Numbers 18
KingCommentsNumbers 18:1
The Plea of Moses
Moses’ reaction to the LORD’s proposal shows that his heart is in tune with that of the LORD. He pleads for the people. Moses does not think of himself; he thinks only of God’s glory and the welfare of the people. What will the Egyptians say? And has not the LORD so often shown His goodness and forgiveness, from their redemption “from Egypt even until now”? Has He not connected promises to the people? God’s promises and deeds are the basis for his plea. Moses calls upon what the LORD has said of Himself (Exodus 34:6-7).
That is also the ground for us to pray for God’s people. The longer we know God, the more reason we have to remind Him of His Being that He has shown after our conversion in His gracious and merciful dealings and involvement with us.
Numbers 18:2
The Plea of Moses
Moses’ reaction to the LORD’s proposal shows that his heart is in tune with that of the LORD. He pleads for the people. Moses does not think of himself; he thinks only of God’s glory and the welfare of the people. What will the Egyptians say? And has not the LORD so often shown His goodness and forgiveness, from their redemption “from Egypt even until now”? Has He not connected promises to the people? God’s promises and deeds are the basis for his plea. Moses calls upon what the LORD has said of Himself (Exodus 34:6-7).
That is also the ground for us to pray for God’s people. The longer we know God, the more reason we have to remind Him of His Being that He has shown after our conversion in His gracious and merciful dealings and involvement with us.
Numbers 18:3
The Plea of Moses
Moses’ reaction to the LORD’s proposal shows that his heart is in tune with that of the LORD. He pleads for the people. Moses does not think of himself; he thinks only of God’s glory and the welfare of the people. What will the Egyptians say? And has not the LORD so often shown His goodness and forgiveness, from their redemption “from Egypt even until now”? Has He not connected promises to the people? God’s promises and deeds are the basis for his plea. Moses calls upon what the LORD has said of Himself (Exodus 34:6-7).
That is also the ground for us to pray for God’s people. The longer we know God, the more reason we have to remind Him of His Being that He has shown after our conversion in His gracious and merciful dealings and involvement with us.
Numbers 18:4
The Plea of Moses
Moses’ reaction to the LORD’s proposal shows that his heart is in tune with that of the LORD. He pleads for the people. Moses does not think of himself; he thinks only of God’s glory and the welfare of the people. What will the Egyptians say? And has not the LORD so often shown His goodness and forgiveness, from their redemption “from Egypt even until now”? Has He not connected promises to the people? God’s promises and deeds are the basis for his plea. Moses calls upon what the LORD has said of Himself (Exodus 34:6-7).
That is also the ground for us to pray for God’s people. The longer we know God, the more reason we have to remind Him of His Being that He has shown after our conversion in His gracious and merciful dealings and involvement with us.
Numbers 18:5
The Plea of Moses
Moses’ reaction to the LORD’s proposal shows that his heart is in tune with that of the LORD. He pleads for the people. Moses does not think of himself; he thinks only of God’s glory and the welfare of the people. What will the Egyptians say? And has not the LORD so often shown His goodness and forgiveness, from their redemption “from Egypt even until now”? Has He not connected promises to the people? God’s promises and deeds are the basis for his plea. Moses calls upon what the LORD has said of Himself (Exodus 34:6-7).
That is also the ground for us to pray for God’s people. The longer we know God, the more reason we have to remind Him of His Being that He has shown after our conversion in His gracious and merciful dealings and involvement with us.
Numbers 18:6
The Plea of Moses
Moses’ reaction to the LORD’s proposal shows that his heart is in tune with that of the LORD. He pleads for the people. Moses does not think of himself; he thinks only of God’s glory and the welfare of the people. What will the Egyptians say? And has not the LORD so often shown His goodness and forgiveness, from their redemption “from Egypt even until now”? Has He not connected promises to the people? God’s promises and deeds are the basis for his plea. Moses calls upon what the LORD has said of Himself (Exodus 34:6-7).
That is also the ground for us to pray for God’s people. The longer we know God, the more reason we have to remind Him of His Being that He has shown after our conversion in His gracious and merciful dealings and involvement with us.
