As we have seen, the period of Wandering in the Wilderness falls into three parts:

Disobedience and rebellion characterise each of these periods:

The Main Point

In the "church in the wilderness" (and their descendants in the promised land), we see a "type" or foreshadowing of the church of Christ. The story of the Israelites is characterised by the MANY CYCLES OF FALLING AWAY AND RENEWAL. Time and again they fell into disobedience, then made a restoration. The history of the church is the same. So the main point is this: It is up to us to see that we are part of a renewal and restoration, not a part of a falling away into disobedience, error, and apostasy.

Bible Summary (Numbers 10-36)

Instances of disobedience are highlighted in this summary

Before and After

Before the period of wilderness wandering, there were numerous examples of disobedience to God. You will recall how, in the time of the PROMISES TO ABRAHAM, Joseph’s brothers sinned in selling him into slavery.

Even Moses, a giant among people of faith, was not without a record of sin. In the time of the BONDAGE IN EGYPT, when Moses lived in Midian, he neglected the covenant of circumcision and God was going to kill him, however his wife saved the day (Exo 4:24-26).

After the period of wilderness wandering, during the CONQUEST OF CANAAN, when judges ruled the Israelites, the people disobeyed God by not driving out all the inhabitants of the land. Consequently, their children were drawn into worshipping the Baals and "there arose a generation arose who did not know God". In their own promised land they became slaves to the people they should have conquered. God raised up judges to restore them, but time and again they fell back into the same error (Judges 2).

In the time of the KINGDOM OF DAVID when David and Solomon ruled, David sinned when he took Basheba. Solomon loved a thousand foreign women who turned away his heart to serve false gods.

In the time of the DIVIDED KINGDOM there were many wicked kings such as Ahab, who married the wicked Jezebel who set out to exterminate God’s prophets (1Kg 16-21). Elisha predicted an ugly death for her (2Kg 9:10,30-37).

In all the other periods the same story continues. Even in the time of the COMING OF THE SON OF GOD, the religious leaders opposed him and sought to kill him (Jhn 5:18).

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