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Chapter 35
The Rebellion of Korah
[This chapter is based on Numbers 16 and 17.]
THE judgments visited upon the Israelites served for a time to restrain
their murmuring and insubordination, but the spirit of rebellion was
still in the heart and eventually brought forth the bitterest fruits.
The former rebellions had been mere popular tumults, arising from the
sudden impulse of the excited multitude; but now a deep-laid conspiracy
was formed, the result of a determined purpose to overthrow the
authority of the leaders appointed by God Himself.
Korah, the leading spirit in this movement, was a Levite, of the family
of Kohath, and a cousin of Moses; he was a man of ability and influence.
Though appointed to the service of the tabernacle, he had become
dissatisfied with his position and aspired to the dignity of the
priesthood. The bestowal upon Aaron and his house of the priestly
office, which had formerly devolved upon the first-born son of every
family, had given rise to jealousy and dissatisfaction, and for some
time Korah had been secretly opposing the authority of Moses and Aaron,
though he had not ventured upon any open act of rebellion. He finally
conceived the bold design of overthrowing both the civil and the
religious authority. He did not fail to find sympathizers. Close to the
tents of Korah and the Kohathites, on the south side of the tabernacle,
was the encampment of the tribe of Reuben, the tents of Dathan and
Abiram, two princes of this tribe, being near that of Korah. These
princes readily joined in his ambitious schemes. Being descendants from
the eldest son of Jacob, they claimed that the civil authority belonged
to them, and they determined to divide with Korah the honors of the
priesthood.
The state of feeling among the people favored the designs of Korah. In
the bitterness of their disappointment, their former doubts, jealousy,
and hatred had returned, and again their complaints were directed
against their patient leader. The Israelites were continually losing
sight of the fact that they were under divine guidance. They forgot that
the Angel of the covenant was their invisible leader, that, veiled by
the cloudy pillar, the presence of Christ went before them, and that
from Him Moses received all his directions.
They were unwilling to submit to the terrible sentence that they must
all die in the wilderness, and hence they were ready to seize upon every
pretext for believing that it was not God but Moses who was leading them
and who had pronounced their doom. The best efforts of the meekest man
upon the earth could not quell the insubordination of this people; and
although the marks of God's displeasure at their former perverseness
were still before them in their broken ranks and missing numbers, they
did not take the lesson to heart. Again they were overcome by
temptation.
The humble shepherd's life of Moses had been far more peaceful and happy
than his present position as leader of that vast assembly of turbulent
spirits. Yet Moses dared not choose. In place of a shepherd's crook a
rod of power had been given him, which he could not lay down until God
should release him.
He who reads the secrets of all hearts had marked the purposes of Korah
and his companions and had given His people such warning and instruction
as might have enabled them to escape the deception of these designing
men. They had seen the judgment of God fall upon Miriam because of her
jealousy and complaints against Moses. The Lord had declared that Moses
was greater than a prophet. "With him will I speak mouth to mouth."
"Wherefore, then," He added, "were ye not afraid to speak against My
servant Moses?" Numbers 12:8. These instructions were not intended for
Aaron and Miriam alone, but for all Israel.
Korah and his fellow conspirators were men who had been favored with
special manifestations of God's power and greatness. They were of the
number who went up with Moses into the mount and beheld the divine
glory. But since that time a change had come. A temptation, slight at
first, had been harbored, and had strengthened as it was encouraged,
until their minds were controlled by Satan, and they ventured upon their
work of disaffection. Professing great interest in the prosperity of the
people, they first whispered their discontent to one another and then to
leading men of Israel. Their insinuations were so readily received that
they ventured still further, and at last they really believed themselves
to be actuated by zeal for God.
They were successful in alienating two hundred and fifty princes, men of
renown in the congregation. With these strong and influential supporters
they felt confident of making a radical change in the government and
greatly improving upon the administration of Moses and Aaron.
Jealousy had given rise to envy, and envy to rebellion. They had
discussed the question of the right of Moses to so great authority and
honor, until they had come to regard him as occupying a very enviable
position, which any of them could fill as well as he. And they deceived
themselves and one another into thinking that Moses and Aaron had
themselves assumed the positions they held. The discontented ones said
that these leaders had exalted themselves above the congregation of the
Lord, in taking upon them the priesthood and government, but their house
was not entitled to distinction above others in Israel; they were no
more holy than the people, and it should be enough for them to be on a
level with their brethren, who were equally favored with God's special
presence and protection.