Numbers 18:7
The Plea of Moses
Moses’ reaction to the LORD’s proposal shows that his heart is in tune with that of the LORD. He pleads for the people. Moses does not think of himself; he thinks only of God’s glory and the welfare of the people. What will the Egyptians say? And has not the LORD so often shown His goodness and forgiveness, from their redemption “from Egypt even until now”? Has He not connected promises to the people? God’s promises and deeds are the basis for his plea. Moses calls upon what the LORD has said of Himself (Exodus 34:6-7).
That is also the ground for us to pray for God’s people. The longer we know God, the more reason we have to remind Him of His Being that He has shown after our conversion in His gracious and merciful dealings and involvement with us.
Numbers 18:8
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:9
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:10
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:11
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:12
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:13
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:14
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:15
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:16
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:17
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:18
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:19
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:20
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:21
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:22
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:23
The LORD Judges
God hears the prayer and forgives. This does not mean that He leaves evil unpunished, but that He postpones judgment. He saves the people and does not consume them immediately. He will punish evil in the continuation of the wilderness journey. Never will the disobedient enter the land (Psalms 95:10-11). The bodies of all the rebellious will fall in the wilderness.
The next command to set out will not be to continue on the way to the promised land, but to go back in the direction of the Red Sea. They want to return to Egypt (Numbers 14:3)? Then they can go that way. They want to die in the wilderness (Numbers 14:2)? They will die in the wilderness. Their bodies shall not be buried in the promised land, as Joseph’s body shall (Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32), because they have despised that land.
Only Caleb and Joshua will enter the land. The LORD calls Caleb “my servant Caleb” (Numbers 14:24). He is a picture of the faithful Servant, the Lord Jesus. This is also evident from the following character sketch: with him is “a different spirit” than with the unbelievers. Caleb does not let his mind be influenced by what he has seen, but by what the LORD has said. Through this “different spirit” in him it becomes visible to the outside that he “followed” the LORD “fully” (Numbers 14:24; Numbers 32:12; Deuteronomy 1:35-36; Joshua 14:8-9; 14).
In a few words, a portrait of a believer of old is given here, which we wish to take as an example. Obedience to the Lord and not let himself being influenced by the human spirit, which prevails in professing Christianity, are the conditions to fully follow the Lord.
Children under the age of twenty will also enter the land. They are a new generation. The old generation is full of Egypt. They are in the wilderness, but their hearts are still fully in Egypt. The children only know the wilderness, not Egypt. God takes these children for His account.
This is also a great encouragement for parents who care about their children because of the time they live in. There is more and more open revolt against God and His Word. There is hardly anything Christian any more present in once Christian countries. But God has a way for every generation to walk. That way can be found in His Word. If the children read in it and take it to heart, they will have their own experiences with an unchanging God Who knows all circumstances and is above them.
God’s people must roam in the wilderness for forty years. This is reflected in the two thousand years of professing Christianity. The good ones suffer in it with the evil ones. Caleb and Joshua, as well as the children, have to travel through the wilderness for forty years. They have to wait for forty years before they can enter the land. Those forty years will be used by God to teach them who they are and who He is (Deuteronomy 8:2). They will have faith experiences and learn to distinguish between what is and what is not of God.
Throughout it all, Caleb and Joshua will have kept theirs eyes constantly on the impressions they have gained as spies of the land. What they have already tasted and enjoyed of the fruit of the land, will have given them strength to continue. They will thus have encouraged the children to persevere.
The people have become a people of vagrants. They have been pilgrims, travelers on a journey to the promised land. Now they are vagrants, without a fixed goal wandering around in the wilderness. This is their punishment, because they have “despised the pleasant land” that God has wanted to give them, for “they did not believe in His word” (Psalms 106:24). To deny what God gives is in fact to deny God Himself.
We know little about the forty years in the wilderness. Only a few events are mentioned to us in Scripture, but they are characteristic of their entire stay in the wilderness. They have been written down so that we may learn from them (1 Corinthians 10:5-11).
The children must also learn that what is in the parents’ hearts is also in their own hearts. They do come into the land, but not because they are better than their parents. If we can know and enjoy anything of the heavenly blessings it is not because we are any better than others who do not know these blessings.
