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The Murmuring of the Israelites. . 1 And all the congregation lifted up their voice, and cried; and the people wept that night. 2 And all the children of Israel murmured against Moses and against Aaron: and the whole congregation said unto them, Would God that we had died in the land of Egypt! or would God we had died in this wilderness! 3 And wherefore hath the LORD brought us unto this land, to fall by the sword, that our wives and our children should be a prey? were it not better for us to return into Egypt? 4 And they said one to another, Let us make a captain, and let us return into Egypt. Here we see what mischief the evil spies made by their unfair representation. We may suppose that these twelve that were impanelled to enquire concerning Canaan had talked it over among themselves before they brought in their report in public; and Caleb and Joshua, it is likely, had done their utmost to bring the rest over to be of their mind, and if they would but have agreed that Caleb, according to his pose, should have spoken for them all, as their foreman, all had been well; but the evil spies, it should seem, wilfully designed to raise this mutiny, purely in opposition to Moses and Aaron, though they could not propose any advantage to themselves by it, unless they hoped to be captains and commanders of the retreat into Egypt they were now meditating. But what came of it? Here in these verses we find those whom they studied to humour put into a vexation, and, before the end of the chapter, brought to ruin. Observe, I. How the people fretted themselves: They lifted up their voices and cried ( Numbers 14:1 ; Numbers 14:1 ); giving credit to the report of the spies rather than to the word of God, and imagining their condition desperate, they laid the reins on the neck of their passions, and could keep no manner of temper. Like foolish froward children, they fall a crying, yet know not what they cry for. It would have been time enough to cry out when the enemy had beaten up their quarters, and they had seen the sons of Anak at the gate of their camp; but those that cried when nothing hurt them deserved to have something given them to cry for. And, as if all had been already gone, they sat down and wept that night. Note, Unbelief, or distrust of God, is a sin that is its own punishment. Those that do not trust God are continually vexing themselves. The world's mourners are more than God's, and the sorrow of the world worketh death. II. How they flew in the face of their governors-- murmured against Moses and Aaron, and in them reproached the Lord, Numbers 14:2 ; Numbers 14:3 . The congregation of elders began the discontent ( Numbers 14:1 ; Numbers 14:1 ), but the contagion soon spread through the whole camp, for the children of Israel murmured. Jealousies and discontents spread like wildfire among the unthinking multitude, who are easily taught to despise dominions, and to speak evil of dignities. 1. They look back with a causeless discontent. They wish that they had died in Egypt with the first-born that were slain there, or in the wilderness with those that lately died of the plague for lusting. See the prodigious madness of unbridled passions, which make men prodigal even of that which nature accounts most dear, life itself. Never were so many months spent so pleasantly as these which they had spent since they came out of Egypt, loaded with honours, compassed with favours, and continually entertained with something or other that was surprising; and yet, as if all these things had not made it worth their while to live, they wished they had died in Egypt. And such a light opinion they had of God's tremendous judgments executed on their neighbours for their sin that they wished they had shared with them in their plagues, rather than run the hazard of making a descent upon Canaan. They wish rather to die criminals under God's justice than live conquerors in his favour. Some read it, O that we had died in Egypt, or in the wilderness! O that we might die! They wish to die, for fear of dying; and have not sense enough to reason as the poor lepers, when rather than die upon the spot they ventured into an enemy's camp, If they kill us, we shall but die, 2 Kings 7:4 . How base were the spirits of these degenerate Israelites, who, rather than die (if it come to the worst) like soldiers on the bed of honour, with their swords in their hands, desire to die like rotten sheep in the wilderness. 2. They look forward with a groundless despair, taking it for granted ( Numbers 14:3 ; Numbers 14:3 ) that if they went on they must fall by the sword, and pretend to lay the cause of their fear upon the great care they had for their wives and children, who, they conclude, will be a prey to the Canaanites. And here is a most wicked blasphemous reflection upon God himself, as if he had brought them hither on purpose that they might fall by the sword, and that their wives and children, those poor innocents, should be a prey. Thus do they, in effect, charge that God who is love itself with the worst of malice, and eternal Truth with the basest hypocrisy, suggesting that all the kind things he had said to them, and done for them, hitherto, were intended only to decoy them into a snare, and to cover a secret design carried on all along to ruin them. Daring impudence! But what will not that tongue speak against heaven that is set on fire of hell? The devil keeps up his interest in the hearts of men by insinuating to them ill thoughts of God, as if he desired the death of sinners, and delighted in the hardships and sufferings of his own servants, whereas he knows his thoughts to us-ward (whether we know them so or no) to be thoughts of good, and not of evil, Jeremiah 29:11 . III. How they came at last to this desperate resolve, that, instead of going forward to Canaan, they would go back again to Egypt. The motion is first made by way of query only ( Numbers 14:3 ; Numbers 14:3 ): Were it not better for us to return into Egypt? But the ferment being high, and the spirits of the people being disposed to entertain any thing that was perverse, it soon ripened to a resolution, without a debate ( Numbers 14:4 ; Numbers 14:4 ): Let us make a captain and return to Egypt; and it is lamented long after ( Nehemiah 9:17 ) that in their rebellion they appointed a captain to return to their bondage; for they knew Moses would not be their captain in this retreat. Now, 1. It was the greatest folly in the world to wish themselves in Egypt, or to think that if they were there it would be better with them than it was. If they durst not go forward to Canaan, yet better be as they were than go back to Egypt. What did they want? What had they to complain of? They had plenty, and peace, and rest, were under a good government, had good company, had the tokens of God's presence with them, and enough to make them easy even in the wilderness, if they had but hearts to be content. But whither were they thus eager to go to better themselves? To Egypt! Had they so soon forgotten the sore bondage they were in there? Would they be again under the tyranny of their taskmasters, and at the drudgery of making brick? And, after all the plagues which Egypt had suffered for their sakes, could they expect any better treatment there than they had formerly, and not rather much worse? In how little time (not a year and a half) have they forgotten all the sighs of their bondage, and all the songs of their deliverance! Like brute-beasts, they mind only what is present, and their memories, with the other powers of reason, are sacrificed to their passions. See Psalms 106:7 . We find it threatened ( Deuteronomy 28:68 ), as the completing of their misery, that they should be brought into Egypt again, and yet this is what they here wish for. Sinners are enemies to themselves; and those that walk not in God's counsels consult their own mischief and ruin. 2. It was a most senseless ridiculous thing to talk of returning thither through the wilderness. Could they expect that God's cloud would lead them or his manna attend them? And, if they did not, the thousands of Israel must unavoidably be lost and perish in the wilderness. Suppose the difficulties of conquering Canaan were as great as they imagined, those of returning to Egypt were much greater. In this let us see, (1.) The folly of discontent and impatience under the crosses of our outward condition. We are uneasy at that which is, complain of our place and lot, and we would shift; but is there any place or condition in this world that has not something in it to make us uneasy if we are disposed to be so? The way to better our condition is to get our spirits into a better frame; and instead of asking, "Were it not better to go to Egypt?" ask, "Were it not better to be content, and make the best of that which is?" (2.) The folly of apostasy from the ways of God. Heaven is the Canaan set before us, a land flowing with milk and honey; those that bring up ever so ill a report of it cannot but say that it is indeed a good land, only it is hard to get to it. Strict and serious godliness is looked upon as an impracticable thing, and this deters many who began well from going on; rather than undergo the imaginary hardships of a religious life, they run themselves upon the certain fatal consequences of a sinful course; and so they transcribe the folly of Israel, who, when they were within a step of Canaan, would make a captain, and return to Egypt. return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-5-10" class="com-number"
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Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
**이스라엘 백성의 원망**
이스라엘 백성이 악한 정탐꾼들의 불공정한 보고로 인해 일으킨 소란이 여기 나타난다. 열두 정탐꾼은 가나안 땅을 조사하러 파견된 자들로, 공개 보고 전에 이미 서로 의논을 나누었을 것이다. 갈렙과 여호수아는 나머지를 설득하려 최선을 다했을 것이며, 갈렙이 대표로 말할 수만 있었더라면 모든 것이 잘 되었을 것이다. 그러나 악한 정탐꾼들은 순전히 모세와 아론을 대적하려는 의도로 이 반란을 일으킨 것으로 보인다.
이 단락에서 주목할 점은 다음과 같다.
**I. 백성이 스스로 분노에 사로잡힌 모습.** 그들은 목소리를 높여 울었다(민 14:1). 정탐꾼의 보고를 하나님의 말씀보다 믿고, 자신들의 처지가 절망적이라고 생각하며 감정에 고삐를 늦추어, 그날 밤 앉아서 울었다. 불신앙은 그 자체가 징벌이다. 하나님을 신뢰하지 않는 자들은 끝없는 근심 속에 산다.
**II. 지도자들에게 달려든 모습.** 그들은 모세와 아론을 원망하였으니, 이는 곧 여호와를 욕되게 한 것이다(민 14:2-3). 불만은 장로들의 무리에서 시작하여(민 14:1) 온 진영으로 삽시간에 번졌다. 이 가운데 두 가지 죄악이 드러난다.
1. 이유 없이 과거를 그리워함. 그들은 이집트에서 죽었더라면, 또는 이 광야에서 죽었더라면 하고 바랐다. 억제되지 않은 감정의 극단적인 광기가 드러나니, 이들은 본성이 가장 소중하게 여기는 생명마저 아낌없이 버리려 한다. 이집트에서 나온 이후 그토록 많은 은혜와 놀라운 일들로 가득한 세월을 보내고서도, 마치 그 모든 것이 살 가치가 없었던 것처럼, 이집트에서 죽었으면 하고 바랐다. 어떤 이들은 이를 "오, 우리가 죽었으면!"이라는 탄식으로 읽기도 한다. 이들은 죽음을 두려워하면서 죽기를 바라며, 가련한 나병 환자들이 "설령 죽더라도 죽을 뿐"(왕하 7:4)이라며 적진으로 들어갔던 현실 감각조차 없었다.
