be made slaves; they were
born slaves and had no power to deliver themselves from the iron fist of
Pharaoh. They needed a Savior and Deliverer, someone who would step up and call
down the power of God to deliver them. Of course, we know that the man whom God
called to do just that was Moses, and Moses was given a voice, someone who
would speak for him, his own brother whose name was Aaron.
It is often said that Moses is a type of Christ as that
deliverer of the church and that Aaron, Moses' brother and spokesman, is a type
of the Holy Spirit that speaks to us and leads us to follow Jesus.
Let’s fast forward to the journey of the Israelites and
remember that they made it all the way to the Jordan River, the very boundary
of the Promised Land that God had given to Abraham, and it was described in the
Bible as “a land that flowed with milk and honey.” Their Promised Land had
everything in it that they would have ever needed to be a powerful, happy,
prosperous, and godly nation. But nothing comes from God without a living,
active faith, and faith is something that the Children of Israel showed a lack
of at every turn. Here, at the very brink of great victory and the fulfillment
of the promises of God, their faith failed, and they were turned back into the
wilderness to wander for another 40 years. A whole generation of faithless
Children of God perished in the wilderness and never obtained the promises of
God because they refused to believe God would fulfill His word to them.
I wonder how many generations of Gentiles, your ancestors and
mine, failed that test of faith? How many failed to see the Promised Land,
failed to trust God to give them the desires of their hearts, and failed to
believe that in Jesus, there was provision for the body, water for the soul,
and life forevermore? How many times have we, right here this day, come to the
brink of the river, tried to look over on the other side, and could not see any
way that God would give us the life we wanted? All we saw were the giants in
the Land, obstacles too big, people who had more power to drag us down than we
could handle, and persecution from friends and neighbors that we considered
greater than the promises of the Almighty God!
How many of us today are facing our own Jordan River, and God
is saying, “Step out by faith and take the land that is before you!” But we
won’t move because it’s a scary thing to step out into the unknown. It seems so
much safer just to hang out where we are and watch the river flow than to step
into the water and take a chance of making a wrong step and drowning. Some
people stand by the river, looking over into that place where they know they
should go in God, into a deeper relationship; into a more active ministry, into
a work that they’ve been called to do, but they won’t step out into the water
by faith and trust God to bring it to pass. It’s just too comfortable to hang
on in the desert place and enjoy thinking about it rather than doing it.
You will never inherit the land hanging out on the wrong side
of the river. You must step out in faith, believing, and let the Holy Ghost
guide you. You’ll have to learn to walk closer to Jesus. You’ll have to just
trust and keep on making the next step. But Jesus will take you into places
that you never dreamed possible if you only have the faith to step out and
follow Him!
It wasn’t Moses’ fault that they didn’t enter the Promised
Land. It wasn’t Aaron’s fault that they had no faith! It wasn’t God’s fault
that they wouldn’t trust Him and follow Him to victory! It was their own lack
of faith despite all that God had done for them! They had that slave mentality
that had kept them in bondage in Egypt, and though God had taken them out of
Egypt, they hadn’t taken Egypt out of their own hearts and minds, and like
Lot’s Wife, they kept looking back to where they’ve been instead of where they
were going.
Let that be a lesson to all of us; you’ll never move forward
or grow in the Lord as you should as long as you are always focusing on the
past! You can’t change the past, but you can stop it from controlling your
future! Learn from it, remember the pit that God brought you out of, then
forget it and keep moving forward, keeping your eyes on the prize of the Crown
of Victory that is ahead instead of the defeats that are left behind.
They were turned back into the wilderness, and with their
backs facing the Promised Land, they walked into a continual and deadly place
of rebellion against God and Moses! They kept looking toward Egypt instead of
looking toward the Promised Land. Where their heart was, their mind stayed, and
their whole life was wasted looking in the wrong direction.
As I studied Numbers chapter 16, I began to see a clear
pattern that has been repeated many times in the hearts of men throughout
history and is still being repeated today.