The next work of the conspirators was with the people. To those who are
in the wrong, and deserving of reproof, there is nothing more pleasing
than to receive sympathy and praise. And thus Korah and his associates
gained the attention and enlisted the support of the congregation. The
charge that the murmurings of the people had brought upon them the wrath
of God was declared to be a mistake. They said that the congregation
were not at fault, since they desired nothing more than their rights;
but that Moses was an overbearing ruler; that he had reproved the people
as sinners, when they were a holy people, and the Lord was among them.
Korah reviewed the history of their travels through the wilderness,
where they had been brought into strait places, and many had perished
because of their murmuring and disobedience. His hearers thought they
saw clearly that their troubles might have been prevented if Moses had
pursued a different course. They decided that all their disasters were
chargeable to him, and that their exclusion from Canaan was in
consequence of the mismanagement of Moses and Aaron; that if Korah would
be their leader, and would encourage them by dwelling upon their good
deeds, instead of reproving their sins, they would have a very peaceful,
prosperous journey; instead of wandering to and fro in the wilderness,
they would proceed directly to the Promised Land.
In this work of disaffection there was greater union and harmony among
the discordant elements of the congregation than had ever before
existed. Korah's success with the people increased his confidence and
confirmed him in his belief that the usurpation of authority by Moses,
if unchecked, would be fatal to the liberties of Israel; he also claimed
that God had opened the matter to him, and had authorized him to make a
change in the government before it should be too late. But many were not
ready to accept Korah's accusations against Moses. The memory of his
patient, self-sacrificing labors came up before them, and conscience was
disturbed. It was therefore necessary to assign some selfish motive for
his deep interest for Israel; and the old charge was reiterated, that he
had led them out to perish in the wilderness, that he might seize upon
their possessions.
For a time this work was carried on secretly. As soon, however, as the
movement had gained sufficient strength to warrant an open rupture,
Korah appeared at the head of the faction, and publicly accused Moses
and Aaron of usurping authority which Korah and his associates were
equally entitled to share. It was charged, further, that the people had
been deprived of their liberty and independence. "Ye take too much upon
you," said the conspirators, "seeing all the congregation are holy,
every one of them, and the Lord is among them: wherefore then lift ye up
yourselves above the congregation of the Lord?"
Moses had not suspected this deep-laid plot, and when its terrible
significance burst upon him, he fell upon his face in silent appeal to
God. He arose sorrowful indeed, but calm and strong. Divine guidance had
been granted him. "Even tomorrow," he said, "the Lord will show who are
His, and who is holy; and will cause him to come near unto Him: even him
whom He hath chosen will He cause to come near unto Him." The test was
to be deferred until the morrow, that all might have time for
reflection. Then those who aspired to the priesthood were to come each
with a censer, and offer incense at the tabernacle in the presence of
the congregation. The law was very explicit that only those who had been
ordained to the sacred office should minister in the sanctuary. And even
the priests, Nadab and Abihu, had been destroyed for venturing to offer
"strange fire," in disregard of a divine command. Yet Moses challenged
his accusers, if they dared enter upon so perilous an appeal, to refer
the matter to God.
Singling out Korah and his fellow Levites, Moses said, "Seemeth it but a
small thing unto you, that the God of Israel hath separated you from the
congregation of Israel, to bring you near to Himself to do the service
of the tabernacle of the Lord, and to stand before the congregation to
minister unto them? And He hath brought thee near to Him, and all thy
brethren the sons of Levi with thee: and seek ye the priesthood also?
for which cause both thou and all thy company are gathered together
against the Lord. And what is Aaron, that ye murmur against him?"