2. 근거 없는 절망으로 미래를 바라봄. 나아가면 반드시 칼에 쓰러질 것이라 단정하고(민 14:3), 처자식에 대한 깊은 염려를 핑계로 댔다. 이것은 사랑 그 자체이신 하나님께 가장 나쁜 악의를 돌리고, 영원한 진리이신 분께 가장 비열한 위선을 씌우는 것이다. 마귀는 하나님에 대한 악한 생각을 심음으로써 사람들의 마음속에서 자신의 권세를 유지한다. 마치 하나님이 죄인들의 죽음을 원하시고, 자기 종들의 고통을 즐기시는 양 속인다. 그러나 하나님의 생각은 우리에게 선이요 재앙이 아님을(렘 29:11) 하나님은 아신다.
**III. 이집트로 돌아가자는 절망적인 결의.** 처음에는 "이집트로 돌아가는 것이 낫지 않겠느냐?"(민 14:3)는 질문으로 시작하더니, 뜨거워진 분위기 속에 금세 "한 지도자를 세우고 이집트로 돌아가자"(민 14:4)는 결의로 굳어졌다. 느헤미야는 오래 후에도 이것을 탄식했다(느 9:17). 이에 대해 두 가지를 생각할 수 있다.
1. 이집트로 돌아가기를 바라는 것은 세상에서 가장 어리석은 일이었다. 그들에게 부족한 것이 있었는가? 풍요와 평화와 안식이 있었고, 선한 통치와 좋은 동반자가 있었으며, 하나님의 임재의 표가 그들과 함께 있었다. 그러나 그들이 가려는 곳은 이집트였다. 그 고된 노예 생활을 벌써 잊었단 말인가? 십사 개월도 채 되지 않아 그들은 속박의 탄식도, 구원의 노래도 잊어버린 것이다(시 106:7). 하나님이 이집트로 돌아가는 것을 가장 혹독한 심판으로 위협하셨는데도(신 28:68), 그들은 바로 그것을 원하고 있었다.
2. 광야를 지나 이집트로 돌아간다는 발상은 더없이 무모하고 터무니없는 것이었다. 하나님의 구름이 그들을 인도하고 만나가 그들과 함께하리라고 기대할 수 있겠는가? 그러지 않는다면 이스라엘 수천 명은 광야에서 반드시 죽고 말 것이었다. 이에서 우리는 두 가지 교훈을 얻는다. (1) 현재의 처지에 대한 불만과 조급함의 어리석음. 우리가 처한 것에 불만을 품고 자리를 옮기려 해도, 이 세상 어느 처지나 장소에 우리가 불만스럽게 마음먹으면 괴로운 요소가 없는 곳이 있겠는가? 처지를 개선하는 길은 심령을 더 나은 상태로 만드는 것이다. (2) 하나님의 길에서 떠나는 어리석음. 천국이 우리 앞에 놓인 가나안이요, 젖과 꿀이 흐르는 땅이다. 경건하고 진지한 삶이 비현실적인 것처럼 보이기에 많은 이들이 잘 시작하고서도 중도에 포기한다. 상상 속의 고난을 피하려다 죄의 길의 확실한 비참한 결과로 스스로를 내몰며, 이스라엘이 가나안 한 걸음 앞에서 지도자를 세워 이집트로 돌아가려 한 그 어리석음을 그대로 되풀이하는 것이다.
원주석
- 번역원본
commentary-section/mhm-num-14-1-4(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반
1~45절 카드 ↗
N U M B E R S CHAP. XIV. This chapter gives us an account of that fatal quarrel between God and Israel upon which, for their murmuring and unbelief, he swore in his wrath that they should not enter into his rest. Here is, I. The mutiny and rebellion of Israel against God, upon the report of the evil spies, Numbers 14:1-4 . II. The fruitless endeavour of Moses and Aaron, Caleb and Joshua, to still the tumult, Numbers 14:5-10 . III. Their utter ruin justly threatened by an offended God, Numbers 14:11 ; Numbers 14:12 . IV. The humble intercession of Moses for them, Numbers 14:13-19 . V. A mitigation of the sentence in answer to the prayer of Moses; they shall not all be cut off, but the decree goes forth ratified with an oath, published to the people, again and again repeated, that this whole congregation should perish in the wilderness, and none of them enter Canaan but Caleb and Joshua only, Numbers 14:20-35 . VI. The present death of the evil spies, Numbers 14:36-39 . VII. The rebuke given to those who attempted to go forward notwithstanding, Numbers 14:40-45 . And this is written for our admonition, that we "fall not after the same example of unbelief." return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-1-4" class="com-number"
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Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
민수기 14장은 이스라엘 백성이 하나님께 반역하여, 그 불신앙으로 말미암아 하나님이 진노 가운데 그들이 약속의 땅에 들어가지 못할 것을 맹세하신 치명적인 사건을 기록한다. 이 장의 내용은 다음과 같다. I. 악한 정탐꾼들의 보고에 따른 이스라엘의 반역과 모반(민 14:1-4). II. 모세와 아론, 갈렙과 여호수아가 소요를 잠재우려 한 헛된 시도(민 14:5-10). III. 진노한 하나님께서 그들의 완전한 멸망을 정당하게 선언하심(민 14:11-12). IV. 모세의 겸손한 중보 기도(민 14:13-19). V. 모세의 기도에 응답한 형벌의 완화 — 모두 진멸되지는 않으나, 맹세로 확증된 선고가 선포되어 이 온 회중이 광야에서 죽고 갈렙과 여호수아만이 가나안에 들어갈 것임이 거듭 선포됨(민 14:20-35). VI. 악한 정탐꾼들의 즉각적인 죽음(민 14:36-39). VII. 그럼에도 불구하고 앞으로 나아가려 한 자들에 대한 책망(민 14:40-45). 이 모든 것은 우리의 경계를 위해 기록된 것이니, 우리로 "같은 불순종의 본을 따르지 않게" 하려 함이다.
원주석
- 번역원본
commentary-section/mhm-num-14-intro(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반
5~10절 카드 ↗
The Expostulation of Joshua and Caleb. . 5 Then Moses and Aaron fell on their faces before all the assembly of the congregation of the children of Israel. 6 And Joshua the son of Nun, and Caleb the son of Jephunneh, which were of them that searched the land, rent their clothes: 7 And they spake unto all the company of the children of Israel, saying, The land, which we passed through to search it, is an exceeding good land. 8 If the LORD delight in us, then he will bring us into this land, and give it us; a land which floweth with milk and honey. 9 Only rebel not ye against the LORD , neither fear ye the people of the land; for they are bread for us: their defence is departed from them, and the LORD is with us: fear them not. 10 But all the congregation bade stone them with stones. And the glory of the LORD appeared in the tabernacle of the congregation before all the children of Israel. The friends of Israel here interpose to save them if possible from ruining themselves, but in vain. The physicians of their state would have healed them, but they would not be healed; their watchmen gave them warning, but they would not take warning, and so their blood is upon their own heads. I. The best endeavours were used to still the tumult, and, if now at last they would have understood the things that belonged to their peace, all the following mischief would have been prevented. 1. Moses and Aaron did their part, Numbers 14:5 ; Numbers 14:5 . Though it was against them that they murmured ( Numbers 14:2 ; Numbers 14:2 ), yet they bravely overlooked the affront and injury done them, and approved themselves faithful friends to those who were outrageous enemies to them. The clamour and noise of the people were so great that Moses and Aaron could not be heard; should they order any of their servants to proclaim silence, the angry multitude would perhaps be the more clamorous; and therefore, to gain audience in the sight of all the assembly, they fell on their faces, thus expressing, (1.) Their humble prayers to God to still the noise of this sea, the noise of its waves, even the tumult of the people. (2.) The great trouble and concern of their own spirits. They fell down as men astonished and even thunder-struck, amazed to see a people throw away their own mercies: to see those so ill-humoured who were so well taught. And, (3.) Their great earnestness with the people to cease their murmurings; they hoped to work upon them by this humble posture, and to prevail with them not to persist in their rebellion; Moses and Aaron beseech them, as though by them God himself did beseech them, to be reconciled unto God. What they said to the people Moses relates in the repetition of this story. Deuteronomy 1:29 ; Deuteronomy 1:30 , Be not afraid; the Lord your God shall fight for you. Note, Those that are zealous friends to precious souls will stoop to any thing for their salvation. Moses and Aaron, notwithstanding the posts of honour they are in, prostrate themselves to the people to beg of them not to ruin themselves. 