The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 36: In the Wilderness
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There are those who will question God's love and His justice
in visiting so severe punishment for words spoken in the heat of
passion. But both love and justice require it to be shown that
utterances prompted by malice against God are a great sin. The
retribution visited upon the first offender would be a warning to
others, that God's name is to be held in reverence. But had this
man's sin been permitted to pass unpunished, others would have
been demoralized; and as the result many lives must eventually
have been sacrificed.
The mixed multitude that came up with the Israelites from
Egypt were a source of continual temptation and trouble. They
professed to have renounced idolatry and to worship the true
God; but their early education and training had molded their
habits and character, and they were more or less corrupted with
idolatry and with irreverence for God. They were oftenest the
ones to stir up strife and were the first to complain, and they
leavened the camp with their idolatrous practices and their
murmurings against God.
Soon after the return into the wilderness, an instance of
Sabbath violation occurred, under circumstances that rendered it
a case of peculiar guilt. The Lord's announcement that He would [p. 409] disinherit Israel had roused a spirit of rebellion. One of the
people, angry at being excluded from Canaan, and determined to
show his defiance of God's law, ventured upon the open
transgression of the fourth commandment by going out to gather
sticks upon the Sabbath. During the sojourn in the wilderness
the kindling of fires upon the seventh day had been strictly
prohibited. The prohibition was not to extend to the land of Canaan,
where the severity of the climate would often render fires a
necessity; but in the wilderness, fire was not needed for warmth.
The act of this man was a willful and deliberate violation of the
fourth commandment—a sin, not of thoughtlessness or ignorance,
but of presumption.
He was taken in the act and brought before Moses. It had
already been declared that Sabbathbreaking should be punished
with death, but it had not yet been revealed how the penalty
was to be inflicted. The case was brought by Moses before the
Lord, and the direction was given, "The man shall be surely put
to death: all the congregation shall stone him with stones without
the camp." Numbers 15:35. The sins of blasphemy and willful
Sabbathbreaking received the same punishment, being equally
an expression of contempt for the authority of God.
In our day there are many who reject the creation Sabbath
as a Jewish institution and urge that if it is to be kept, the
penalty of death must be inflicted for its violation; but we see
that blasphemy received the same punishment as did
Sabbathbreaking. Shall we therefore conclude that the third commandment
also is to be set aside as applicable only to the Jews? Yet
the argument drawn from the death penalty applies to the third,
the fifth, and indeed to nearly all the ten precepts, equally with
the fourth. Though God may not now punish the transgression
of His law with temporal penalties, yet His word declares that
the wages of sin is death; and in the final execution of the judgment
it will be found that death is the portion of those who
violate His sacred precepts.
During the entire forty years in the wilderness, the people
were every week reminded of the sacred obligation of the
Sabbath, by the miracle of the manna. Yet even this did not lead
them to obedience. Though they did not venture upon so open
and bold transgression as had received such signal punishment, [p. 410] yet there was great laxness in the observance of the fourth
commandment. God declares through His prophet, "My Sabbaths
they greatly polluted." Ezekiel 20:13-24. And this is enumerated
among the reasons for the exclusion of the first generation from
the Promised Land. Yet their children did not learn the lesson.
Such was their neglect of the Sabbath during the forty years'
wandering, that though God did not prevent them from entering
Canaan, He declared that they should be scattered among the
heathen after the settlement in the Land of Promise.
From Kadesh the children of Israel had turned back into the
wilderness; and the period of their desert sojourn being ended,
they came, "even the whole congregation, into the desert of Zin
in the first month: and the people abode in Kadesh."
Numbers 20:1.
Here Miriam died and was buried. From that scene of
rejoicing on the shores of the Red Sea, when Israel went forth
with song and dance to celebrate Jehovah's triumph, to the
wilderness grave which ended a lifelong wandering—such had
been the fate of millions who with high hopes had come forth
from Egypt. Sin had dashed from their lips the cup of blessing.
Would the next generation learn the lesson?
"For all this they sinned still, and believed not for His
wondrous works. . . . When He slew them, then they sought
Him: and they returned and inquired early after God. And they
remembered that God was their Rock, and the high God their
Redeemer." Psalm 78:32-35. Yet they did not turn to God with
a sincere purpose. Though when afflicted by their enemies they
sought help from Him who alone could deliver, yet "their heart
was not right with Him, neither were they steadfast in His
covenant. But He, being full of compassion, forgave their iniquity,
and destroyed them not: yea, many a time turned He His anger
away. . . . For He remembered that they were but flesh; a wind
that passeth away, and cometh not again." Verses 37-39.
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