The Bible Recap - Day 062 (Numbers 18-20) - Year 3
Episode Date: March 3, 2021SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - ...Exodus 17 - Daily Study Guide & Weekly Discussion Guide SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
After yesterday's demonstration where God validated Aaron's position as high priest, God
addresses Aaron directly today.
This is rare.
God usually addresses Moses and hasn't passed things along to Aaron, but there are a few times where God speaks directly to Aaron, and this is one of them.
He sets out some new rules and reiterates existing rules about how the priests and the
Levites are supposed to care for the Tabernacle. The priests, Aaron and his two sons,
are to guard the Tabernacle on the inside near the Holy Vessels, and the Levites are to guard the
Tabernacle on the outside to keep everyone out. And God makes it clear, if a Levite passes into the part reserved for priests,
they'll both die. God tells them all this in an effort to spare them the wrath he has to pour out
when they rebel against him. God also unpacked something he's hinted at before. The Levites will have
no inheritance among the people of Israel. No land, no cattle,
and nothing to bank their futures on, apart from the promise of God that he would provide
for them through his people. The other 12 tribes brought a tithe, which literally means
one-tenth of their income to the Levites. Of that tithe, the Levites gave 10% back to
God, who said it should be given to the priest. This was God's plan of provision for everyone.
The Levites are giving their lives to serve the people, taking care of them,
and the people are giving back their tides to the sanctuary, taking care of the Levites.
In Chapter 19, we get a few more laws, particularly laws pertaining to death and being clean afterward.
This is timely, not just because of all the death that happened recently in the camp, but also because we're at the onset of roughly two million people
dying in the camp over the next 38 years. They need to know how to handle it.
A lot of time passes between chapter 19 and chapter 20, roughly 38 years. We're almost
at the end of the Israelites' time in the wilderness, and you're probably breathing
a sigh of relief to hear that.
But a lot of sad stuff happens in this chapter as we prepare to finish out their time.
First, Miriam dies.
She was a prophetess and the highest regarded woman among the tribes.
After her death, the people encounter another spot where there's no water and they complain
again.
But for most of these complainers, it's likely their first time complaining.
The older generation is mostly dead now.
Even though they've inherited their parents grumbling, and they long for an Egypt they
barely knew if at all, their complaint is real.
There is no water.
So God tells Moses and Aaron how to handle it.
Go get the staff, likely Aaron's butted staff, from before the Lord, likely the Ark of the Covenant,
then take all the people to the rock.
Then, while they're all watching, speak to the rock and tell it to release water.
Easy peasy, right?
So they get the staff and gather the people by the rock, and Moses tells all the rebels to pay close attention,
then he becomes the rebel, because he strikes the rock twice instead of speaking
to it. As a leader of the people, he lets his anger and frustration, and honestly, probably
his sheer exhaustion, take the wheel. He's 120 years old at this point, and it seems like
this younger generation is repeating the same errors of their parents.
Somosist disregards God's words, either casually or blatantly. Maybe he even halfway
reasoned that this is what he had done before and it worked. Because the last time we were in this
situation back in Exodus 17, God told him to strike the rock. But the instructions are different
this time, and Moses hedges. God still gives the people water, but Moses' disobedience and unbelief cost him dearly.
God shows his goodness by being kind to sinners who rebel against him,
but there are consequences even for slight disobedience. As a result,
Moses and Aaron are prohibited from entering Canaan too. As they make their journey toward Canaan,
they need to pass through Eden. We haven't talked about Eden in a while, so here's a refresher.
The Edimites are the descendants of Issa, he was the son of Isaac, the grandson of Abraham,
and the older brother of Jacob, whom all the Israelites are descendants of.
So the Edimites are essentially the Israelites' closest living relatives.
Moses has messengers asked the king of the item if they can pass through their land,
and he says, no. It's a reasonable response, with as many Israelites as they are, even passing through
on their highway instead of their fields, that deplete a lot of the natural resources the
itemites needed to live. So Israel had to take a longer way around, per usual. More on that tomorrow.
In our final paragraph today, Aaron dies and is
succeeded by his son, Eliezer, as the High Priest. What was your God shot? I
noticed how his character is so consistent. Over and over again, we keep seeing
how he makes his rules, his people disobey them, and while they have to deal
with the consequences of their sins, ultimately he is so merciful,
even in those consequences. From clothing, Adam and Eve, but banishing them from the garden,
to letting Moses continue to lead the people, but banishing him from Canaan. God calls sinners
into his family, and then he works with what he's got. His mercy is such a comfort to me,
because I know the wickedness of my own heart.
But with the bits of wisdom he's given to sinners like me, it's wisdom enough to know
he's where the joy is.
We don't want to just help you read the Bible.
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This is designed for you to do on your own.
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It has about 10 questions per week,
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