Numbers 18:24
Unbelief Judged – Faith Spared
The ten spies were not allowed to die a natural death. God endures a lot of the Christians, but on some He brings direct judgment (Acts 5:5; 10). Where God’s testimony is particularly defamed, the judgment of God comes directly, regardless of whether it concerns Israel or the church. They have sinned themselves and also made others sin. They have sinned themselves by bringing out a very bad report of the land. Others have believed this very bad report and therefore also sinned. The nature of this sin is also very bad. They presented the service of God as a hopeless thing and made Him a liar.
Possibly the twelve spies are standing together, in the midst of the people. Then the LORD kills the ten unbelieving spies by a plague. Joshua and Caleb remain alive. That must have said a lot to the Israelites. These two men remain standing where a whole people fall.
Numbers 18:25
Unbelief Judged – Faith Spared
The ten spies were not allowed to die a natural death. God endures a lot of the Christians, but on some He brings direct judgment (Acts 5:5; 10). Where God’s testimony is particularly defamed, the judgment of God comes directly, regardless of whether it concerns Israel or the church. They have sinned themselves and also made others sin. They have sinned themselves by bringing out a very bad report of the land. Others have believed this very bad report and therefore also sinned. The nature of this sin is also very bad. They presented the service of God as a hopeless thing and made Him a liar.
Possibly the twelve spies are standing together, in the midst of the people. Then the LORD kills the ten unbelieving spies by a plague. Joshua and Caleb remain alive. That must have said a lot to the Israelites. These two men remain standing where a whole people fall.
Numbers 18:26
Unbelief Judged – Faith Spared
The ten spies were not allowed to die a natural death. God endures a lot of the Christians, but on some He brings direct judgment (Acts 5:5; 10). Where God’s testimony is particularly defamed, the judgment of God comes directly, regardless of whether it concerns Israel or the church. They have sinned themselves and also made others sin. They have sinned themselves by bringing out a very bad report of the land. Others have believed this very bad report and therefore also sinned. The nature of this sin is also very bad. They presented the service of God as a hopeless thing and made Him a liar.
Possibly the twelve spies are standing together, in the midst of the people. Then the LORD kills the ten unbelieving spies by a plague. Joshua and Caleb remain alive. That must have said a lot to the Israelites. These two men remain standing where a whole people fall.
Numbers 18:27
The People Are Disobedient Again
In contradiction to what Moses says, they are now going as they first refused to go, in contradiction to what God said. They also act contrary to what the LORD has commanded in Numbers 14:25, where He said that the people must return to the wilderness. Time and again they neglect God’s words, whether they are spoken in blessing or in judgment.
Nor do they listen to Moses, who warns them not to go. They won’t let themselves be told by anybody. They go up willfully: without God, without the ark of the covenant and without Moses. If there had been real repentance they would have bowed under God’s judgment. But this is not the case. They only regret the consequences of their actions. Therefore they try to make up for their first sin, that of fear, by adding a second sin, that of audacious self-confidence. But God never commits His Name to disobedience.
Christians who want to appropriate the things of God in their own power become prey to the power of the enemy. That is what we see here in what the Israelites do. As the enemies are in their eyes, when they look at them without involving God, so they experience the reality of the enemy’s power because they move up without God. The people suffer a severe defeat.
Numbers 18:28
The People Are Disobedient Again
In contradiction to what Moses says, they are now going as they first refused to go, in contradiction to what God said. They also act contrary to what the LORD has commanded in Numbers 14:25, where He said that the people must return to the wilderness. Time and again they neglect God’s words, whether they are spoken in blessing or in judgment.
Nor do they listen to Moses, who warns them not to go. They won’t let themselves be told by anybody. They go up willfully: without God, without the ark of the covenant and without Moses. If there had been real repentance they would have bowed under God’s judgment. But this is not the case. They only regret the consequences of their actions. Therefore they try to make up for their first sin, that of fear, by adding a second sin, that of audacious self-confidence. But God never commits His Name to disobedience.