In the 3rd verse, four men rose up against Moses; four men
who were full of pride and jealousy! These men were Korah, Dathan, Abiram, and
On. These were men of the tribes of Israel, three of them being from the Tribe
of Levi and one from the tribe of Rueben.
Suppose you remember anything about the Tribes of Israel. In
that case, you will also know the Tribe of Levi was chosen by God to be
ministers and servants who were to work at caring for the Tabernacle and that
the Tabernacle was the place in the camp where the presence of God dwelt. What
a privilege it is to be chosen by God to work in His kingdom. Regardless of
whether their job was hammering stakes to hold up the outer walls, assembling
and disassembling the gold-plated Acacia boards of the Holy Place, or carefully
folding and wrapping the veils that stood before the Ark of the Covenant, it
was all a labor of love for God; at least it should have been a labor of love.
Some of the Levites sang in the choir as the sacrifices were
offered. Others took part in assembling the Brazen Altar and the Laver of
Water, where the priests were commanded to do their work. Only the priests
could carry the Ark of the Covenant, but that was a commandment of God, and
anyone who touched that Ark other than those chosen to carry it would die
instantly under God’s judgment. The Levites were not chosen to be priests but
to serve in the Tabernacle. They could do everything except what the priests
were given to do, but there was a dividing line that they must never cross.
The only people who were chosen to serve as priests were the
sons of Aaron. The Aaronic Priests were called and anointed to carry the blood
of the lamb, to present the blood before God in the Holy of Holies, and to care
for the Altar of Incense, the Lampstand, and the Table of Showbread. Only a
priest could enter the Holy Place, and only the High Priest could enter the
Holy of Holies. Only a priest could handle the sacrificial offerings. This all
pointed to the fact that only Jesus, our Great High Priest, would be worthy to
be the sacrifice for our sins. For anyone else to try to usurp that authority
or to push himself into that position without the anointing of God meant death.
Since Aaron is a type of the Holy Ghost in speaking for
Moses, it seems to me that what the Bible is trying to tell us is it takes the
anointing of the Holy Ghost to serve as a priest. It’s a special anointing that
no Levite had. They were anointed to serve in one capacity and the priests in
another. God chooses whom He will, and He anoints us to do a job. We should be
grateful to serve wherever God chooses to use us. It’s a great and wonderful
privilege to work in the House of the Lord.
Two of Aaron’s own sons, men who were chosen to be priests,
overstepped their bounds even though they were anointed. They took it upon
themselves to offer strange fire upon the Altar of Incense, overstepping their
assigned duties, going beyond their anointed task. In Leviticus 1:1-2, we are
told that the fire of God’s judgment shot out from the altar and consumed them.
When God gives us a place, that’s where we need to be. This
lesson from God’s Word tells us that if we don’t obey the Lord and not only
stay in our place, but carry out our duties as God specifies, then we are
subject to the judgment of God for our rebellious heart. Too many people
presume too much; just presuming that you can do the same thing that God calls
someone else to do and then trying to usurp that position can get you into more
trouble with God than you want to handle.
These four men, Korah, Dathan, Abiram, and On, along with
many others who came under their influence, were soon to discover how dangerous
it is to play the games of jealousy, envy, and rebellion against the will of
God!
Somehow, it comes into the heart of man that he deserves so
much more than he’s getting. Mankind also believes that he should be the master
of his own destiny and the ruler of his own life. Pride and selfishness reign
in all of us occasionally, and even in the people of God; I’ve seen this.
Korah and his followers decided to call a meeting and
confront Moses and Aaron with their grievances. Now, it’s one thing to come to
God with questions and concerns, but it’s another thing altogether to come to
God with the attitude of a know-it-all.
Their accusation against Moses and Aaron was simple. They
accused Moses and Aaron of taking too much power. Their attitude was one that
I’ve heard so many times; “Just who do you think you are, Moses? What gives you
the right to exercise the authority that you have over us? Are we not as good
as you are? Are we not as holy before God as you are? What makes you any better
than us? And the same goes for Aaron!”
Moses immediately fell on his face before God. He didn’t lash
back at them, although he probably felt like doing just that. Instead, Moses
fell down and prayed for these men and all of the camp of Israel, for Moses
knew that what they had done was not against him but against God!