2. Caleb and Joshua did their part: they rent their clothes in a holy indignation at the sin of the people, and a holy dread of the wrath of God, which they saw ready to break out against them. it was the greater trouble to these good men because the tumult was occasioned by those spies with whom they had been joined in commission; and therefore they thought themselves obliged to do what they could to still the storm which their fellows had raised. No reasoning could be more pertinent and pathetic than theirs was ( Numbers 14:7-9 ; Numbers 14:7-9 ), and they spoke as with authority. (1.) They assured them of the goodness of the land they had surveyed, and that it was really worth venturing for, and not a land that ate up the inhabitants, as the evil spies had represented it. It is an exceedingly good land ( Numbers 14:7 ; Numbers 14:7 ); it is very, very good, so the word is; so that they had no reason to despise this pleasant land. Note, If men were but thoroughly convinced of the desirableness of the gains of religion, they would not stick at the services of it. (2.) They made nothing of the difficulties that seemed to lie in the way of their gaining the possession of it: " Fear not the people of the land, Numbers 14:9 ; Numbers 14:9 . Whatever formidable ideas have been given you of them, the lion is not so fierce as he is painted. They are bread for us, " that is, "they are set before us rather to be fed upon than to be fought with, so easily, so pleasantly, and with so much advantage to ourselves shall we master them." Pharaoh is said to have been given them for meat ( Psalms 74:14 ), and the Canaanites will be so too. They show that, whatever was suggested to the contrary, the advantage was clear on Israel's side. For, [1.] Though the Canaanites dwell in walled cities, they are naked: Their defence has departed from them; that common providence which preserves the rights of nations has abandoned them, and will be no shelter nor protection to them. The other spies took notice of their strength, but these of their wickedness, and thence inferred that God had forsaken them, and therefore their defence had departed. No people can be safe when they have provoked God to leave them. [2.] Though Israel dwell in tents they are fortified: The Lord is with us, and his name is a strong tower; fear them not. Note, While we have the presence of God with us, we need not fear the most powerful force against us. (3.) They showed them plainly that all the danger they were in was from their own discontents, and that they would succeed against all their enemies if they did not make God their enemy. On this point alone the cause would turn ( Numbers 14:8 ; Numbers 14:8 ): " If the Lord delight in us, as certainly he does, and will if we do not provoke him, he will bring us into this good land; we shall without fail get it in possession by his favour, and the light of his countenance ( Psalms 44:3 ), if we do not forfeit his favour and by our own follies turn away our own mercies." It has come to this issue ( Numbers 14:9 ; Numbers 14:9 ): Only rebel not you against the Lord. Note, Nothing can ruin sinners but their own rebellion. If God leave them, it is because they drive him from them; and they die because they will die. None are excluded the heavenly Canaan but those that exclude themselves. And, now, could the case have been made more plain? could it have been urged more closely? But what was the effect? II. It was all to no purpose; they were deaf to this fair reasoning; nay, they were exasperated by it, and grew more outrageous: All the congregation bade stone them with stones, Numbers 14:10 ; Numbers 14:10 . The rulers of the congregation, and the great men (so bishop Patrick), ordered the common people to fall upon them, and knock their brains out. Their case was sad indeed when their leaders thus caused them to err. Note, It is common for those whose hearts are fully set in them to do evil to rage at those who give them good counsel. Those who hate to be reformed hate those that would reform them, and count them their enemies because they tell them the truth. Thus early did Israel begin to misuse the prophets, and stone those that were sent to them, and it was this that filled the measure of their sin, Matthew 23:37 . Stone them with stones! Why, what evil have they done? No crime can be laid to their charge; but the truth is these two witnesses tormented those that were obstinate in their infidelity, Revelation 11:10 . Caleb and Joshua had but just said, The Lord is with us; fear them not ( Numbers 14:9 ; Numbers 14:9 ): and, if Israel will not apply those encouraging words to their own fears, those that uttered them know how to encourage themselves with them against this enraged multitude that spoke of stoning them, as David in a like cause, 1 Samuel 30:6 . Those that cannot prevail to edify others with their counsels and comforts should endeavour at least to edify themselves. Caleb and Joshua knew they appeared for God and his glory, and therefore doubted not but God would appear for them and their safety. And they were not disappointed, for immediately the glory of the Lord appeared, to the terror and confusion of those that were for stoning the servants of God. When they reflected upon God ( Numbers 14:3 ; Numbers 14:3 ), his glory appeared not to silence their blasphemies; but, when they threatened Caleb and Joshua, they touched the apple of his eye, and his glory appeared immediately. Note, Those who faithfully expose themselves for God are sure to be taken under his special protection, and shall be hidden from the rage of men, either under heaven or in heaven. return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-11-19" class="com-number"
Pericope (part_of)
- part_of
pericope/per-num-14-002
절 (explains)
bible-text/num-14-5, bible-text/num-14-6, bible-text/num-14-7, bible-text/num-14-8, bible-text/num-14-9, bible-text/num-14-10
Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
**여호수아와 갈렙의 권면**
이스라엘의 친구들이 개입하여, 가능하다면 그들이 스스로 파멸하는 것을 막으려 했으나 헛된 일이었다. 나라의 의사들이 고치려 했으나 그들은 치유받기를 원치 않았고, 파수꾼들이 경고를 주었으나 듣지 않았으니, 그 피는 자기들의 머리로 돌아갈 것이다.
**I. 소요를 잠재우기 위해 최선의 노력이 기울여졌다.**
1. 모세와 아론이 자신의 역할을 했다(민 14:5). 그들을 향해 원망이 쏟아졌음에도(민 14:2), 그들은 의연하게 그 무례한 상처를 무시하고 자신들에게 적대적인 자들의 진정한 친구임을 증명했다. 군중의 소란이 너무 커서 말로 들리게 할 수 없었기에, 온 회중 앞에서 얼굴을 땅에 엎드렸다. 이는 (1) 이 파도 같은 소란을 잠재워 달라는 하나님께 드리는 겸손한 기도요, (2) 자신들의 크나큰 슬픔과 괴로움의 표현이며, (3) 백성들에게 드리는 간절한 탄원이었다. 귀한 영혼들에게 열심인 자들은 그들의 구원을 위해서라면 무엇이든 낮출 것이다. 모세와 아론은 자신들이 맡은 영예로운 직분에도 불구하고 자신들의 파멸을 자초하지 말라고 백성 앞에 엎드렸다.
2. 갈렙과 여호수아도 자신들의 역할을 했다. 그들은 백성의 죄에 대한 거룩한 분노와 하나님의 진노가 곧 임할 것에 대한 거룩한 두려움으로 옷을 찢었다. 이 두 선한 사람은 함께 파송된 정탐꾼들이 일으킨 풍파를 자신들이 책임지고 잠재워야 한다는 의무감을 느꼈다. 그들의 논거는 더없이 적절하고 간절했으며(민 14:7-9), 권위 있게 말했다.
(1) 그들은 땅의 탁월함을 확언하며, 모험을 감수할 만한 곳이라고 말했다. "그 땅은 심히 아름다운 땅"(민 14:7)이라고, "심히 심히 좋은 땅"이라고 했다. 그러므로 백성이 이 좋은 땅을 멸시할 이유가 없었다. 사람들이 종교의 유익에 대해 충분히 확신한다면 그 섬김을 두고 머뭇거리지 않을 것이다.
(2) 그들은 앞길의 어려움을 아무것도 아닌 것으로 만들었다. "그 땅 백성을 두려워하지 마라"(민 14:9). 그들은 "우리의 먹이"라고 했다. 곧 싸워야 할 상대가 아니라, 쉽고 유쾌하게 제압할 수 있는 먹이라는 것이다. 바로가 그들에게 먹이가 되었듯이(시 74:14), 가나안 사람들도 그렇게 될 것이다. 그들은 이스라엘에 유리한 두 가지를 보여 주었다. [1.] 가나안 사람들이 성벽 도시에 살지라도 그들은 벌거벗은 것이나 마찬가지다. "그들의 방어막이 떠났다." 즉 나라의 권리를 보존하는 공동의 섭리가 그들을 버렸다는 것이다. 다른 정탐꾼들은 가나안의 강함을 주목했지만, 갈렙과 여호수아는 그들의 사악함을 보고, 하나님이 그들을 버리셨으므로 그들의 방어막이 떠났다고 추론했다. [2.] 이스라엘이 천막에 살지라도 그들은 요새화되어 있다. "여호와가 우리와 함께 계시기" 때문이다.
(3) 그들은 모든 위험이 그들 자신의 불만에서 온다는 것을 분명히 보여 주었다. "여호와가 우리를 기뻐하신다면"(민 14:8). 오직 "여호와를 거역하지 말라"(민 14:9). 죄인들을 파멸시키는 것은 오직 그들 자신의 반역뿐이다. 하나님이 그들을 떠나신다면 그것은 그들이 하나님을 쫓아낸 것이기 때문이다.
**II. 그럼에도 아무 소용이 없었다.** 그들은 이 공정한 이치에 귀를 막았고, 오히려 더 격분하여 난폭해졌다. 온 회중이 그들을 돌로 치라고 했다(민 14:10). 지도자들이 평민들에게 그들에게 달려들어 죽이라고 명했다. 이처럼 지도자들이 그들을 잘못 인도하는 것이야말로 백성에게 슬픈 일이었다. 완전히 악에 빠진 자들이 선한 권고를 주는 자들에게 격노하는 것은 흔한 일이다. 이스라엘은 이렇게 일찍부터 선지자들을 학대하고 그들에게 보냄을 받은 자들을 돌로 치기 시작하여(마 23:37), 죄악의 잔을 채워갔다.
갈렙과 여호수아는 방금 "여호와가 우리와 함께 계시니 그들을 두려워하지 말라"(민 14:9)고 말했는데, 이스라엘이 그 격려의 말을 자신들의 두려움에 적용하지 않는다면, 두 사람은 돌에 맞을 뻔한 자신들에게 그 말을 적용할 수 있었다. 다윗이 비슷한 경우에 그랬듯이(삼상 30:6). 자신의 권고와 위로로 다른 사람을 세우지 못한다면, 적어도 자기 자신을 세우는 데 힘써야 한다. 갈렙과 여호수아는 자신들이 하나님과 그의 영광을 위해 나선 것을 알았기에, 하나님이 그들을 위해 그리고 그들의 안전을 위해 나타나실 것을 의심하지 않았다. 과연 그들은 실망하지 않았다. 여호와의 영광이 즉각 나타났기 때문이다. 백성이 하나님을 비방했을 때(민 14:3) 그의 영광이 나타나 그들의 신성모독을 잠잠케 하지는 않으셨다. 그러나 그들이 갈렙과 여호수아를 위협했을 때, 이는 그분의 눈동자를 건드린 것이었기에, 그분의 영광이 즉각 나타났다. 하나님을 위해 충실하게 자신을 드리는 자들은 반드시 하나님의 특별한 보호 아래 있으며, 사람들의 분노에서 숨겨질 것이다.
