The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 26: From the Red Sea to Sinai
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In the circumstances connected with the giving of the manna,
we have conclusive evidence that the Sabbath was not instituted,
as many claim, when the law was given at Sinai. Before the
Israelites came to Sinai they understood the Sabbath to be obligatory
upon them. In being obliged to gather every Friday a
double portion of manna in preparation for the Sabbath, when
none would fall, the sacred nature of the day of rest was
continually impressed upon them. And when some of the people [p. 297] went out on the Sabbath to gather manna, the Lord asked, "How
long refuse ye to keep My commandments and My laws?"
"The children of Israel did eat manna forty years, until they
came to a land inhabited: they did eat manna, until they came
unto the borders of the land of Canaan." For forty years they
were daily reminded by this miraculous provision, of God's
unfailing care and tender love. In the words of the psalmist, God
gave them "of the corn of heaven. Man did eat angels' food"
(Psalm 78:24, 25)—that is, food provided for them by the angels.
Sustained by "the corn of heaven," they were daily taught that,
having God's promise, they were as secure from want as if
surrounded by fields of waving grain on the fertile plains of
Canaan.
The manna, falling from heaven for the sustenance of Israel,
was a type of Him who came from God to give life to the world.
Said Jesus, "I am that Bread of life. Your fathers did eat manna
in the wilderness, and are dead. This is the bread which cometh
down from heaven. . . . If any man eat of this bread, he shall
live forever: and the bread that I will give is My flesh, which I
will give for the life of the world." John 6:48-51. And among
the promises of blessing to God's people in the future life it is
written, "To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the hidden
manna." Revelation 2:17.
After leaving the wilderness of Sin, the Israelites encamped
in Rephidim. Here there was no water, and again they
distrusted the providence of God. In their blindness and
presumption the people came to Moses with the demand, "Give
us water that we may drink." But his patience failed not.
"Why chide ye with me?" he said; "wherefore do ye tempt the
Lord?" They cried in anger, "Wherefore is this, that thou hast
brought us up out of Egypt, to kill us and our children and
our cattle with thirst?" When they had been so abundantly
supplied with food, they remembered with shame their unbelief
and murmurings, and promised to trust the Lord in the future;
but they soon forgot their promise, and failed at the first trial
of their faith. The pillar of cloud that was leading them seemed
to veil a fearful mystery. And Moses—who was he? they
questioned, and what could be his object in bringing them from
Egypt? Suspicion and distrust filled their hearts, and they boldly
accused him of designing to kill them and their children by [p. 298] privations and hardships that he might enrich himself with their
possessions. In the tumult of rage and indignation they were
about to stone him.
In distress Moses cried to the Lord, "What shall I do unto
this people?" He was directed to take the elders of Israel and
the rod wherewith he had wrought wonders in Egypt, and to
go on before the people. And the Lord said unto him, "Behold,
I will stand before thee there upon the rock in Horeb; and
thou shalt smite the rock, and there shall come water out of it,
that the people may drink." He obeyed, and the waters burst
forth in a living stream that abundantly supplied the encampment.
Instead of commanding Moses to lift up his rod and call down
some terrible plague, like those on Egypt, upon the leaders in
this wicked murmuring, the Lord in His great mercy made the
rod His instrument to work their deliverance.
"He clave the rocks in the wilderness, and gave them drink
as out of the great depths. He brought streams also out of the
rock, and caused waters to run down like rivers." Psalm 78:15, 16.
Moses smote the rock, but it was the Son of God who, veiled
in the cloudy pillar, stood beside Moses, and caused the
life-giving water to flow. Not only Moses and the elders, but all
the congregation who stood at a distance, beheld the glory of
the Lord; but had the cloud been removed, they would have
been slain by the terrible brightness of Him who abode therein.
In their thirst the people had tempted God, saying, "Is the
Lord among us, or not?"—"If God has brought us here, why
does He not give us water as well as bread?" The unbelief thus
manifested was criminal, and Moses feared that the judgments
of God would rest upon them. And he called the name of the
place Massah, "temptation," and Meribah, "chiding," as a
memorial of their sin.
A new danger now threatened them. Because of their
murmuring against Him, the Lord suffered them to be attacked
by their enemies. The Amalekites, a fierce, warlike tribe
inhabiting that region, came out against them and smote those
who, faint and weary, had fallen into the rear. Moses, knowing
that the masses of the people were unprepared for battle, directed
Joshua to choose from the different tribes a body of soldiers,
and lead them on the morrow against the enemy, while he [p. 299] himself would stand on an eminence near by with the rod of
God in his hand. Accordingly the next day Joshua and his
company attacked the foe, while Moses and Aaron and Hur
were stationed on a hill overlooking the battlefield. With arms
outstretched toward heaven, and holding the rod of God in his
right hand, Moses prayed for the success of the armies of Israel.
As the battle progressed, it was observed that so long as his hands
were reaching upward, Israel prevailed, but when they were
lowered, the enemy was victorious. As Moses became weary,
Aaron and Hur stayed up his hands until the going down of
the sun, when the enemy was put to flight.
As Aaron and Hur supported the hands of Moses, they
showed the people their duty to sustain him in his arduous
work while he should receive the word from God to speak to
them. And the act of Moses also was significant, showing that
God held their destiny in His hands; while they made Him
their trust, He would fight for them and subdue their enemies;
but when they should let go their hold upon Him, and trust in
their own power, they would be even weaker than those who had
not the knowledge of God, and their foes would prevail against
them.
As the Hebrews triumphed when Moses was reaching his
hands toward heaven and interceding in their behalf, so the
Israel of God prevail when they by faith take hold upon the
strength of their mighty Helper. Yet divine strength is to be
combined with human effort. Moses did not believe that God
would overcome their foes while Israel remained inactive. While
the great leader was pleading with the Lord, Joshua and his brave
followers were putting forth their utmost efforts to repulse the
enemies of Israel and of God.
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