It was God who set Moses and Aaron over the Children of
Israel; and it was God who had placed the Levites in their positions; and these
men were defying the divine order of God! Terror for what God might do to the
people struck the heart of Moses. He feared for Israel and cried out to God for
mercy on their behalf. The acts of defiance against Moses, Aaron, and God would
not go unanswered.
Proverbs
16:18 says, "Pride goeth before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a
fall."
These defiant Jews were about to find out just how terrible
God’s power of destruction can be. In the 13th verse of Numbers chapter 16,
these defiant men even confessed that they thought the land of Egypt was better
than the Promised Land. They called Egypt the land of milk and honey.
Oh, how terrible it is when we begin to live in rebellion
against the Law of God! Isaiah 5:20, "Woe unto them that call evil good,
and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for darkness; that put
bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter!"
When we begin to listen to the voice of Satan, and allow
pride and jealousy to arise in us, our vision of right and wrong are skewed.
And we are in danger of God’s wrath.
Look around our society today, and you can see this in
action. Many are saying that Christianity is the evil that plagues the world
and that those who preach that Jesus is the only way to salvation are the
troublemakers because we are intolerant of people who teach anything else. Men
will try to excuse their rebellion against the authority of Jesus by saying
that there are many ways to Heaven. They will pass laws to make immorality and
degenerate behavior legal and, at the same time, pass laws that restrict even
speaking the name of Jesus or reading a Bible in a public place, saying that it
infringes upon the right of all men to think the way they want. America is
fulfilling Isaiah 5:20 right now.
Like Korah and his followers, mankind says, “We are good as
you. We are equal or even better than Jesus. We don’t need a leader. We can
save ourselves. We don’t need to hear some preacher or some book to tell us
what to do.”
I’ve seen this same attitude in the Church! “Preacher, I
don’t need you to tell me how to act, what to do, and what not to do! I’m as
good as my neighbor, even better than many! I can hear from God just as much as
you can. I don’t need church! I don’t need a teacher! I can get it all on my
own! If I feel like I want to do something for God, I don’t need the approval
of anyone because I can hear the voice of the Lord just as good as they can.”
That’s nothing more than an evil spirit of pride, a spirit
that rejects the counsel of God and defies the leading of the Holy Ghost! Yes,
you can hear the voice of the Lord as well as the pastor can, but do you have
the anointing that he has for the office, and do you have the authority under
the Word of God to do whatever you want to? God has a divine order and when we
step out of that order, we are walking on dangerous ground!
Korah and 250 of his followers brought their own brass
censers to the court of the Tabernacle. Censers were used to carry burning
incense before the Lord, and only a priest could do that according to God’s
instructions. They came to show Moses and Aaron that they could do the work of
a priest and a leader of the people just as well as Moses and Aaron could. They
came and stood before the very door of the Holy Place and took fire off the
Brazen Altar to burn their incense.
Incense is a type of the prayers of the saints and these men
had their prayers, but their prayers and offerings were not accepted because of
the pride of their hearts. We can pray all we want to for God to give us this
ministry, or let us be lifted up, but unless it’s in God’s will, we pray in
vain.
There are people today who are full of themselves. They
aren’t teachable; they never shut up long enough to hear anyone or learn
anything. They’ve always got to put in their two cents worth, and frankly, I
think that most of the time, we need to give them at least a penny and a half
in change because what they have to say is so foolish. All it does is prove to
the whole world just how little they really know, but they are so full of
selfish pride and a know-it-all attitude that they think they’re really being
helpful. Sometimes, you just want to say, “If you’ll be quiet and listen,
rather than keep running off at the mouth and arguing about every point, you
might accidentally learn how foolish you really are.”
But realistically, the best thing you can do for people like
that is just put them in God’s hands and walk away. They aren’t teachable and
will probably never hear anything other than their own voices.