원주석
- 번역원본
commentary-section/mhm-num-14-5-10(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반
11~19절 카드 ↗
The Intercession of Moses. . 11 And the LORD said unto Moses, How long will this people provoke me? and how long will it be ere they believe me, for all the signs which I have showed among them? 12 I will smite them with the pestilence, and disinherit them, and will make of thee a greater nation and mightier than they. 13 And Moses said unto the LORD , Then the Egyptians shall hear it, (for thou broughtest up this people in thy might from among them;) 14 And they will tell it to the inhabitants of this land: for they have heard that thou LORD art among this people, that thou LORD art seen face to face, and that thy cloud standeth over them, and that thou goest before them, by day time in a pillar of a cloud, and in a pillar of fire by night. 15 Now if thou shalt kill all this people as one man, then the nations which have heard the fame of thee will speak, saying, 16 Because the LORD was not able to bring this people into the land which he sware unto them, therefore he hath slain them in the wilderness. 17 And now, I beseech thee, let the power of my Lord be great, according as thou hast spoken, saying, 18 The LORD is longsuffering, and of great mercy, forgiving iniquity and transgression, and by no means clearing the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation. 19 Pardon, I beseech thee, the iniquity of this people according unto the greatness of thy mercy, and as thou hast forgiven this people, from Egypt even until now. Here is, I. The righteous sentence which God gave against Israel for their murmuring and unbelief, which, though afterwards mitigated, showed what was the desert of their sin and the demand of injured justice, and what would have been done if Moses had not interposed. When the glory of the Lord appeared in the tabernacle we may suppose that Moses took it for a call to him immediately to come and attend there, as before the tabernacle was erected he went up to the mount in a similar case, Exodus 32:30 . Thus, while the people were studying to disgrace him, God publicly put honour upon him, as the man of his counsel. Now here we are told what God said to him there. 1. He showed him the great evil of the people's sin, Numbers 14:11 ; Numbers 14:11 . What passed between God and Israel went through the hands of Moses: when they were displeased with God they told Moses of it ( Numbers 14:2 ; Numbers 14:2 ); when God was displeased with them he told Moses too, revealing his secret to his servant the prophet, Amos 3:7 . Two things God justly complains of to Moses:-- (1.) Their sin. They provoke me, or (as the word signifies) they reject, reproach, despise me, for they will not believe me. This was the bitter root which bore the gall and wormwood. It was their unbelief that made this a day of provocation in the wilderness, Hebrews 3:8 . Note, Distrust of God, of his power and promise, is itself a very great provocation, and at the bottom of many other provocations. Unbelief is a great sin ( 1 John 5:10 ), and a root sin, Hebrews 3:12 . (2.) Their continuance in it: How long will they do so? Note, The God of heaven keeps an account how long sinners persist in their provocations; and the longer they persist the more he is displeased. The aggravations of their sin were, [1.] Their relation to God: This people, a peculiar people, a professing people. The nearer any are to God in name and profession, the more he is provoked by their sins, especially their unbelief. [2.] The experience they had had of God's power and goodness, in all the signs which he had shown among them, by which, one would think, he had effectually obliged them to trust him and follow him. The more God has done for us the greater is the provocation if we distrust him. 2. He showed him the sentence which justice passed upon them for it, Numbers 14:12 ; Numbers 14:12 . "What remains now but that I should make a full end of them? It will soon be done. I will smite them with the pestilence, not leave a man of them alive, but wholly blot out their name and race, and so disinherit them, and be no more troubled with them. Ah, I will ease me of my adversaries. They wish to die; and let them die, and neither root nor branch be left of them. Such rebellious children deserve to be disinherited." And if it be asked, "What will become of God's covenant with Abraham then?" here is an answer, "I shall be preserved in the family of Moses: I will make of thee a greater nation. " Thus, (1.) God would try Moses, whether he still continued that affection for Israel which he formerly expressed upon a like occasion, in preferring their interests before the advancement of his own family; and it is proved that Moses was still of the same public spirit, and could not bear the thought of raising his own name upon the ruin of the name of Israel. (2.) God would teach us that he will not be a loser by the ruin of sinners. If Adam and Eve had been cut off and disinherited, he could have made another Adam and another Eve, and have glorified his mercy in them, as here he could have glorified his mercy in Moses, though Israel had been ruined. II. The humble intercession Moses made for them. Their sin had made a fatal breach in the wall of their defence, at which destruction would certainly have entered if Moses had not seasonably stepped in and made it good. Here he was a type of Christ, who interceded for his persecutors, and prayed for those that despitefully used him, leaving us an example to his own rule, Matthew 5:44 . 1. The prayer of his petition is, in one word, Pardon, I beseech thee, the iniquity of this people ( Numbers 14:19 ; Numbers 14:19 ), that is, "Do not bring upon them the ruin they deserve." This was Christ's prayer for those that crucified him, Father forgive them. The pardon of a national sin, as such, consists in the turning away of the national punishment; and that is it for which Moses is here so earnest. 2. The pleas are many, and strongly urged. (1.) He insists most upon the plea that is taken from the glory of God, Numbers 14:13-16 ; Numbers 14:13-16 . With this he begins, and somewhat abruptly, taking occasion from that dreadful word, I will disinherit them. Lord (says he), then the Egyptians shall hear it. God's honour lay nearer to his heart than any interests of his own. Observe how he orders this cause before God. He pleads, [1.] That the eyes both of Egypt and Canaan were upon them, and great expectations were raised concerning them. They could not but have heard that thou, Lord, art among this people, Numbers 14:14 ; Numbers 14:14 . The neighbouring countries rang of it, how much this people were the particular care of heaven, so as never any people under the sun were. [2.] That if they should be cut off great notice would be taken of it. "The Egyptians will hear it ( Numbers 14:13 ; Numbers 14:13 ), for they have their spies among us, and they will tell it to the inhabitants of the land " ( Numbers 14:14 ; Numbers 14:14 ); for there was great correspondence between Egypt and Canaan, although not by the way of this wilderness. "If this people that have made so great a noise be all consumed, if their mighty pretensions come to nothing, and their light go out in a snuff, it will be told with pleasure in Gath, and published in the streets of Askelon; and what construction will the heathen put upon it? It will be impossible to make them understand it as an act of God's justice, and as such redounding to God's honour; brutish men know not this ( Psalms 92:6 ): but they will impute it to the failing of God's power, and so turn it to his reproach, Numbers 14:16 ; Numbers 14:16 . They will say, He slew them in the wilderness because he was not able to bring them to Canaan, his arm being shortened, and his stock of miracles being spent. Now, Lord, let not one attribute be glorified at the expense of another; rather let mercy rejoice against judgment than that almighty power should be impeached." Note, The best pleas in prayer are those that are taken from God's honour; for they agree with the first petition of the Lord's Prayer, Hallowed be thy name. Do not disgrace the throne of thy glory. God pleads it with himself ( Deuteronomy 32:27 ), I feareth the wrath of the enemy; and we should use it as an argument with ourselves to walk so in every thing as to give no occasion to the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme, 1 Timothy 6:1 . (2.) He pleads God's proclamation of his name at Horeb ( Numbers 14:17 ; Numbers 14:18 ): Let the power of the Lord be great. Power is here put for pardoning mercy; it is his power over his own anger. If he should destroy them, God's power would be questioned; if he should continue and complete their salvation, notwithstanding the difficulties that arose, not only from the strength of their enemies, but from their own provocations, this would greatly magnify the divine power: what cannot he do who could make so weak a people conquerors and such an unworthy people favourites? The more danger there is of others reproaching God's power the more desirous we should be to see it glorified. To enforce this petition, he refers to the word which God had spoken: The Lord is long-suffering and of great mercy. God's goodness had there been spoken of as his glory; God gloried in it, Exodus 34:6 ; Exodus 34:7 . Now here he prays that upon this occasion he would glorify it. Note, We must take our encouragement in prayer from the word of God, upon which he has caused us to hope, Psalms 119:49 . "Lord, be and do according as thou hast spoken; for hast thou spoken, and wilt thou not make it good?" Three things God had solemnly made a declaration of, which Moses here fastens upon, and improves for the enforcing of his petition:-- [1.] The goodness of God's nature in general, that he is long-suffering, or slow to anger, and of great mercy; not soon provoked, but tender and compassionate towards offenders. [2.] His readiness in particular to pardon sin: Forgiving iniquity and transgression, sins of all sorts. [3.] His unwillingness to proceed to extremity, even when he does punish. For in this sense the following words may be read: That will by no means make quite desolate, in visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children. God had indeed said in the second commandment that he would thus visit, but here he promises not to make a full end of families, churches, and nations, at once; and so it is very applicable to this occasion, for Moses cannot beg that God would not at all punish this sin (it would be too great an encouragement to rebellion if he should set no mark of his displeasure upon it), but that he would not kill all this people as one man, Numbers 14:15 ; Numbers 14:15 . He does not ask that they may not be corrected, but that they may not be disinherited. And this proclamation of God's name was the more apposite to his purpose because it was made upon occasion of the pardoning of their sin in making the golden calf. This sin which they had now fallen into was bad enough, but it was not idolatry. (3.) He pleads past experience: As thou hast forgiven this people from Egypt, Numbers 14:19 ; Numbers 14:19 . This seemed to make against him. Why should those be forgiven any more who, after they had been so often forgiven, revolted yet more and more, and seemed hardened and encouraged in their rebellion by the lenity and patience of their God, and the frequent pardons they had obtained? Among men it would have been thought impolitic to take notice of such a circumstance in a request of this nature, as it might operate to the prejudice of the petitioner: but, as in other things so in pardoning sin, God's thoughts and ways are infinitely above ours, Isaiah 55:9 . Moses looks upon it as a good plea, Lord, forgive, as thou hast forgiven. It will be no more a reproach to thy justice, nor any less the praise of thy mercy, to forgive now, than it has been formerly. Therefore the sons of Jacob are not consumed, because they have to do with a God that changes not, Malachi 3:6 . return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-20-35" class="com-number"
Pericope (part_of)
- part_of
pericope/per-num-14-003 - part_of
pericope/per-num-14-004
절 (explains)
bible-text/num-14-11, bible-text/num-14-12, bible-text/num-14-13, bible-text/num-14-14, bible-text/num-14-15, bible-text/num-14-16, bible-text/num-14-17, bible-text/num-14-18, bible-text/num-14-19
Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
**모세의 중보 기도**
이 단락에서 다루는 것은 다음과 같다. I. 하나님이 이스라엘을 대적하여 내리신 의로운 선고. II. 모세의 겸손한 중보 기도.
