The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 41: Apostasy at the Jordan
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All felt that the punishment was just, and the people hastened
to the tabernacle, and with tears and deep humiliation confessed
their sin. While they were thus weeping before God, at the
door of the tabernacle, while the plague was still doing its work
of death, and the magistrates were executing their terrible
commission, Zimri, one of the nobles of Israel, came boldly into the
camp, accompanied by a Midianitish harlot, a princess "of a chief
house in Midian," whom he escorted to his tent. Never was vice
bolder or more stubborn. Inflamed with wine, Zimri declared
his "sin as Sodom," and gloried in his shame. The priests and
leaders had prostrated themselves in grief and humiliation, weeping
"between the porch and the altar," and entreating the Lord
to spare His people, and give not His heritage to reproach, when
this prince in Israel flaunted his sin in the sight of the congregation,
as if to defy the vengeance of God and mock the judges
of the nation. Phinehas, the son of Eleazar the high priest, rose
up from among the congregation, and seizing a javelin, "he went
after the man of Israel into the tent," and slew them both. Thus
the plague was stayed, while the priest who had executed the
divine judgment was honored before all Israel, and the priesthood
was confirmed to him and to his house forever.
Phinehas "hath turned My wrath away from the children of
Israel," was the divine message; "wherefore say, Behold, I give
unto him My covenant of peace: and he shall have it, and his [p. 456] seed after him, even the covenant of an everlasting priesthood;
because he was zealous for His God, and made an atonement for
the children of Israel."
The judgments visited upon Israel for their sin at Shittim,
destroyed the survivors of that vast company, who, nearly forty
years before, had incurred the sentence, "They shall surely die
in the wilderness." The numbering of the people by divine direction,
during their encampment on the plains of Jordan, showed
that "of them whom Moses and Aaron the priest numbered,
when they numbered the children of Israel in the wilderness
of Sinai, . . . there was not left a man of them, save Caleb
the son of Jephunneh, and Joshua the son of Nun." Numbers
26:64,65.
God had sent judgments upon Israel for yielding to the
enticements of the Midianites; but the tempters were not to escape
the wrath of divine justice. The Amalekites, who had attacked
Israel at Rephidim, falling upon those who were faint and
weary behind the host, were not punished till long after; but the
Midianites who seduced them into sin were speedily made to feel
God's judgments, as being the more dangerous enemies. "Avenge
the children of Israel of the Midianites" (Numbers 31:2), was the
command of God to Moses; "afterward shalt thou be gathered
unto thy people." This mandate was immediately obeyed. One
thousand men were chosen from each of the tribes and sent out
under the leadership of Phinehas. "And they warred against the
Midianites, as the Lord commanded Moses. . . . And they slew
the kings of Midian, beside the rest of them that were slain; . . .
five kings of Midian: Balaam also the son of Beor they slew with
the sword." Verses 7, 8. The women also, who had been made
captives by the attacking army, were put to death at the command
of Moses, as the most guilty and most dangerous of the
foes of Israel.
Such was the end of them that devised mischief against God's
people. Says the psalmist: "The heathen are sunk down in the
pit that they made: in the net which they hid is their own foot
taken." Psalm 9:15. "For the Lord will not cast off His people,
neither will He forsake His inheritance. But judgment shall return
unto righteousness." When men "gather themselves together
against the soul of the righteous," the Lord " shall bring
upon them their own iniquity, and shall cut them off in their
own wickedness." Psalm 94:14, 15, 21, 23. [p. 457]
When Balaam was called to curse the Hebrews he could not,
by all his enchantments, bring evil upon them; for the Lord had
not "beheld iniquity in Jacob," neither had He "seen perverseness
in Israel." Numbers 23:21, 23. But when through yielding
to temptation they transgressed God's law, their defense departed
from them. When the people of God are faithful to His commandments,
"there is no enchantment against Jacob, neither is
there any divination against Israel." Hence all the power and
wily arts of Satan are exerted to seduce them into sin. If those
who profess to be the depositaries of God's law become transgressors
of its precepts, they separate themselves from God, and
they will be unable to stand before their enemies.
The Israelites, who could not be overcome by the arms or by
the enchantments of Midian, fell a prey to her harlots. Such is
the power that woman, enlisted in the service of Satan, has exerted
to entrap and destroy souls. "She hath cast down many
wounded: yea, many strong men have been slain by her." Proverbs
7:26. It was thus that the children of Seth were seduced
from their integrity, and the holy seed became corrupt. It was
thus that Joseph was tempted. Thus Samson betrayed his strength,
the defense of Israel, into the hands of the Philistines. Here
David stumbled. And Solomon, the wisest of kings, who had
thrice been called the beloved of his God, became a slave of
passion, and sacrificed his integrity to the same bewitching
power.
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