Like Korah and his cronies, their hearts are set on
rebellion, fixed on pride of self, and their only desire is to take over where
they have no place. Because of their continued hard-headed and hard-hearted
attitude and jealousy, God finally told Moses and Aaron to separate themselves
from these rebellious men and that everyone whose tents were even close to them
should move away lest they be consumed with the same judgment as Korah and his
followers. They were not to touch one thing that belonged to these men because
it was all cursed in the eyes of God for their rebellious attitude!
If you’re a Child of God, you better check your heart and
attitude to see if pride and jealousy are there because God hates those things.
They are a sin that will steal your eternal soul and bring death, both
physically and spiritually.
Moses, Aaron, and all the people of Israel who stood with
them separated themselves from Korah and his followers. Even the 250 who had
been drawn in to be a part of Korah’s rebellion drew back a little. Something
happened to put the fear of God into their hearts.
The Shekinah Glory, the power and presence of Almighty God
that normally rested between the Cherubim above the Mercy Seat upon the Ark of
the Covenant in the Holy of Holies, came forward and stood at the door of the
Tabernacle. God’s presence was with Moses and Aaron in a clear and visible way!
There was no question whose side God was on in this battle. He stood with his
anointed ones, Moses and Aaron.
1 Chronicles
16:22 says, "Touch not mine anointed, and do my prophets no harm."
Let me tell you, child of God, that you better be careful
when you speak out against a man or woman of God! You might not agree with
their form of ministry. You might not like the way they preach or teach. You
might think that you know more than they do. You might think that they are
being too hard, or too soft, or too anything. But never forget that if they are
preaching Christ and Him crucified, they are still speaking under the anointing
of the Holy Ghost. Don’t put yourself in the place of “touching the anointed
one of God,” and don’t let yourself be caught up in trying to discredit those
God has anointed.
At Moses’ word, God honored his chosen man and proved who was
on the Lord’s side. The ground beneath the feet of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram.
These rebellious men, along with their entire families, wives, and children,
their tents, and all that they owned, were swallowed alive into the pits of
hell, and the earth closed over them. It wasn’t just an ordinary earthquake,
but the earth moved more like a wild animal that opened its mouth wide to
swallow its prey. The hole opened; they fell in, and the hole closed.
The screams of the dying and terror in their eyes as they
fell alarmed the rest of the people, and they began to turn and run away lest
they too would be swallowed up, but that didn’t save those who had rebelled
along with Korah. The fire of God’s wrath, like lightning that came from the
Shekinah, and fire from the altar killed all 250 of them.
If you had stood there, would that have been enough to
persuade you to repent your rebellion? It wasn’t enough for Israel! Oh, how far
had their lack of faith taken them! Even though God’s judgment had fallen, and
he had clearly shown who was called and anointed to lead Israel, the people
began the very next day to murmur against Moses, accusing them of murdering all
of those who had died the day before! This is a definite case of “Terminal
Stupidity!” When will they ever learn? You saw God’s wrath swallow up 250 and
more yesterday! Have you forgotten already? Are you stupid enough to continue
in rebellion and think you’ll get away with it?
But we can’t point fingers at Israel. How many times have we
seen the good things of God, and yet we still see Christians who rebel against
the authority of the preacher of the gospel or rebel against the leadership
that is placed over them, or how many times have we seen people who simply
refuse to come under authority but will bow up, get angry and even leave the
church because they can’t have their way?
All of us have seen how many people will backslide and fall
into such deep pits of sin and despair that some never come out of! It’s as
though their sin of rebellion opens its mouth and swallows them up, heart and
soul, and they never experience the anointing of God again.
Do you think it can’t happen to you? How many times does the
judgment of God have to fall, and how much pain and death will men have to
face? Christian, how much trouble is going to have to come into your life
before you realize that it’s futile to fight against the power of God and the
authority that God has placed over you? How many people today will run from the
House of God every time the preaching gets hot and conviction falls on them for
their sin of rebellion? We must repent our bad attitudes quickly before the
judgment comes.
As the people stood that day, accusing Moses and Aaron of
murder, suddenly, beginning at the front and moving to the back of the
congregation, people began to drop dead on their feet in an instant of time.
The wave of God’s judgment could be visibly seen as it moved back into the
crowd. People were dropping dead, row upon row!