**I. 하나님의 의로운 선고(민 14:11-12).** 하나님의 영광이 성막에 나타났을 때, 모세는 그것을 자신이 즉시 나아가야 할 부름으로 받아들였을 것이다. 하나님은 그에게 두 가지를 말씀하셨다.
1. 백성의 죄악의 심각성을 보이셨다(민 14:11). 하나님이 모세에게 불평하신 두 가지는 (1) 그들의 죄: "그들이 나를 경멸하니, 이는 그들이 나를 믿지 않기 때문이다." 이것이 광야에서의 반역을 가져온 쓴 뿌리였다(히 3:8). 하나님에 대한 불신은 그 자체로 크나큰 도발이요(요일 5:10), 근본적인 죄악이다(히 3:12). (2) 그 지속성: "그들이 어느 때까지 그러하겠느냐?" 죄인들이 도발을 얼마나 오래 지속하는지 하나님은 셈하신다. (3) 죄악의 가중 요소들: [1.] 하나님과의 관계 — "이 백성"이라는 특별한 백성. [2.] 이전의 경험 — 하나님이 그들 가운데서 행하신 모든 표징.
2. 정의가 그들에게 내린 선고를 보이셨다(민 14:12). "내가 전염병으로 그들을 쳐서 멸하고 너를 그들보다 크고 강한 나라로 이루겠다." 이렇게 (1) 하나님은 모세를 시험하셨다. 이전에 비슷한 경우에 나타났던 이스라엘을 향한 애정이 지금도 지속되는지, 그들의 이익을 자기 가문의 출세보다 앞세울 수 있는지를 보셨다. (2) 하나님은 죄인들의 파멸로 잃는 것이 없으심을 가르치셨다.
**II. 모세의 겸손한 중보 기도.** 백성의 죄가 방어벽에 치명적인 틈을 냈고, 모세가 제때에 뛰어들어 막지 않았다면 멸망이 확실히 들이닥쳤을 것이다. 이 점에서 모세는 그를 십자가에 못 박는 자들을 위해 중보하신 그리스도의 예표였다(마 5:44).
1. 간구의 기도. 한마디로 "이 백성의 죄악을 사하소서"(민 14:19)다. 곧 "그들이 마땅히 받을 파멸을 내리지 마소서"라는 것이다. 이것은 그를 십자가에 못 박은 자들을 위한 그리스도의 기도였다. "아버지여 저들을 용서해 주소서."
2. 여러 근거가 강하게 제시된다.
(1) 하나님의 영광에서 가져온 근거를 가장 중점적으로 내세운다(민 14:13-16). 하나님의 영예가 자신의 이익보다 마음 가까이 있었다. 그는 이 사건을 어떻게 하나님 앞에 아뢰는지를 보라. [1.] 이집트와 가나안의 눈이 그들을 주목하고 있었다. 이 백성이 하늘의 특별한 보살핌을 받는다는 것이 주변 나라들에 울려 퍼져 있었다(민 14:14). [2.] 그들이 진멸된다면 크게 주목받을 것이다. "이집트 사람들이 들을 것"이고(민 14:13), 가나안 거민들도 알게 될 것이다(민 14:14). 그들은 그것을 하나님의 능력이 짧아진 것으로 해석할 것이다(민 14:16). "주님이 이 백성을 가나안으로 인도할 능력이 없어서 광야에서 죽였다"고 말할 것이다. 하나님께 드리는 최상의 간구는 하나님의 영예에서 가져온 것이다. 이는 주님의 기도의 첫 번째 간구, "이름이 거룩히 여김을 받으시오며"와 일치하기 때문이다.
(2) 시내산에서 선포하신 하나님 자신의 이름을 근거로 내세운다(민 14:17-18). "주의 능력을 크게 나타내소서"라고 간구하며, 하나님이 말씀하신 것을 근거로 삼는다. "여호와는 노하기를 더디 하고 인자가 크사 죄악과 허물을 사하시는" 분이심을(출 34:6-7). 세 가지를 붙잡는다. [1.] 하나님 본성의 선하심 — 노하기를 더디 하시고 인자가 크시다. [2.] 특별히 죄를 사하시려는 준비 — 죄악과 허물을 사하신다. [3.] 극단으로 나아가기를 꺼리심 — "만 대까지 죄를 벌하시되" 뒤에 따르는 말씀처럼 온 가족과 나라를 단번에 멸하지는 않으신다. 기도에서 하나님의 말씀을 소망의 근거로 삼아야 한다(시 119:49). "주님, 말씀하신 대로 되게 하소서."
(3) 과거의 경험을 근거로 내세운다. "이집트에서부터 지금까지 이 백성을 사하신 것처럼"(민 14:19). 이것은 오히려 불리한 근거처럼 보일 수 있다. 그토록 여러 번 용서를 받은 자들이 점점 더 심해지는데 어찌 또 용서를 구하겠는가? 그러나 모세는 이것을 좋은 근거로 여겼다. "주님, 용서하신 것처럼 용서해 주소서." 그것은 전에 주의 정의를 욕되게 하지 않았고 주의 자비를 칭송하는 것이었으니, 지금 용서하신다 해도 마찬가지일 것이다. 그러므로 야곱의 자손이 소멸되지 않는 것은, 변하지 않는 하나님을 상대하기 때문이다(말 3:6).
원주석
- 번역원본
commentary-section/mhm-num-14-11-19(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반
20~35절 카드 ↗
God's Answer to Moses; The Israelites Threatened. . 20 And the LORD said, I have pardoned according to thy word: 21 But as truly as I live, all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the LORD . 22 Because all those men which have seen my glory, and my miracles, which I did in Egypt and in the wilderness, and have tempted me now these ten times, and have not hearkened to my voice; 23 Surely they shall not see the land which I sware unto their fathers, neither shall any of them that provoked me see it: 24 But my servant Caleb, because he had another spirit with him, and hath followed me fully, him will I bring into the land whereinto he went; and his seed shall possess it. 25 (Now the Amalekites and the Canaanites dwelt in the valley.) To morrow turn you, and get you into the wilderness by the way of the Red sea. 26 And the LORD spake unto Moses and unto Aaron, saying, 27 How long shall I bear with this evil congregation, which murmur against me? I have heard the murmurings of the children of Israel, which they murmur against me. 28 Say unto them, As truly as I live, saith the LORD , as ye have spoken in mine ears, so will I do to you: 29 Your carcases shall fall in this wilderness; and all that were numbered of you, according to your whole number, from twenty years old and upward, which have murmured against me, 30 Doubtless ye shall not come into the land, concerning which I sware to make you dwell therein, save Caleb the son of Jephunneh, and Joshua the son of Nun. 31 But your little ones, which ye said should be a prey, them will I bring in, and they shall know the land which ye have despised. 32 But as for you, your carcases, they shall fall in this wilderness. 33 And your children shall wander in the wilderness forty years, and bear your whoredoms, until your carcases be wasted in the wilderness. 34 After the number of the days in which ye searched the land, even forty days, each day for a year, shall ye bear your iniquities, even forty years, and ye shall know my breach of promise. 35 I the LORD have said, I will surely do it unto all this evil congregation, that are gathered together against me: in this wilderness they shall be consumed, and there they shall die. We have here God's answer to the prayer of Moses, which sings both of mercy and judgment. It is given privately to Moses ( Numbers 14:20-25 ; Numbers 14:20-25 ), and then directed to be made public to the people, Numbers 14:26-35 ; Numbers 14:26-35 . The frequent repetitions of the same things in it speak these resolves to be unalterable. Let us see the particulars. I. The extremity of the sentence is receded from ( Numbers 14:20 ; Numbers 14:20 ): " I have pardoned, so as not to cut them all off at once, and disinherit them." See the power of prayer, and the delight God takes in putting an honour upon it. He designed a pardon, but Moses shall have the praise of obtaining it by prayer: it shall be done according to thy word; thus, as a prince, he has power with God, and prevails. See what countenance and encouragement God gives to our intercessions for others, that we may be public-spirited in prayer. Here is a whole nation rescued from ruin by the effectual fervent prayer of one righteous man. See how ready God is to forgive sin, and how easy to be entreated: Pardon, says Moses ( Numbers 14:19 ; Numbers 14:19 ); I have pardoned, says God, Numbers 14:20 ; Numbers 14:20 . David found him thus swift to show mercy, Psalms 32:5 . He deals not with us after our sins, Psalms 103:10 . II. The glorifying of God's name is, in the general, resolved upon, Numbers 14:21 ; Numbers 14:21 . It is said, it is sworn, All the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord. Moses in his prayer had shown a great concern for the glory of God. "Let me alone," says God, "to secure that effectually, and to advance it, by this dispensation." All the world shall see how God hates sin even in his own people, and will reckon for it, and yet how gracious and merciful he is, and how slow to anger. Thus when our Saviour prayed, Father, glorify thy name, he was immediately answered, I have glorified it, and will glorify it yet again, John 12:28 . Note, Those that sincerely seek God's glory may be sure of what they seek. God having turned this prayer for the glorifying of himself into a promise, we may turn it into praise, in concert with the angels, Isaiah 6:3 , The earth is full of his glory. III. The sin of this people which provoked God to proceed against them is here aggravated, Numbers 14:22 ; Numbers 14:27 . It is not made worse than really it was, but is shown to be exceedingly sinful. It was an evil congregation, each bad, but altogether in congregation, very bad. 1. They tempted God--tempted his power, whether he could help them in their straits--his goodness, whether he would--and his faithfulness, whether his promise would be performed. They tempted his justice, whether he would resent their provocations and punish them or no. They dared him, and in effect challenged him, as God does the idols ( Isaiah 41:23 ), to do good, or do evil. 2. They murmured against him. This is much insisted on, Numbers 14:27 ; Numbers 14:27 . As they questioned what he would do, so they quarrelled with him for every thing he did or had done, continually fretting and finding fault. It does not appear that they murmured at any of the laws or ordinances that God gave them (though they proved a heavy yoke), but they murmured at the conduct they were under, and the provision made for them. Note, It is much easier to bring ourselves to the external services of religion, and observe all the formalities of devotion, than to live a life of dependence upon, and submission to, the divine Providence in the course of our conversation. 3. They did this after they had seen God's miracles in Egypt and in the wilderness, Numbers 14:2 ; Numbers 14:2 . They would not believe their own eyes, which were witnesses for God that he was in the midst of them of a truth. 