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民數記 21

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1 地的迦人亞拉得王,以色列人從亞他林,就和以色列人爭戰,擄了他們幾個人。

2 以色列人耶和華發願:你若將這民交付我,我就把他們的城邑盡行毀滅。

3 耶和華應允了以色列人,把迦南人交付他們,他們就把迦南人和迦南人的城邑盡行毀滅。那地方的名便何珥瑪(何珥瑪就是毀滅的意思)。

4 他們從何珥起行,往紅那條走,要繞過以東。百姓因這難行,心中甚是煩躁,

5 就怨讟摩西:你們為甚麼把我們埃及領出來、使我們在曠野呢?這裡沒有糧,沒有我們的心厭惡這淡薄的食物。

6 於是耶和華使火進入百姓中間,就咬他們。以色列人死了許多

7 百姓到摩西那裡,我們怨讟耶和華和你,有罪了。求你禱告耶和華,叫這些離開我們。於是摩西為百姓禱告。

8 耶和華摩西:你製造一條火蛇,掛在杆子上;凡被咬的,一望這蛇,就必得活。

9 摩西便製造一條銅,掛在杆子上;凡被咬的,一望這銅就活了。

10 以色列人起行,安營在阿伯。

11 又從阿伯起行,安營在以耶亞巴琳,與摩押相對的曠野,向日出之地。

12 從那裡起行,安營在撒烈谷。

13 從那裡起行,安營在亞嫩河那邊。這亞嫩河是在曠野,從亞摩利的境界流出來的;原來亞嫩河是摩押邊界,在摩押和亞摩利人搭界的地方。

14 所以耶和華的戰記上:蘇法的哇哈伯與亞嫩的谷,

15 並向亞珥城眾谷的下坡,是靠近摩押的境界。

16 以色列人從那裡起行,到了比珥(比珥就是的意思)。從前耶和華吩咐摩西:招聚百姓,我他們喝,的就是這

17 當時,以色列人唱歌說:阿,湧上水來!你們要向這

18 是首領和民中的尊貴人用圭用杖所所掘的。以色列人從曠野往瑪他拿去,

19 從瑪他拿到拿哈列,從拿哈列到巴末,

20 從巴末到了摩押地的谷,又到那下望曠野之毘斯迦的山頂。

21 以色列人差遣使者去見亞摩利人的王西宏,說:

22 求你容我們從你的經過;我們不偏入田間和葡萄園,也不裡的,只走大道(原文作王道),直到過了你的境界。

23 西宏不容以色列人從他的境界經過,就招聚他的眾民出到曠野,要攻擊以色列人,到了雅雜與以色列人爭戰。

24 以色列人用刀殺了他,得了他的,從亞嫩河到雅博河,直到亞捫人的境界,因為亞捫人的境界多有堅壘。

25 以色列人奪取這一切的城邑,也亞摩利人的城邑,就是希實本與希實本的一切鄉村。

26 這希實本是亞摩利王西宏的京城;西宏曾與摩押的先王爭戰,從他中奪取了全,直到亞嫩河。

27 所以那些作詩歌的:你們到希實本;願西宏的城被修造,被建立

28 因為有從希實本發出,有燄出於西宏的城,燒盡摩押的亞珥和亞嫩河邱壇的祭司(祭司原文作主)。

29 摩押阿,你有禍了!基抹的民哪,你們滅亡了!基抹的男子逃奔,女子被擄,交付亞摩利的王西宏。

30 我們射了他們;希實本直到底本盡皆毀滅。我們使地變成荒場,直到挪法;這挪法直延到米底巴。

31 這樣,以色列人在亞摩利人之

32 摩西打發人去窺探雅謝,以色列人就佔了雅謝的鎮市,趕出那裡的亞摩利人。

33 以色列人回,向巴珊去。巴珊王噩和他的眾民都出來,在以得來與他們交戰。

34 耶和華摩西:不要他!因我已將他和他的眾民,並他的,都交在你中;你要待他像從前待希實本的亞摩利王西宏一般。

35 於是他們殺了他和他的眾子,並他的眾民,沒有留下一個,就得了他的

   

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Trading Natural Delights for Spiritual

Napsal(a) Bill Woofenden

"And the people spake against God, and against Moses, 'Wherefore have ye brought us up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? for there is no bread, neither is there any water; and our soul loatheth this light bread.'" Numbers 21:5

Additional readings: Mark 10:17-31, Psalm 136

The children of Israel had been led out of hard bondage in Egypt and were on their way to a land of their own where they would be free. Yet hardly had they set forth when they began to complain "Would to God we had died by the hand of the Lord in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the fleshpots, and when we did eat bread to the full" (Exodus 16:3). Then the manna was given them every day a portion sufficient for their needs. Now, near the end of their journey to the land of Canaan, the people murmur again and speak the words of our text.

The Bible is the story of our spiritual development, of the states through which we pass in regeneration.