Moses commanded Aaron to quickly grab a censer of burning
incense and run among the crowd, in effect, offering a prayer of atonement for
their rebellion! As Aaron ran quickly, the incense arose before God, crying out
for mercy and the plague of death to cease.
Numbers
16:48, "And he stood between the dead and the living; and the plague was
stayed."
Fourteen thousand seven hundred of the Children of Israel
died in a few moments as God’s wrath went among them! That’s not counting those
who had died the day before! If Aaron had not stood there with his censer,
there’s no doubt that all of Israel would have died for that spirit of
rebellion.
Let me tell you, friends, that this is no game we’re playing.
Whether our hearts and spirits are right is a matter of life and death! All of
mankind died in an instant of time when Adam took that bite in the Garden of
Eden. The price of sin is death, eternal death. We were born dead, spiritually
dead!
Then Jesus ran among men, carrying that incense, that censer
filled with his prayers to the Father on behalf of all men. He came and stood
between the living God and the souls of dead men as our intercessor. The
judgment of God was set for every one of us to die in the pits of the flame,
just as Korah did. But Jesus came running from Glory, the Shekinah Glory of God
dwelt among men; and he stands today, having been nailed to an old rugged
cross, giving His blood as payment for our sin, and rising from the dead. Jesus
is standing there between the living and the dead.
Jesus is the way to life! Who will be on the Lord’s side? In
Numbers 16:50, we see that Aaron and Moses returned to the door of the
Tabernacle, and the plague stopped!
Jesus went down and took the keys of death, hell, and the
grave. Today, the power of death is stopped! Jesus is the resurrection and the
life, and all who will have life must come by Him!
Let us check our hearts and see if there is a spirit of
rebellion in us. Are we teachable, or does pride rule in us? Are we submissive
to the leadership that God has anointed over us, or do we live in rebellion
against that authority? If that authority is anointed and operates according to
God’s will, we must be willing to bow before it!
Lord, help me never to usurp the position and the authority
of those who are placed over me! Lord, help your children never to do that
either! The One who is over us all is Jesus! Let us never think that we know
more than Christ himself. Let us never presume that we can live without the Law
of God! Let us always realize that except for the mercy and grace of God, we
would be counted among the dead.
Is your heart right with God today? Have you repented of that
spirit of pride, of rebellion against the leadership and authority of God, of
that self-centered desire for what you want instead of what God wants? The Word
of God teaches us today that without Jesus, we have no chance. We either submit
to Him, or we die! God’s wrath is coming soon upon all who refuse to serve him
in spirit and truth. The plague of death will come upon everyone who has not
been fully persuaded to surrender all to Jesus.
The Book of Revelation describes the judgment of God that
falls upon the Antichrist and the False Prophet and all his followers at the
end of the reign of the Antichrist upon the earth. It is very similar to what
happened to Korah and his followers.
Revelation
19:20 - 21, "And the beast was taken, and with him the false prophet that
wrought miracles before him, with which he deceived them that had received the
mark of the beast, and them that worshipped his image. These both were cast
alive into a lake of fire burning with brimstone. And the remnant were slain
with the sword of him that sat upon the horse, which sword proceeded out of his
mouth: and all the fowls were filled with their flesh."
On that day, rebellion against God will meet God’s wrath.
With the word of His mouth, millions will fall dead in their tracks while the
Antichrist and his False Prophet fall into the pits of hell while they are
still living. All of those on the side of the dead will fall into that awful
place, never to get out again.
Where do you stand? Are you on the side of the living or of
the dead? Jesus stands in the middle, beckoning us all to come to him and have
life eternal. It is His desire that none should perish, that none should suffer
judgment, that none should ever be lost, and that none should stand in a place
of rebellion.
Jesus is standing between the living and the dead, beckoning
us to come to Him and stand among the living who will be eternally blessed.
Come, stand with us. Every one of us must repent of that rebellious nature,
that heart that says, “It’s my life, my way, and I’ll do it the way I choose.”
We must follow Jesus and come under His authority as our Lord and King.
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