4. They had repeated the provocations ten times, that is, very often: the Jewish writers reckon this exactly the tenth time that the body of the congregation had provoked God. First, at the Red Sea, Exodus 14:11 . In Marah, Exodus 15:23 ; Exodus 15:24 . In the wilderness of Sin, Exodus 16:2 . At Rephidim, Exodus 17:1 ; Exodus 17:2 . The golden calf, Exodus 32:1-35 . Then at Taberah. Then at Kibroth-Hattaavah, Numbers 11:1-35 ; Numbers 11:1-35 . And so this was the tenth. Note, God keeps an account how often we repeat our provocations, and will sooner or later set them in order before us. 5. They had not hearkened to his voice, though he had again and again admonished them of their sin. IV. The sentence passed upon them for this sin. 1. That they should not see the promised land ( Numbers 14:23 ; Numbers 14:23 ), nor come into it, Numbers 14:30 ; Numbers 14:30 . He swore in his wrath that they should not enter into his rest, Psalms 95:11 . Note, Disbelief of the promise is a forfeiture of the benefit of it. Those that despise the pleasant land shall be shut out of it. The promise of God should be fulfilled to their posterity, but not to them. 2. That they should immediately turn back into the wilderness, Numbers 14:25 ; Numbers 14:25 . Their next remove should be a retreat. They must face about, and instead of going forward to Canaan, on the very borders of which they now were, they must withdraw towards the Red Sea again. To-morrow turn you; that is, "Very shortly you shall be brought back to that vast howling wilderness which you are so weary of. And it is time to shift for your own safety, for the Amalekites lie in wait in the valley, ready to attack you if you march forward." Of them they had been distrustfully afraid ( Numbers 13:29 ; Numbers 13:29 ), and now with them God justly frightened them. The fear of the wicked shall come upon him. 3. That all those who had now grown up to men's estate should die in the wilderness, not all at once, but by degrees. They wished that they might die in the wilderness, and God said Amen to their passionate wish, and made their sin their ruin, snared them in the words of their mouth, and caused their own tongue to fall upon them, took them at their word, and determined that their carcases should fall in the wilderness, Numbers 14:28 ; Numbers 14:29 , and again, Numbers 14:32 ; Numbers 14:35 . See with what contempt they are spoken of, now that they had by their sin made themselves vile; the mighty men of valour were but carcases, when the Spirit of the Lord had departed from them. They were all as dead men. Their fathers had such a value for Canaan that they desired to have their dead bodies carried thither to be buried, in token of their dependence upon God's promise that they should have that land for a possession: but these, having despised that good land and disbelieved the promise of it, shall not have the honour to be buried in it, but shall have their graves in the wilderness. 4. That in pursuance of this sentence they should wander to and fro in the wilderness, like travellers that have lost themselves, for forty years; that is, so long as to make it full forty years from their coming out of Egypt to their entrance into Canaan, Numbers 14:33 ; Numbers 14:34 . Thus long they were kept wandering, (1.) To answer the number of the days in which the spies were searching the land. They were content to wait forty days for the testimony of men, because they could not take God's word; and therefore justly are they kept forty years waiting for the performance of God's promise. (2.) That hereby they might be brought to repentance, and find mercy with God in the other world, whatever became of them in this. Now they had time to bethink themselves, and to consider their ways; and the inconveniences of the wilderness would help to humble them and prove them, and show them what was in their heart, Deuteronomy 8:2 . Thus long they bore their iniquities, feeling the weight of God's wrath in the punishment. They were made to groan under the burden of their own sin that brought it upon them, which was too heavy for them to bear. (3.) That they might sensibly feel what a dangerous thing it is for God's covenant-people to break with him: " You shall know my breach of promise, both the causes of it, that it is procured by your sin" (for God never leaves any till they first leave him), "and the consequences of it, that it will produce your ruin; you are quite undone when you are thrown out of covenant." (4.) That a new generation might in this time be raised up, which could not be done all of a sudden. And the children, being brought up under the tokens of God's displeasure against their fathers, and so bearing their whoredoms (that is, the punishment of their sins, especially their idolatry about the golden calf, which God now remembered against them), might take warning not to tread in the steps of their fathers' disobedience. And their wandering so long in the wilderness would make Canaan at last the more welcome to them. It should seem that upon occasion of this sentence Moses penned the Psalms 90:1-17 , which is very apposite to the present state of Israel, and wherein they are taught to pray that since this sentence could not be reversed it might be sanctified, and they might learn to apply their hearts unto wisdom. V. The mercy that was mixed with this severe sentence. 1. Mercy to Caleb and Joshua, that though they should wander with the rest in the wilderness, yet they, and only they of all that were now above twenty years old, should survive the years of banishment, and live to enter Canaan. Caleb only is spoken of ( Numbers 14:24 ; Numbers 14:24 ), and a particular mark of honour put upon him, both, (1.) In the character given of him: he had another spirit, different from the rest of the spies, an after-spirit, which furnished him with second thoughts, and he followed the Lord fully, kept close to his duty, and went through with it, though deserted and threatened; and, (2.) In the recompence promised to him: Him will I bring in due time into the land whereinto he went. Note, [1.] It ought to be the great care and endeavour of every one of us to follow the Lord fully. We must, in a course of obedience to God's will and of service to his honour, follow him universally, without dividing,--uprightly, without dissembling,--cheerfully, without disputing,--and constantly, without declining; and this is following him fully. [2.] Those that would follow God fully must have another spirit, another from the spirit of the world, and another from what their own spirit has been. They must have the spirit of Caleb. [3.] Those that follow God fully in times of general apostasy God will own and honour by singular preservations in times of general calamity. The heavenly Canaan shall be the everlasting inheritance of those that follow the Lord fully. When Caleb is again mentioned ( Numbers 14:30 ; Numbers 14:30 ) Joshua stands with him, compassed with the same favours and crowned with the same honours, having stood with him in the same services. 2. Mercy to the children even of these rebels. They should have a seed preserved, and Canaan secured to that seed: Your little ones, now under twenty years old, which you, in your unbelief, said should be a prey, them will I bring in, Numbers 14:31 ; Numbers 14:31 . They had invidiously charged God with a design to ruin their children, Numbers 14:3 ; Numbers 14:3 . But God will let them know that he can put a difference between the guilty and the innocent, and cut them off without touching their children. Thus the promise made to Abraham, though it seemed to fail for a time, was kept from failing for evermore; and, though God chastened their transgressions with a rod, yet his loving kindness he would not utterly take away. return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-36-45" class="com-number"
Pericope (part_of)
- part_of
pericope/per-num-14-005 - part_of
pericope/per-num-14-006
절 (explains)
bible-text/num-14-20, bible-text/num-14-21, bible-text/num-14-22, bible-text/num-14-23, bible-text/num-14-24, bible-text/num-14-25, bible-text/num-14-26, bible-text/num-14-27, bible-text/num-14-28, bible-text/num-14-29, bible-text/num-14-30, bible-text/num-14-31, bible-text/num-14-32, bible-text/num-14-33, bible-text/num-14-34, bible-text/num-14-35
Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
**하나님의 응답과 이스라엘에 대한 선고**
이 단락은 모세의 기도에 대한 하나님의 응답을 다루는데, 자비와 심판이 함께 담겨 있다. 먼저 모세에게 사적으로 전해지고(민 14:20-25), 이후 백성에게 공포된다(민 14:26-35). 같은 내용의 빈번한 반복은 이 결심이 변치 않음을 나타낸다.
**I. 극단적인 선고는 물러났다(민 14:20).** "내가 네 말대로 사하였노라." 기도의 능력과 기도를 존귀히 여기시는 하나님의 기쁨을 보라. 하나님은 이미 사면을 계획하셨으나, 모세가 기도로 얻어낸 것으로 되어, "네 말대로" 행하셨다. 이처럼 공적 중보 기도를 위한 하나님의 격려를 보라. 한 의인의 간절한 기도로 한 나라 전체가 파멸에서 건져지는 것이다. 다윗도 그분이 자비를 신속히 베푸심을 발견했다(시 32:5). 하나님은 우리의 죄대로 우리를 대우하지 않으신다(시 103:10).
**II. 하나님의 이름을 영화롭게 하는 것이 큰 틀에서 결정되었다(민 14:21).** 맹세로 확언하셨다. "온 세상이 여호와의 영광으로 가득하리라." 이 징계를 통해 온 세상이 하나님이 자기 백성에게 있는 죄도 얼마나 미워하시며, 또한 얼마나 은혜롭고 자비로우시며 노하기를 더디 하시는지를 볼 것이다. 우리 구주가 "아버지여, 아버지의 이름을 영화롭게 하소서"라고 기도하셨을 때, 즉각 "내가 이미 영화롭게 하였고 또다시 영화롭게 하리라"는 응답을 받으셨다(요 12:28). 진정으로 하나님의 영광을 구하는 자들은 구하는 것을 반드시 얻는다.