Christians who want to appropriate the things of God in their own power become prey to the power of the enemy. That is what we see here in what the Israelites do. As the enemies are in their eyes, when they look at them without involving God, so they experience the reality of the enemy’s power because they move up without God. The people suffer a severe defeat.
Numbers 18:29
The People Are Disobedient Again
In contradiction to what Moses says, they are now going as they first refused to go, in contradiction to what God said. They also act contrary to what the LORD has commanded in Numbers 14:25, where He said that the people must return to the wilderness. Time and again they neglect God’s words, whether they are spoken in blessing or in judgment.
Nor do they listen to Moses, who warns them not to go. They won’t let themselves be told by anybody. They go up willfully: without God, without the ark of the covenant and without Moses. If there had been real repentance they would have bowed under God’s judgment. But this is not the case. They only regret the consequences of their actions. Therefore they try to make up for their first sin, that of fear, by adding a second sin, that of audacious self-confidence. But God never commits His Name to disobedience.
Christians who want to appropriate the things of God in their own power become prey to the power of the enemy. That is what we see here in what the Israelites do. As the enemies are in their eyes, when they look at them without involving God, so they experience the reality of the enemy’s power because they move up without God. The people suffer a severe defeat.
Numbers 18:30
The People Are Disobedient Again
In contradiction to what Moses says, they are now going as they first refused to go, in contradiction to what God said. They also act contrary to what the LORD has commanded in Numbers 14:25, where He said that the people must return to the wilderness. Time and again they neglect God’s words, whether they are spoken in blessing or in judgment.
Nor do they listen to Moses, who warns them not to go. They won’t let themselves be told by anybody. They go up willfully: without God, without the ark of the covenant and without Moses. If there had been real repentance they would have bowed under God’s judgment. But this is not the case. They only regret the consequences of their actions. Therefore they try to make up for their first sin, that of fear, by adding a second sin, that of audacious self-confidence. But God never commits His Name to disobedience.
Christians who want to appropriate the things of God in their own power become prey to the power of the enemy. That is what we see here in what the Israelites do. As the enemies are in their eyes, when they look at them without involving God, so they experience the reality of the enemy’s power because they move up without God. The people suffer a severe defeat.
Numbers 18:31
The People Are Disobedient Again
In contradiction to what Moses says, they are now going as they first refused to go, in contradiction to what God said. They also act contrary to what the LORD has commanded in Numbers 14:25, where He said that the people must return to the wilderness. Time and again they neglect God’s words, whether they are spoken in blessing or in judgment.
Nor do they listen to Moses, who warns them not to go. They won’t let themselves be told by anybody. They go up willfully: without God, without the ark of the covenant and without Moses. If there had been real repentance they would have bowed under God’s judgment. But this is not the case. They only regret the consequences of their actions. Therefore they try to make up for their first sin, that of fear, by adding a second sin, that of audacious self-confidence. But God never commits His Name to disobedience.
Christians who want to appropriate the things of God in their own power become prey to the power of the enemy. That is what we see here in what the Israelites do. As the enemies are in their eyes, when they look at them without involving God, so they experience the reality of the enemy’s power because they move up without God. The people suffer a severe defeat.
Numbers 18:32
The People Are Disobedient Again
In contradiction to what Moses says, they are now going as they first refused to go, in contradiction to what God said. They also act contrary to what the LORD has commanded in Numbers 14:25, where He said that the people must return to the wilderness. Time and again they neglect God’s words, whether they are spoken in blessing or in judgment.
Nor do they listen to Moses, who warns them not to go. They won’t let themselves be told by anybody. They go up willfully: without God, without the ark of the covenant and without Moses. If there had been real repentance they would have bowed under God’s judgment. But this is not the case. They only regret the consequences of their actions. Therefore they try to make up for their first sin, that of fear, by adding a second sin, that of audacious self-confidence. But God never commits His Name to disobedience.
Christians who want to appropriate the things of God in their own power become prey to the power of the enemy. That is what we see here in what the Israelites do. As the enemies are in their eyes, when they look at them without involving God, so they experience the reality of the enemy’s power because they move up without God. The people suffer a severe defeat.
