What should have taken some eleven days of brisk walking turned into forty years of marching in a circle all because whether or not the people should obey God was put up for a vote, and the overwhelming majority said no. They forgot the one inviolable rule: God is not interested in alternate views, differing opinions, or my thoughts on how He could better run the cosmos. Man’s job is not to outvote God. Man’s duty is to obey Him.
It’s not just this generation that is so self-diluted as to
think they can dictate terms to God. It’s not just this generation that reeks
of self-importance to the point of believing that their feelings trump the will
of God or the guidelines He set forth in His Word. People have always thought
more of themselves than they ought and given themselves greater importance than
they had any right to.
Do you know who I am doesn’t play so well with God because He
does, and He’s not impressed. The same goes for insisting that your taxes pay
His salary, or in this case, your tithes pay His wages. What great virtues
humility and obedience, and how rarely witnessed among God’s children.
The promised land was before them, a river’s width away, and
they decided as a collective that this is where their God’s power ceased, this
is where He would fail, and this is where He would fall short.
If you’ve ever wondered how long it might take to be given
another opportunity to enter your Canaan once you’ve squandered the first, it
took the children of Israel forty years. Make of that what you will, but the
takeaway from their experience should be to do what God tells you when He tells
you and don’t delay in your obedience.
Since we’re on the topic, contrary to some who insist that
Canaan is heaven, it isn’t because although Moses was not allowed to enter
Canaan, nobody turned him away from the gates of paradise. Even the people
claiming there are pet dinosaurs in heaven haven’t proffered that we had to
defeat giants to enter in. Canaan is Canaan, heaven is heaven, and the two are
not the same thing, nor are they interchangeable. Yes, I know, it is easier just
to repeat something you heard once than dig a bit deeper and take the time to
rightly divide the Word.
Canaan is that place in your walk where you see what
everything has led up to. It’s that place of victory and maturity where the
hand of God and His presence are ever present in your life, and you are living
the victorious life you once only dreamt of.
Of all the children of Israel who began the journey out of
Egypt, only two made it to Canaan. Joshua and Caleb, the two men who forty
years earlier had insisted that the land was theirs for the taking. Imagine all
the victories, growth, progress, and maturing you could have had had you simply
obeyed and done what God told you the first time. Imagine where the children of
Israel would have been had they crossed the river and taken the land forty
years prior.
It’s difficult to quantify what we lose out on when we are
reticent, hesitant, or unwilling to obey the voice of God and do as He commands
at the moment. What did that delay cost? What did that hesitancy tally up to?
We can guess at it and draw logical conclusions, but it is near to impossible
to quantify with any degree of certainty.
For the longest time, the church has been giving the people
what they wanted instead of what they needed. There are surveys and
questionnaires asking what you would like to see more of in church, what you
would like to hear more of, what topics the pastor should tackle, and which
ones he should stay away from, and the sheep are flattered and more than
willing to give their two cents and then some.
It’s all well and good until the people you’ve been supplying
with what they wanted realize that it’s nowhere close to what they needed. Because
they didn’t get what they needed, they’re spiritually stunted, powerless in the
face of evil, and focused on things contrary to what the Word of God insists we
should focus on.
Then, the same individuals you catered to, fawned over and bent
over backward to keep happy, will turn on you and lay the blame for their
immaturity squarely at your feet. No one will own up to their complicity or
their part in the catastrophe that is the modern-day church. No one will
acknowledge that it was their pressure on the shepherds to present the gospel
in the least challenging, least offensive way possible that created the society
of the clanging cymbal we’re living through. That would require humility and
self-awareness. That would require owning up to our actions and taking
responsibility for our hand in the mockery Christendom has become.
No one is blameless in all this. Not the shepherds, not the
sheep, no one. Moses fell short in that he decided to put it up for a vote as
to whether the people should obey God or not. The people failed because they
chose rebellion over obedience. Both suffered the consequences of their actions
to one degree or another, and though millennia have passed, the consequences
remain the same.
If we’ve learned anything from this moment in Israel’s history, I hope it’s that you don’t do the work of God based on polling data, and if the people and the will of God conflict, it’s always the people that are in the wrong.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
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