The Bible Recap - Day 065 (Numbers 26-27) -Year 4
Episode Date: March 6, 2022SHOW 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: - ...Numbers 14 - Sign up to receive a PDF on how to identify idolatry in your heart!* *Email will be sent out on the last day of each month 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.
Yesterday closed with a plague and today opened with God talking to Moses and Eleazar,
the new high priest now that his father Aaron has died. God tells them to take a census.
Why do we need another one of these? Because it's been
38 years since the last census and there have been a lot of new deaths and a lot of new births
in the meantime. They needed the updated numbers since they were about to enter the Promised Land,
and the leaders also verified that there were no people remaining from the first census other than
Caleb and Joshua and their families. If you remember from numbers 14,
that was one of the prerequisites for entering the Promised Land,
all the old generation had to die off.
At the end of the census, they confirm this.
God tells Moses and Eleas are how to divide the land he's giving them,
and he says to give larger plots of land to larger tribes
and smaller plots of land to smaller tribes,
and again, he reiterates that the Levites will be given no inheritance of the land because God himself was their inheritance.
In chapter 27, we hit a unique situation.
Zalofa had had no sons to give his inheritance to before he died, so his five daughters
approached Moses and Eleazar for consideration.
But before they approached them, they had to argue their case
to four other judges first. Remember how Moses' father-in-law, Jethro, told him to appoint judges
over the people to handle things, and only the biggest problems that the judges couldn't solve
have been brought to Moses? That's how these five women got there. They make their case and ask
for land. Moses takes this request to God, and God says they're right. He orders Moses to give
them what would have belonged to their father. Not only that, but God makes this a new law.
The request of these five women and their persistence about it all showed they truly believed
God when he said he was giving the Israelites the land and they didn't want to be left out.
Then God pulls Moses aside and lets him know the news.
He's about to die, just as God promised him.
God tells him he'll get to see the promised land
from the top of the mountain where he'll die.
God will reveal the promise fulfilled,
but Moses won't get to enter it.
Don't feel too sorry for him though,
I'm pretty sure he won't be missing it where he's headed.
Then, despite how horrible these people have been to Moses over the past 40 years,
he pleads with God to appoint a new leader for them, so they won't be like sheep without a shepherd.
God commands Moses to commission Joshua, his assistant for this role.
And in front of Elias or the new high priest, Moses lays his hands on Joshua and establishes
him as his successor.
Where did you see God's character and what we read today?
What was your God shot?
For me, it was in God's response to the five daughters of Zalofahead.
We've seen a lot of compassion and generosity on his part, but I also think there's something
very reasonable about this.
Was this compassionate and generous?
Absolutely. But it was also reasonable.
I'm occasionally accused of being too rational
of subtracting emotions from decision-making processes.
And while I'm learning to move more toward the middle
where I can incorporate both logic and emotion,
I find it really comforting that our God strikes
the perfect balance of both.
I want to get to that place,
and the Spirit
serves as a good guide for me. Yes, of course, he's where the truth is, Terrily, but also,
he's where the joy is.
One of the themes we see in Scripture from Genesis to Revelation is the theme of idolatry and how
it distracts our heart from engaging with God at a deeper level. Idolatory doesn't just refer to statues,
Ezekiel 14 tells us we can take idols into our hearts.
So we built out a PDF with more info on how to identify idolatry in your own heart
and we'd love to share that with you.
If you want to get this PDF for free,
all you have to do is go to thebibolrecap.com forward slash idols
and submit your email address.
That's thebibolrecap.com-forward-slash-idles and submit your email address. That's thebibelrecap.com-forward-slash-idles.
The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-group, Discipleship and Bible Study Groups that meet
in homes and churches around the world each week.
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