Dathan and Abiram had not taken so bold a stand as had Korah; and Moses,
hoping that they might have been drawn into the conspiracy without
having become wholly corrupted, summoned them to appear before him, that
he might hear their charges against him. But they would not come, and
they insolently refused to acknowledge his authority. Their reply,
uttered in the hearing of the congregation, was, "Is it a small thing
that thou hast brought us up out of a land that floweth with milk and
honey, to kill us in the wilderness, except thou make thyself altogether
a prince over us? Moreover thou hast not brought us into a land that
floweth with milk and honey, or given us inheritance of fields and
vineyards: wilt thou put out the eyes of these men? We will not come
up."
Thus they applied to the scene of their bondage the very language in
which the Lord had described the promised inheritance. They accused
Moses of pretending to act under divine guidance, as a means of
establishing his authority; and they declared that they would no longer
submit to be led about like blind men, now toward Canaan, and now toward
the wilderness, as best suited his ambitious designs. Thus he who had
been as a tender father, a patient shepherd, was represented in the
blackest character of a tyrant and usurper. The exclusion from Canaan,
in punishment of their own sins, was charged upon him.
It was evident that the sympathies of the people were with the
disaffected party; but Moses made no effort at self-vindication. He
solemnly appealed to God, in the presence of the congregation, as a
witness to the purity of his motives and the uprightness of his conduct,
and implored Him to be his judge.
On the morrow, the two hundred and fifty princes, with Korah at their
head, presented themselves, with their censers. They were brought into
the court of the tabernacle, while the people gathered without, to await
the result. It was not Moses who assembled the congregation to behold
the defeat of Korah and his company, but the rebels, in their blind
presumption, had called them together to witness their victory. A large
part of the congregation openly sided with Korah, whose hopes were high
of carrying his point against Aaron.
As they were thus assembled before God, "the glory of the Lord appeared
unto all the congregation." The divine warning was communicated to Moses
and Aaron, "Separate yourselves from among this congregation, that I may
consume them in a moment." But they fell upon their faces, with the
prayer, "O God, the God of the spirits of all flesh, shall one man sin,
and wilt Thou be wroth with all the congregation?"
Korah had withdrawn from the assembly to join Dathan and Abiram when
Moses, accompanied by the seventy elders, went down with a last warning
to the men who had refused to come to him. The multitudes followed, and
before delivering his message, Moses, by divine direction, bade the
people, "Depart, I pray you, from the tents of these wicked men, and
touch nothing of theirs, lest ye be consumed in all their sins." The
warning was obeyed, for an apprehension of impending judgment rested
upon all. The chief rebels saw themselves abandoned by those whom they
had deceived, but their hardihood was unshaken. They stood with their
families in the door of their tents, as if in defiance of the divine
warning.
In the name of the God of Israel, Moses now declared, in the hearing of
the congregation: "Hereby ye shall know that the Lord hath sent me to do
all these works; for I have not done them of mine own mind. If these men
die the common death of all men, or if they be visited after the
visitation of all men, then the Lord hath not sent me. But if the Lord
make a new thing, and the earth open her mouth, and swallow them up,
with all that appertain unto them, and they go down quick into the pit,
then ye shall understand that these men have provoked the Lord."
The eyes of all Israel were fixed upon Moses as they stood, in terror
and expectation, awaiting the event. As he ceased speaking, the solid
earth parted, and the rebels went down alive into the pit, with all that
pertained to them, and "they perished from among the congregation." The
people fled, self-condemned as partakers in the sin.
But the judgments were not ended. Fire flashing from the cloud consumed
the two hundred and fifty princes who had offered incense. These men,
not being the first in rebellion, were not destroyed with the chief
conspirators. They were permitted to see their end, and to have an
opportunity for repentance; but their sympathies were with the rebels,
and they shared their fate.
When Moses was entreating Israel to flee from the coming destruction,
the divine judgment might even then have been stayed, if Korah and his
company had repented and sought forgiveness. But their stubborn
persistence sealed their doom. The entire congregation were sharers in
their guilt, for all had, to a greater or less degree, sympathized with
them. Yet God in His great mercy made a distinction between the leaders
in rebellion and those whom they had led. The people who had permitted
themselves to be deceived were still granted space for repentance.
Overwhelming evidence had been given that they were wrong, and that
Moses was right. The signal manifestation of God's power had removed all
uncertainty.