**III. 이 죄악의 가중성(민 14:22, 27).** 그것은 있는 그대로보다 더 나쁘게 묘사된 것이 아니라, 실로 지극히 죄악된 것으로 드러난다.
1. 그들이 하나님을 시험했다 — 능력과 선하심과 신실하심을 시험하고, 정의를 시험하며, 사실상 하나님께 도전한 것이다.
2. 그들이 하나님을 원망했다(민 14:27). 하나님이 행하신 모든 일에 트집을 잡고 끊임없이 불평했다. 율법이나 예배 규례에 대해서는 불평이 없었어도, 자신들이 처한 상황과 하나님이 베푸시는 것들에 대해서는 늘 불평했다. 외적 종교 행위에 순응하고 경건의 형식을 지키는 것이, 하나님의 섭리에 의존하고 그에 복종하며 사는 것보다 훨씬 쉽다는 것을 보라.
3. 이집트와 광야에서 하나님의 기적을 보고도 이 일을 행했다(민 14:22).
4. 열 번이나 도발을 반복했다. 유대 주석가들은 이것이 정확히 열 번째라고 꼽는다. 첫째 홍해에서(출 14:11), 마라에서(출 15:23-24), 신 광야에서(출 16:2), 르비딤에서(출 17:1-2), 금송아지(출 32장), 다베라에서, 기브롯 핫다아와에서(민 11장), 이번이 열 번째다.
5. 하나님의 음성에 순종하지 않았다.
**IV. 이 죄악에 대한 선고.**
1. 그들은 약속의 땅을 보지 못할 것이다(민 14:23, 30). 하나님은 진노 중에 맹세하셨다(시 95:11). 약속을 믿지 않는 것은 그 유익을 상실하는 것이다.
2. 즉시 광야로 되돌아가야 한다(민 14:25). 다음 이동은 후퇴가 될 것이다. 내일 방향을 돌려라. 아말렉 사람과 가나안 사람이 골짜기에 자리 잡고 있어(민 13:29), 만약 앞으로 나아가면 공격을 당할 것이다.
3. 이미 장성한 자들은 모두 광야에서 죽을 것이다. 그러나 단번에가 아니라 점차적으로. 그들은 광야에서 죽기를 바랐는데, 하나님이 그 격한 소원에 아멘으로 응답하신 것이다. 그들의 시체가 광야에 쓰러지리라(민 14:28-29, 32, 35). 가나안에 묻히기를 원했던 열조와 달리, 이들은 광야에 무덤을 갖게 될 것이다.
4. 이 선고에 따라 그들은 사십 년 동안 광야를 헤매게 된다. 이집트에서 나온 후 가나안에 들어갈 때까지 꼭 사십 년이 되도록(민 14:33-34). 사십 년 동안 방황하게 된 이유는 (1) 정탐꾼들이 사십 일 동안 땅을 정탐한 것에 맞추기 위함이다. 하나님의 말씀을 믿지 않아 사람들의 증언을 기다리려고 사십 일을 기꺼이 기다렸으니, 하나님의 약속 이행을 사십 년 동안 기다리는 것이 마땅하다. (2) 이 기간이 회개와 하나님의 자비를 찾는 시간이 되게 하기 위함이다. 광야의 불편이 그들을 겸손하게 하고 시험하며, 그들 마음속에 무엇이 있는지 드러낼 것이다(신 8:2). (3) 언약 백성이 하나님과 결별하는 것이 얼마나 위험한 일인지를 실감하게 하기 위함이다. (4) 새 세대가 일어나게 하기 위함이다.
**V. 엄중한 선고에 섞인 자비.**
1. 갈렙과 여호수아에 대한 자비. 그들은 광야에서 나머지와 함께 방황할 것이나, 스무 살 이상 된 자들 중에서 오직 그들만이 유배의 세월을 살아남아 가나안에 들어갈 것이다. 갈렙에 대해 특별히(민 14:24) (1) 그에 대한 평가에서 "그는 다른 영을 가졌고" 주를 온전히 따랐다고 하신다. (2) 그에게 약속된 보상에서 "그를 들어간 그 땅으로 인도하겠다"고 하신다. 주를 온전히 따른다는 것은 남김 없이, 위선 없이, 기꺼이, 끝까지 따르는 것이다. 주를 온전히 따르려는 자는 세상의 영과도, 자기 자신의 옛 영과도 다른 영을 가져야 한다. 일반적인 배교의 시대에 주를 온전히 따르는 자들을 하나님은 일반적인 재앙의 때에 특별한 보존으로 인정하시고 존귀히 여기신다.
2. 반역자들의 자녀들에 대한 자비. 씨가 보존되고 가나안이 그 씨에게 약속될 것이다. "너희가 잡혀갈 것이라 한 너희의 어린 자녀들을 내가 들여보내리니"(민 14:31). 그들은 하나님이 자기 자녀들을 파멸시키려 한다고 비방했지만(민 14:3), 하나님은 죄인과 무죄한 자 사이에 차이를 두실 수 있음을 보여 주실 것이다. 이리하여 아브라함에게 주신 약속은, 비록 잠시 실패한 것처럼 보였어도, 영원히 실패하지 않았다.
원주석
- 번역원본
commentary-section/mhm-num-14-20-35(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반
36~45절 카드 ↗
Death of the Evil Spies. . 36 And the men, which Moses sent to search the land, who returned, and made all the congregation to murmur against him, by bringing up a slander upon the land, 37 Even those men that did bring up the evil report upon the land, died by the plague before the LORD . 38 But Joshua the son of Nun, and Caleb the son of Jephunneh, which were of the men that went to search the land, lived still. 39 And Moses told these sayings unto all the children of Israel: and the people mourned greatly. 40 And they rose up early in the morning, and gat them up into the top of the mountain, saying, Lo, we be here, and will go up unto the place which the LORD hath promised: for we have sinned. 41 And Moses said, Wherefore now do ye transgress the commandment of the LORD ? but it shall not prosper. 42 Go not up, for the LORD is not among you; that ye be not smitten before your enemies. 43 For the Amalekites and the Canaanites are there before you, and ye shall fall by the sword: because ye are turned away from the LORD , therefore the LORD will not be with you. 44 But they presumed to go up unto the hill top: nevertheless the ark of the covenant of the LORD , and Moses, departed not out of the camp. 45 Then the Amalekites came down, and the Canaanites which dwelt in that hill, and smote them, and discomfited them, even unto Hormah. Here is, I. The sudden death of the ten evil spies. While the sentence was passing upon the people, before it was published, they died of the plague before the Lord, Numbers 14:36 ; Numbers 14:37 . Now, 1. God hereby showed his particular displeasure against those who sinned and made Israel to sin. (1.) They sinned themselves, in bringing up a slander upon the land of promise. Note, Those greatly provoke God who misrepresent religion, cast reproach upon it, and raise prejudices in men's minds against it, or give occasion to those to do so who seek occasion. Those that represent the service of God as mean and despicable, melancholy and uncomfortable, hard and impracticable, needless and unprofitable, bring up an evil report upon the good land, pervert the right ways of the Lord, and in effect give him the lie. (2.) They made Israel to sin. They designedly made all the congregation murmur against God. Note, Ring-leaders in sin may expect to fall under particular marks of the wrath of God, who will severely reckon for the blood of souls, which is thus spilt. 2. God hereby showed what he could have done with the whole congregation, and gave an earnest of the execution of the sentence now passed upon them. He that thus cut off one of a tribe could have cut off their whole tribes suddenly, and would do it gradually. Note, The remarkable deaths of notorious sinners are earnests of the final perdition of ungodly men, 2 Peter 2:5 ; 2 Peter 2:6 . Thus the wrath of God is revealed, that sinners may hear and fear. II. The special preservation of Caleb and Joshua: They lived still, Numbers 14:38 ; Numbers 14:38 . It is probable that all the twelve spies stood together, for the eyes of all Israel were now upon them; and therefore it is taken notice of as very remarkable, and which could not but be affecting to the whole congregation, that when the ten evil spies fell down dead of the plague, a malignant infectious distemper, yet these two that stood among them lived, and were well. God hereby confirmed their testimony, and put those to confusion that spoke of stoning them. He likewise gave them an assurance of their continued preservation in the wilderness, when thousands should fall on their right hand and on their left, Psalms 91:7 . Death never misses his mark, nor takes any by oversight that were designed for life, though in the midst of those that were to die. III. The publication of the sentence to all the people, Numbers 14:36 ; Numbers 14:36 . He told them all what the decree was which had gone forth concerning them, and which could not be reversed, that they must all die in the wilderness, and Canaan must be reserved for the next generation. It was a very great disappointment, we may well think, to Moses himself, who longed to be in Canaan, as well as to all the people; yet he acquiesced, but they wept and mourned greatly. The assurance which Moses had of God's being glorified by this sentence gave him satisfaction, while the consciousness of their own guilt, and their having procured it to themselves, gave them the greatest vexation. They wept for nothing ( Numbers 14:1 ; Numbers 14:1 ), and now they have cause given them to weep; so justly are murmurers made mourners. If they had mourned for the sin when they were faithfully reproved for it ( Numbers 14:9 ; Numbers 14:9 ), the sentence would have been prevented; but now that they mourned for the judgment only their grief came too late, and did them no service; they found no place for repentance, though they sought it carefully with tears, Hebrews 12:17 . Such mourning as this there is in hell, but the tears will not quench the flames, no, nor cool the tongue. IV. The foolish fruitless attempts of some of the Israelites to enter Canaan, notwithstanding the sentence. 