The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 34: The Twelve Spies
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The night was spent in lamentation, but with the morning
came a hope. They resolved to redeem their cowardice. When
God had bidden them go up and take the land, they had refused;
and now when He directed them to retreat they were equally
rebellious. They determined to seize upon the land and possess it;
it might be that God would accept their work and change His
purpose toward them.
God had made it their privilege and their duty to enter the
land at the time of His appointment, but through their willful
neglect that permission had been withdrawn. Satan had gained
his object in preventing them from entering Canaan; and now he
urged them on to do the very thing, in the face of the divine
prohibition, which they had refused to do when God required it.
Thus the great deceiver gained the victory by leading them to
rebellion the second time. They had distrusted the power of God
to work with their efforts in gaining possession of Canaan; yet
now they presumed upon their own strength to accomplish the
work independent of divine aid. "We have sinned against the
Lord," they cried; "we will go up and fight, according to all
that the Lord our God commanded us." Deuteronomy 1:41. So
terribly blinded had they become by transgression. The Lord had
never commanded them to "go up and fight." It was not His
purpose that they should gain the land by warfare, but by strict
obedience to His commands.
Though their hearts were unchanged, the people had been
brought to confess the sinfulness and folly of their rebellion at
the report of the spies. They now saw the value of the blessing
which they had so rashly cast away. They confessed that it was
their own unbelief which had shut them out from Canaan. "We [p. 393] have sinned," they said, acknowledging that the fault was in
themselves, and not in God, whom they had so wickedly charged
with failing to fulfill His promises to them. Though their confession
did not spring from true repentance, it served to vindicate
the justice of God in His dealings with them.
The Lord still works in a similar manner to glorify His name
by bringing men to acknowledge His justice. When those who
profess to love Him complain of His providence, despise His
promises, and, yielding to temptation, unite with evil angels to
defeat the purposes of God, the Lord often so overrules
circumstances as to bring these persons where, though they may have no
real repentance, they will be convinced of their sin and will be
constrained to acknowledge the wickedness of their course and
the justice and goodness of God in His dealings with them. It is
thus that God sets counteragencies at work to make manifest the
works of darkness. And though the spirit which prompted to the
evil course is not radically changed, confessions are made that
vindicate the honor of God and justify His faithful reprovers,
who have been opposed and misrepresented. Thus it will be when
the wrath of God shall be finally poured out. When "the Lord
cometh with ten thousand of His saints, to execute judgment
upon all," He will also "convince all that are ungodly among
them of all their ungodly deeds." Jude 14, 15. Every sinner will
be brought to see and acknowledge the justice of his
condemnation.
Regardless of the divine sentence, the Israelites prepared to
undertake the conquest of Canaan. Equipped with armor and
weapons of war, they were, in their own estimation, fully
prepared for conflict; but they were sadly deficient in the sight of
God and His sorrowful servants. When, nearly forty years later,
the Lord directed Israel to go up and take Jericho, He promised
to go with them. The ark containing His law was borne before
their armies. His appointed leaders were to direct their
movements, under the divine supervision. With such guidance, no
harm could come to them. But now, contrary to the command of
God and the solemn prohibition of their leaders, without the ark,
and without Moses, they went out to meet the armies of the
enemy.
The trumpet sounded an alarm, and Moses hastened after
them with the warning, "Wherefore now do ye transgress the
commandment of the Lord? but it shall not prosper. Go not up, [p. 394] for the Lord is not among you; that ye be not smitten before
your enemies. For the Amalekites and the Canaanites are there
before you, and ye shall fall by the sword."
The Canaanites had heard of the mysterious power that seemed
to be guarding this people and of the wonders wrought in their
behalf, and they now summoned a strong force to repel the
invaders. The attacking army had no leader. No prayer was offered
that God would give them the victory. They set forth with the
desperate purpose to reverse their fate or to die in battle. Though
untrained in war, they were a vast multitude of armed men,
and they hoped by a sudden and fierce assault to bear down all
opposition. They presumptuously challenged the foe that had
not dared to attack them.
The Canaanites had stationed themselves upon a rocky tableland
reached only by difficult passes and a steep and dangerous
ascent. The immense numbers of the Hebrews could only render
their defeat more terrible. They slowly threaded the mountain
paths, exposed to the deadly missiles of their enemies above.
Massive rocks came thundering down, marking their path with
the blood of the slain. Those who reached the summit, exhausted
with their ascent, were fiercely repulsed, and driven back with
great loss. The field of carnage was strewn with the bodies of
the dead. The army of Israel was utterly defeated. Destruction
and death was the result of that rebellious experiment.
Forced to submission at last, the survivors "returned, and wept
before the Lord;" but "the Lord would not hearken" to their
voice. Deuteronomy 1:45. By their signal victory the enemies of
Israel, who had before awaited with trembling the approach of
that mighty host, were inspired with confidence to resist them.
All the reports they had heard concerning the marvelous things
that God had wrought for His people, they now regarded as
false, and they felt that there was no cause for fear. That first
defeat of Israel, by inspiring the Canaanites with courage and
resolution, had greatly increased the difficulties of the conquest.
Nothing remained for Israel but to fall back from the face of
their victorious foes, into the wilderness, knowing that here must
be the grave of a whole generation.
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