Jesus, the Angel who went before the Hebrews, sought to save them from
destruction. Forgiveness was lingering for them. The judgment of God had
come very near, and appealed to them to repent. A special, irresistible
interference from heaven had arrested their rebellion. Now, if they
would respond to the interposition of God's providence, they might be
saved. But while they fled from the judgments, through fear of
destruction, their rebellion was not cured. They returned to their tents
that night terrified, but not repentant.
They had been flattered by korah and his company until they really
believed themselves to be very good people, and that they had been
wronged and abused by Moses. Should they admit that Korah and his
company were wrong, and Moses right, then they would be compelled to
receive as the word of God the sentence that they must die in the
wilderness. They were not willing to submit to this, and they tried to
believe that Moses had deceived them. They had fondly cherished the hope
that a new order of things was about to be established, in which praise
would be substituted for reproof, and ease for anxiety and conflict. The
men who had perished had spoken flattering words and had professed great
interest and love for them, and the people concluded that Korah and his
companions must have been good men, and that Moses had by some means
been the cause of their destruction.
It is hardly possible for men to offer greater insult to God than to
despise and reject the instrumentalities He would use for their
salvation. The Israelites had not only done this, but had purposed to
put both Moses and Aaron to death. Yet they did not realize the
necessity of seeking pardon of God for their grievous sin. That night of
probation was not passed in repentance and confession, but in devising
some way to resist the evidences which showed them to be the greatest of
sinners. They still cherished hatred of the men of God's appointment,
and braced themselves to resist their authority. Satan was at hand to
pervert their judgment and lead them blindfold to destruction.
All Israel had fled in alarm at the cry of the doomed sinners who went
down into the pit, for they said, "Lest the earth swallow us up also."
"But on the morrow all the congregation of the children of Israel
murmured against Moses and against Aaron, saying, ye have killed the
people of the Lord." And they were about to proceed to violence against
their faithful, self-sacrificing leaders.
A manifestation of the divine glory was seen in the cloud above the
tabernacle, and a voice from the cloud spoke to Moses and Aaron, "Get
you up from among this congregation, that I may consume them as in a
moment."
The guilt of sin did not rest upon Moses, and hence he did not fear and
did not hasten away and leave the congregation to perish. Moses
lingered, in this fearful crisis manifesting the true shepherd's
interest for the flock of his care. He pleaded that the wrath of God
might not utterly destroy the people of His choice. By his intercession
he stayed the arm of vengeance, that a full end might not be made of
disobedient, rebellious Israel.
But the minister of wrath had gone forth; the plague was doing its work
of death. By his brother's direction, Aaron took a censer and hastened
into the midst of the congregation to "make an atonement for them." "And
he stood between the dead and the living." As the smoke of the incense
ascended, the prayers of Moses in the tabernacle went up to God; and the
plague was stayed; but not until fourteen thousand of Israel lay dead,
an evidence of the guilt of murmuring and rebellion.
But further evidence was given that the priesthood had been established
in the family of Aaron. By divine direction each tribe prepared a rod
and wrote upon it the name of the tribe. The name of Aaron was upon that
of Levi. The rods were laid up in the tabernacle, "before the
testimony." The blossoming of any rod was to be a token that the Lord
had chosen that tribe for the priesthood. On the morrow, "behold, the
rod of Aaron for the house of Levi was budded, and brought forth buds,
and bloomed blossoms, and yielded almonds." It was shown to the people,
and afterward laid up in the tabernacle as a witness to succeeding
generations. This miracle effectually settled the question of the
priesthood.
It was now fully established that Moses and Aaron had spoken by divine
authority, and the people were compelled to believe the unwelcome truth
that they were to die in the wilderness. "Behold," they exclaimed, "we
die, we perish, we all perish." They confessed that they had sinned in
rebelling against their leaders, and that Korah and his company had
suffered from the just judgment of God.
In the rebellion of Korah is seen the working out, upon a narrower
stage, of the same spirit that led to the rebellion of Satan in heaven.
