God promised Abraham multiple descendants and a homeland to bless the world (Gen.12:1-3). Abraham’s descendants multiplied but ended up enslaved in Egypt. They cried out and the Lord used Moses to deliver the Israelites out of Egypt by His mighty acts of judgment. The Israelite community left Egypt with the Lord leading them by the pillar of cloud and fire. Then when Pharaoh and his army pursued Israel, Moses stretched out his staff over the Red Sea and the Lord divided the sea so that the Israelites walked through on dry ground. Pharaoh’s army followed them into the sea but the Lord drowned Pharaoh’s entire. The Israelites trusted in the Lord and in His servant Moses but then they quarreled when they faced the difficulties of life in the desert. This brings us to the story of the Lord providing the Israelites with water from the rock and giving them a victory over the Amalekites (Exodus 17). You can watch the video and read the comments below.
The Lord delivered
the Israelites out of Egypt with mighty acts of judgment and led them by the pillar
of cloud and fire. Then the Lord provided
the Israelites with plenty of ‘manna and quail’ to eat. In this story we find that
the Israelites had been led to camp at Rephidim where they had no water. Now instead
of trusting the Lord to provide water
for them the Israelites tested the Lord
and yet the Lord graciously provided water
for the people to drink from the ‘Rock at Horeb’.
The Israelite
community were
traveling place to place and the Lord led them to camp at Rephidim where
there was no visible source of water. However, rather than trusting God the
Israelites quarreled with Moses and demanded he give them water to drink. Moses
questions why they were quarreling and putting the Lord to the test since it
was the Lord who had led them to the camp. By quarreling and demanding that
Moses give them water they were actually ‘putting the Lord to the test”.
With no water
in sight they assumed that there was no water available. They definitely needed
water so they chose to quarrel with Moses and they even accused Moses of
bringing them out of Egypt only to make them, their children and their livestock
die of thirst. They quarreled to such an extent that Moses actually thought the
Israelites would stone him to death. Moses was at a loss as to what to do so he
cried out to the Lord, “What am I to do… the Israelites are ready to stone me.”
The Lord’s answer
was for Moses to walk ahead of the people accompanied by some of the Israelite
elders. The Lord would stand
before Moses on the “Rock at Horeb’ and Moses was to strike the rock with the
same staff which they used to strike the Nile and bring judgment upon the ‘gods
of Egypt’. Moses did this in the sight of the elders of Israel and the Lord
provided water from the rock for the people to drink. So Moses called the place Massah, which means testing and ‘meribah’ which
means quarreling because there they questioned whether or not He was with them.
The Lord allowed Himself to be put on trial by having Moses strike the rock
with the staff with which Moses had brought judgment on Egypt.
God calls His people to trust Him to provide for us. Yet in this story we find the
Israelites testing the Lord’s patience by doubting that God was with
them (Ex. 17:2, 6-7). This happened at Horeb which is another
name for Mount Sinai and is the same place where Moses encountered God at the burning
bush (Ex. 3:1; Deut 4:15). We find water flowing from God’s presence in other
places in the scripture (Gen. 2:10; Ezek. 47:1–2). The New Testament tells us
that the Israelites drank from the rock that accompanied them and that rock was
Christ (1 Corinthians 10:3–4). Today,
we are to look directly to Jesus the mediator of the better new
covenant to provide spiritual water for our thirsty souls (Hebrews 9:15, 12:24,
John 7:37b–38).
After they
quarreled and putting the Lord to the test the Israelites were attacked by the Amalekites. First came the infighting and then came the attack from the
outside. Moses tells Joshua to choose some of their men to fight while he would
go up the hill with the staff of God to intercede. So Joshua and his chosen men
fought the Amalekites while Moses, Aaron and Hur went to the top of the hill. While
Moses held up his hands the Israelites were winning, but whenever Moses lowered
his hands the Amalekites were winning. When Moses’ hands grew tired Aaron and
Hur held Moses hands steady till sunset.
Moses lifted
up his hands to the throne of God and Joshua overcame the Amalekite army with
the sword. The Lord told Moses to write this account down on a scroll so
that the event could be remembered. Moses was to make sure that Joshua heard it
since the Lord would blot out the memory of Amalek. Then Moses built an
altar and called it ‘The Lord is my Banner’ and he said that the Lord
fought for Israel when hands were lifted up to the throne of the Lord. The
story shows how quarreling can make one vulnerable to outside attack. It is curious
how being attacked can motivate people to work together to overcome a common
enemy. Facing opposition can stimulate cooperation and divert attention away
from quarreling and bickering. The story makes it clear that the battle is the
Lord’s and that spiritual battles are won by lifting up hands in prayer to the
throne of God. Moses interceded for the Old Testament people and we look in
pray to the better new covenant mediator, our Lord Jesus Christ.
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