Love is the life of man, and those things in which we delight are as the food by which we live. We are born natural, and our first delights are natural delights. These natural delights are very real to us. The delights that come to us through the senses—sight, hearing, taste, touch, and smell—are marvelous in their degree and appeal. Into these loves we are born. They form the basis of the life of the natural man. They urge us to explore and conquer the secret forces of the earth, to produce a multitude of things that add to our comfort and pleasure. They call forth the development of the arts and sciences; they sharpen the mind and develop many skills. They make life worth living to the natural man.

What has spiritual love or its delights to offer against the very definite and assured delights of the natural man?

The Lord began His sermon on the mount with the Blessings, blessed are the poor in spirit, they that mourn, that hunger and thirst after righteousness, that are persecuted and reviled. And further on in His Gospel He says, "If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me" (Matthew 16:24, Mark 8:34, Luke 9:23) and "Whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it" (Matthew 16:25) and "Whosoever he be of you that forsaketh not all that he hath, he cannot be my disciple" (Luke 14:33). There are indeed rewards mentioned. It is said that those who give up will receive a hundredfold in this world, and in the world to come life everlasting. And we are told of the delights following upon serving the Lord and serving others—the delight of peace with the Lord and with men. But all these to the natural man seem vague and shadowy as compared to the apparently vivid and more real delights of the Egypt state, the delights of the love of self and the world. In Scripture language to be led out of Egypt is to be led out of slavery to our natural lusts into the freedom of heavenly love and it’s delights.

Do we really believe this? Do we know, acknowledge, and understand that our natural loves hold us in bondage, and that in the exercise of spiritual loves alone is freedom?

We are taught and affirm that the health of the spirit is of infinitely more consequence than the health of the body, and we know that many who are severely afflicted in body are strong in spiritual growth and health. The Word of God caters to the spirit of man. It gives light to his mind, nourishment to his soul, and the power to interpret life. It enables him to distinguish between right and wrong, giving him eternal standards which don’t change.

But when the Divine laws conflict with some of our worldly interests, many are prone to turn away with the excuse, "It will not do to mix religion with business." And when we think of heaven, do we not often think of it as a place where all our external delights will be satisfied, wishing it to be a place where we shall be given the delights we may have been denied in the world? Do we find it hard to believe that the delight's of heaven are something other than these, that with the angels the glories amid which they dwell are thought nothing of save as representatives of the interior spiritual things in which alone they place the reality and the joy of heaven? Do we murmur at the restraint which the Word puts upon our natural loves? Can it be said of us, "Our soul loatheth this light bread?"

It would be foolish as well as hypocritical to deny the value and desirability of our natural desires and the delight in their gratification, but they should not be the life of life to us, making heavenly delights vague and shadowy. The love of gratifying natural needs and wants may become so great that one will seek dominion over the whole world in the effort to amass to himself its riches. So laws have to be made to protect men from each other. Everyone is born into this love of self and the world. But we are told that we must be born again. Our first loves are not heavenly loves, and inmostly they have in them hatred for the Lord and for the heavenly kingdom. Yet the Lord in a marvelous way bends them to His service and gradually supplants them with love to Himself and to the neighbor.

He begins in our infancy, even before we are born, by planting "remains." In childhood, when the senses are most awake and plastic, He leads us—through our self-seeking love of finding out about all manner of things—to learn about the material world. This prepares the way for our taking part in the affairs of the world. So the mind is stored with various knowledges. But this is not all. If our development stopped here, there would be nothing heavenly in it. In John 1:12 we read, "But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name: Which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God"—not by our natural inheritance, nor by our natural desires, nor by any process of purely human thought, but of God.

When mature thought is reached, when man can think and choose for himself, there is a disposition inseminated to obey the Lord rather than self, a perception that there is something higher and better than natural delights, the perception that if our natural desires are allowed to get control, we shall cease to be our own masters and become enslaved. How and when this change comes we may not tell. It may come quietly and imperceptibly; it may be an awakening at some great crisis of life. In either case it is not an instantaneous and complete change from earthly to heavenly. Natural loves still exist, and for a long time their delights will appear the greatest in life. We should not be discouraged by this. The Israelites, when they left Egypt, did not immediately come to their homes in the Holy Land. The Lord does not take away our natural delights. We may enjoy the good things in the world, but there must be the love of use to others to purify our enjoyment of them. Little by little, under the Divine providence, the hold of natural loves is loosened and heavenly loves are developed and increased. At first we give natural delights first place and uses last, but in time this order is reversed, and love to the Lord and the neighbor come first and natural delights become secondary.

"If thou turn away thy foot from the sabbath, from doing thy pleasure on my holy day; and call the sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord, honorable; and shalt honor him, not doing thine own ways, nor finding thine own pleasure, nor speaking thine own words:

"Then shalt thou delight thyself in the Lord; and I will cause thee to ride upon the high places of the earth, and feed thee with the heritage of Jacob thy father: for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it" (Isaiah 58:13-14).