1. They were now eager to go forward towards Canaan, Numbers 14:40 ; Numbers 14:40 . They were up early, mustered all their force, got together in a body, and begged of Moses to lead them on against the enemy, and now there is no more talk among them of making a captain to return into Egypt. They confess their fault: We have sinned; they profess reformation: Lo, we be here, and will go up. They now desire the land which they had despised, and put a confidence in the promise which they had distrusted. Thus when God judges he will overcome, and, first or last, will convince sinners of the evil of all their ungodly deeds, and hard speeches, and force them to recall their own words. But, though God was glorified by this recantation of theirs, they were not benefited by it, because it came too late. The decree had gone forth, the consumption was determined; they did not seek the Lord while he might be found, and now he would not be found. O, if men would but be as earnest for heaven while their day of grace lasts as they will be when it is over, would be as solicitous to provide themselves with oil while the bridegroom tarries as they will be when the bridegroom comes, how well were it for them! 2. Moses utterly disallows their motion, and forbids the expedition they were meditating: Go not up, Numbers 14:41-43 ; Numbers 14:41-43 . (1.) He gives them warning of the sin; it is transgressing the commandment of the Lord, who had expressly ordered them, when they did move, to move back towards the Red Sea. Note, That which has been duty, in its season, when it comes to be mistimed may be turned into sin. It is true the command he refers to was in the nature of a punishment, but he that has not obeyed the law is obliged to submit to the penalty, for the Lord is our Judge as well as Lawgiver. (2.) He gives them this warning of the danger: " It shall not prosper, never expect it." Note, It is folly to promise ourselves success in that which we undertake contrary to the mind of God. " The Canaanites are before you to attack you, and the Lord is not among you to protect you and fight for you, and therefore look to yourselves that you be not smitten before your enemies. " Those that are out of the way of their duty are from under God's protection, and go at their peril. It is dangerous going where we cannot expect God should go along with us. Nay, he plainly foresees and foretels their defeat: You shall fall by the sword of the Amalekites and Canaanites (who were to have fallen by their sword); Because you are turned away from the Lord, from following the guidance of his precept and promise, therefore the Lord will not be with you. Note, God will certainly leave those that leave him; and those that are left of him lie exposed to all misery. 3. They venture notwithstanding. Never was people so perverse and so desperately resolved in every thing to walk contrary to God. God bade them go, and they would not; he forbade them, and they would. Thus is the carnal mind enmity to God: They presumed to go up unto the hill-top, Numbers 14:44 ; Numbers 14:44 . Here, (1.) They struggled against the sentence of divine justice, and would press on in defiance of it. (2.) They slighted the tokens of God's presence, for they would go though they left Moses and the ark of the covenant behind them. They had distrusted God's strength, and now they presume upon their own without his. 4. The expedition speeds accordingly, Numbers 14:45 ; Numbers 14:45 . The enemy had posted themselves upon the top of the hill, to make good that pass against the invaders, and, being informed by their scouts of their approach, sallied out upon them, and defeated them, and it is probable that many of the Israelites were killed. Now the sentence began to be executed that their carcases should fall in the wilderness. Note, That affair can never end well that begins with sin. The way to obtain peace with our friends, and success against our enemies, is to make God our friend, and keep ourselves in his love. The Jews, like these their ancestors, when they had rejected Christ's righteousness, attempted to establish their own, and it sped as this. return to ' Top of Page ' Numbers Num 13 Numbers Num Numbers Num 15 Footnotes: Copyright Statement These files are public domain and are a derivative of an electronic edition that is available on the Christian Classics Ethereal Library Website. Bibliographical Information Henry, Matthew. "Complete Commentary on Numbers 14". 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Pericope (part_of)
- part_of
pericope/per-num-14-007 - part_of
pericope/per-num-14-008
절 (explains)
bible-text/num-14-36, bible-text/num-14-37, bible-text/num-14-38, bible-text/num-14-39, bible-text/num-14-40, bible-text/num-14-41, bible-text/num-14-42, bible-text/num-14-43, bible-text/num-14-44, bible-text/num-14-45
Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
**악한 정탐꾼들의 죽음과 이스라엘의 패퇴**
**I. 열 명의 악한 정탐꾼들의 갑작스러운 죽음(민 14:36-37).** 백성에 대한 선고가 내려지는 동안, 그것이 공포되기 전에, 그들은 여호와 앞에서 전염병으로 죽었다.
1. 하나님은 이로써 죄를 짓고 이스라엘을 죄에 빠뜨린 자들에 대한 특별한 진노를 나타내셨다. (1) 그들은 스스로 죄를 지었다. 약속의 땅을 헐뜯는 악한 보고를 냈다. 하나님의 섬김을 비루하고 우울하며 어렵고 무익한 것으로 묘사하는 자들은 좋은 땅을 욕되게 하는 악한 보고를 내는 것이요, 주님의 바른 길을 왜곡하는 것이다. (2) 그들은 이스라엘을 죄에 빠뜨렸다. 죄를 선동한 자들은 영혼의 피를 흘린 것에 대해 반드시 엄한 심판을 받게 될 것이다.
2. 하나님은 이로써 온 회중에게 하실 수 있었던 일을 보이시고, 이제 그들에게 내린 선고의 집행에 대한 예표를 주셨다. 한 지파에서 하나를 이렇게 갑자기 끊을 수 있으신 분이라면 그 온 지파도 갑자기 끊으실 수 있다. 악명 높은 죄인들의 주목할 만한 죽음은 불경건한 자들의 마지막 파멸의 예표다(벧후 2:5-6).
**II. 갈렙과 여호수아의 특별한 보존(민 14:38).** "그러나 눈의 아들 여호수아와 여분네의 아들 갈렙은 살았다." 열두 정탐꾼이 모두 함께 서 있었을 것이고, 악한 정탐꾼 열 명이 감염성 독한 병으로 죽는데 자신들은 살아 건강했다는 것이 온 회중에게 매우 인상적이었을 것이다. 하나님은 이로써 그들의 증언을 확증하시고 그들을 돌로 치려 했던 자들을 부끄럽게 하셨다. 또한 광야에서 수천 명이 쓰러질 때에도 그들이 계속 보존될 것을 확신시켜 주셨다(시 91:7). 죽음은 자신의 표적을 결코 빗나가지 않으며, 살도록 예정된 자를 실수로 데려가는 법이 없다.
**III. 선고의 공포(민 14:39).** 모세가 이 결정을 모든 백성에게 고하자, 백성이 크게 슬퍼했다. 모세 자신도 가나안을 사모했기에 이것은 큰 실망이었을 것이다. 그러나 그는 복종했다. 하나님이 이 선고로 영광을 받으신다는 확신이 모세에게 만족을 주었고, 자신들의 죄책감과 스스로 자초했다는 의식이 그들에게 큰 고통을 주었다. 그들은 아무 이유 없이 울었는데(민 14:1), 이제 울 이유를 받게 되었다. 만약 그들이 책망을 받을 때 그 죄를 인하여 통곡했더라면(민 14:9) 선고를 막을 수 있었을 것이다. 그러나 이제 심판만을 애통해하는 슬픔은 너무 늦어 아무 소용이 없었다. 눈물로 간절히 구해도 회개할 기회를 찾지 못했다(히 12:17).
**IV. 이스라엘의 일부가 선고에도 불구하고 가나안으로 들어가려 한 어리석고 헛된 시도.**
1. 이제 그들은 앞으로 나아가려는 열망으로 가득했다(민 14:40). 일찍 일어나 부대를 집결하고, 모세에게 적을 쳐달라고 간청하며, 이집트로 돌아갈 지도자를 세우자는 말은 더 이상 없었다. "우리가 범죄하였다"고 죄를 고백하고, "우리가 올라가겠다"고 개혁을 선포했다. 이처럼 하나님이 심판하실 때 이기시며, 마침내 죄인들로 하여금 자신들의 모든 악한 행실과 완악한 말을 깨닫게 하신다. 그러나 이 회개는 너무 늦었기에 그들에게 유익이 되지 않았다. 때가 있을 때 주를 찾지 않았기에, 이제는 찾아도 찾을 수 없는 것이다.
2. 모세가 그들의 계획을 단호히 금했다(민 14:41-43). (1) 죄에 대한 경고를 주었다. 이는 여호와의 명령을 어기는 것이라고. 하나님은 이미 그들에게 홍해 방향으로 돌아서라 명하셨다. 그 의무를 이행하지 않은 자는 형벌에 복종해야 한다. (2) 위험에 대한 경고를 주었다. "형통하지 못할 것"이다. 하나님의 뜻에 반하여 하는 일에서 성공을 기대하는 것은 어리석음이다. 가나안 사람이 앞에 있고 여호와가 함께하지 않으시면, 적의 칼 앞에서 쓰러질 것이다. 의무의 길 밖에 있는 자들은 하나님의 보호 밖에 있으며, 위험을 감수하는 것이다. 하나님이 함께 가시지 않을 곳에 가는 것은 위험하다.
3. 그럼에도 그들은 감행했다(민 14:44). 이처럼 뒤틀리고 하나님을 대적하여 걷기로 굳게 작정한 백성이 있었다. 하나님이 가라 하시면 가지 않고, 금하시면 가려 한다. 그들은 산 위로 올라갔다. (1) 하나님의 정의의 선고에 저항하며 그것에 맞섰다. (2) 하나님의 임재의 표를 가볍게 여겼으니, 모세와 언약궤를 뒤에 두고도 가려 했다. 그들은 하나님의 능력을 불신했다가, 이제는 하나님 없이 자신들의 능력에 의지했다.
4. 그 원정의 결과가 그에 맞게 나타났다(민 14:45). 아말렉 사람과 가나안 사람들이 산 위에 진을 치고 그 길목을 지키다가, 정탐꾼들의 정보로 이스라엘의 진격을 알아채고 돌격하여 그들을 무너뜨렸다. 이리하여 그들의 시체가 광야에 쓰러지리라는 선고가 집행되기 시작했다. 죄로 시작되는 일은 결코 좋은 결말을 맺을 수 없다. 원수들과 화평하고 원수들을 이기는 길은 하나님을 우리의 친구로 삼고 그의 사랑 안에 머무는 것이다. 유대인들은 이 선조들처럼 그리스도의 의를 거부한 채 자신들의 의를 세우려 했고, 바로 이것처럼 결국 패배하고 말았다.
원주석
- 번역원본
commentary-section/mhm-num-14-36-45(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반