The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 33: From Sinai to Kadesh
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Moses now summoned the seventy to the tabernacle. "And
the Lord came down in a cloud, and spake unto him, and took
of the spirit that was upon him, and gave it unto the seventy
elders: and it came to pass, that, when the spirit rested upon
them, they prophesied, and did not cease." Like the disciples on
the Day of Pentecost, they were endued with "power from on
high." It pleased the Lord thus to prepare them for their work,
and to honor them in the presence of the congregation, that
confidence might be established in them as men divinely chosen to
unite with Moses in the government of Israel.
Again evidence was given of the lofty, unselfish spirit of the
great leader. Two of the seventy, humbly counting themselves
unworthy of so responsible a position, had not joined their brethren
at the tabernacle; but the Spirit of God came upon them
where they were, and they, too, exercised the prophetic gift. On
being informed of this, Joshua desired to check such irregularity,
fearing that it might tend to division. Jealous for the honor of [p. 382] his master, "My lord Moses," he said, "forbid them." The answer
was, "Enviest thou for my sake? would God that all the
Lord's people were prophets, and that the Lord would put His
Spirit upon them."
A strong wind blowing from the sea now brought flocks of
quails, "about a day's journey on this side, and a day's journey
on the other side, round about the camp, and about two cubits
above the face of the earth." Numbers 11:31, R.V. All that day
and night, and the following day, the people labored in gathering
the food miraculously provided. Immense quantities were
secured. "He that gathered least gathered ten homers." All that
was not needed for present use was preserved by drying, so that
the supply, as promised, was sufficient for a whole month.
God gave the people that which was not for their highest good,
because they persisted in desiring it; they would not be satisfied
with those things that would prove a benefit to them. Their
rebellious desires were gratified, but they were left to suffer the
result. They feasted without restraint, and their excesses were
speedily punished. "The Lord smote the people with a very great
plague." Large numbers were cut down by burning fevers, while
the most guilty among them were smitten as soon as they tasted
the food for which they had lusted.
At Hazeroth, the next encampment after leaving Taberah, a
still more bitter trial awaited Moses. Aaron and Miriam had occupied
a position of high honor and leadership in Israel. Both were
endowed with the prophetic gift, and both had been divinely
associated with Moses in the deliverance of the Hebrews. "I sent
before thee Moses, Aaron, and Miriam" (Micah 6:4), are the
words of the Lord by the prophet Micah. Miriam's force of
character had been early displayed when as a child she watched
beside the Nile the little basket in which was hidden the infant
Moses. Her self-control and tact God had made instrumental in
preserving the deliverer of His people. Richly endowed with the
gifts of poetry and music, Miriam had led the women of Israel
in song and dance on the shore of the Red Sea. In the affections
of the people and the honor of Heaven she stood second only to
Moses and Aaron. But the same evil that first brought discord
in heaven sprang up in the heart of this woman of Israel, and
she did not fail to find a sympathizer in her dissatisfaction.
In the appointment of the seventy elders Miriam and Aaron [p. 383] had not been consulted, and their jealousy was excited against
Moses. At the time of Jethro's visit, while the Israelites were on
the way to Sinai, the ready acceptance by Moses of the counsel
of his father-in-law had aroused in Aaron and Miriam a fear that
his influence with the great leader exceeded theirs. In the organization
of the council of elders they felt that their position and
authority had been ignored. Miriam and Aaron had never known
the weight of care and responsibility which had rested upon
Moses; yet because they had been chosen to aid him they
regarded themselves as sharing equally with him the burden of
leadership, and they regarded the appointment of further assistants
as uncalled for.
Moses felt the importance of the great work committed to him
as no other man had ever felt it. He realized his own weakness,
and he made God his counselor. Aaron esteemed himself more
highly, and trusted less in God. He had failed when entrusted
with responsibility, giving evidence of the weakness of his
character by his base compliance in the matter of the idolatrous
worship at Sinai. But Miriam and Aaron, blinded by jealousy
and ambition, lost sight of this. Aaron had been highly honored
by God in the appointment of his family to the sacred office of
the priesthood; yet even this now added to the desire for
self-exaltation. "And they said, Hath the Lord indeed spoken only
by Moses? hath He not spoken also by us?" Regarding themselves
as equally favored by God, they felt that they were entitled to the
same position and authority.
Yielding to the spirit of dissatisfaction, Miriam found cause
of complaint in events that God had especially overruled. The
marriage of Moses had been displeasing to her. That he should
choose a woman of another nation, instead of taking a wife from
among the Hebrews, was an offense to her family and national
pride. Zipporah was treated with ill-disguised contempt.
Though called a "Cushite woman" (Numbers 12:1, R.V.), the
wife of Moses was a Midianite, and thus a descendant of Abraham.
In personal appearance she differed from the Hebrews in
being of a somewhat darker complexion. Though not an Israelite,
Zipporah was a worshiper of the true God. She was of a timid,
retiring disposition, gentle and affectionate, and greatly distressed
at the sight of suffering; and it was for this reason that Moses,
when on the way to Egypt, had consented to her return to Midian. [p. 384] He desired to spare her the pain of witnessing the judgments that
were to fall on the Egyptians.
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