It was pride and ambition that prompted Lucifer to complain of the
government of God, and to seek the overthrow of the order which had been
established in heaven. Since his fall it has been his object to infuse
the same spirit of envy and discontent, the same ambition for position
and honor, into the minds of men. He thus worked upon the minds of Korah,
Dathan, and Abiram, to arouse the desire for self-exaltation and excite
envy, distrust, and rebellion. Satan caused them to reject God as their
leader, by rejecting the men of God's appointment. Yet while in their
murmuring against Moses and Aaron they blasphemed God, they were so
deluded as to think themselves righteous, and to regard those who had
faithfully reproved their sins as actuated by Satan.
Do not the same evils still exist that lay at the foundation of Korah's
ruin? Pride and ambition are widespread; and when these are cherished,
they open the door to envy, and a striving for supremacy; the soul is
alienated from God, and unconsciously drawn into the ranks of Satan.
Like Korah and his companions, many, even of the professed followers of
Christ, are thinking, planning, and working so eagerly for
self-exaltation that in order to gain the sympathy and support of the
people they are ready to pervert the truth, falsifying and
misrepresenting the Lord's servants, and even charging them with the
base and selfish motives that inspire their own hearts. By persistently
reiterating falsehood, and that against all evidence, they at last come
to believe it to be truth. While endeavoring to destroy the confidence
of the people in the men of God's appointment, they really believe that
they are engaged in a good work, verily doing God service.
The Hebrews were not willing to submit to the directions and
restrictions of the Lord. They were restless under restraint, and
unwilling to receive reproof. This was the secret of their murmuring
against Moses. Had they been left free to do as they pleased, there
would have been fewer complaints against their leader. All through the
history of the church God's servants have had the same spirit to meet.
It is by sinful indulgence that men give Satan access to their minds,
and they go from one stage of wickedness to another. The rejection of
light darkens the mind and hardens the heart, so that it is easier for
them to take the next step in sin and to reject still clearer light,
until at last their habits of wrongdoing become fixed. Sin ceases to
appear sinful to them. He who faithfully preaches God's word, thereby
condemning their sins, too often incurs their hatred. Unwilling to
endure the pain and sacrifice necessary to reform, they turn upon the
Lord's servant and denounce his reproofs as uncalled for and severe.
Like Korah, they declare that the people are not at fault; it is the
reprover that causes all the trouble. And soothing their consciences
with this deception, the jealous and disaffected combine to sow discord
in the church and weaken the hands of those who would build it up.
Every advance made by those whom God has called to lead in His work has
excited suspicion; every act has been misrepresented by the jealous and
faultfinding. Thus it was in the time of Luther, of the Wesleys and
other reformers. Thus it is today.
Korah would not have taken the course he did had he known that all the
directions and reproofs communicated to Israel were from God. But he
might have known this. God had given overwhelming evidence that He was
leading Israel. But Korah and his companions rejected light until they
became so blinded that the most striking manifestations of His power
were not sufficient to convince them; they attributed them all to human
or satanic agency. The same thing was done by the people, who the day
after the destruction of Korah and his company came to Moses and Aaron,
saying, "Ye have killed the people of the Lord." Notwithstanding they
had had the most convincing evidence of God's displeasure at their
course, in the destruction of the men who had deceived them, they dared
to attribute His judgments to Satan, declaring that through the power of
the evil one, Moses and Aaron had caused the death of good and holy men.
It was this act that sealed their doom. They had committed the sin
against the Holy Spirit, a sin by which man's heart is effectually
hardened against the influence of divine grace. "Whosoever speaketh a
word against the Son of man," said Christ, "it shall be forgiven him:
but whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost, it shall not be forgiven
him." Matthew 12:32. These words were spoken by our Saviour when the
gracious works which He had performed through the power of God were
attributed by the Jews to Beelzebub. It is through the agency of the
Holy Spirit that God communicates with man; and those who deliberately
reject this agency as satanic, have cut off the channel of communication
between the soul and Heaven.
God works by the manifestation of His Spirit to reprove and convict the
sinner; and if the Spirit's work is finally rejected, there is no more
that God can do for the soul. The last resource of divine mercy has been
employed. The transgressor has cut himself off from God, and sin has no
remedy to cure itself. There is no reserved power by which God can work
to convict and convert the sinner. "Let him alone" (Hosea 4:17) is the
divine command. Then "there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, but a
certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which
shall devour the adversaries." Hebrews 10:26, 27.
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