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Chapter 43
The Death of Moses
[This chapter is based on Deuteronomy 31 to 34.]
IN all the dealings of God with His people there is, mingled with His
love and mercy, the most striking evidence of His strict and impartial
justice. This is exemplified in the history of the Hebrew people. God
had bestowed great blessings upon Israel. His loving-kindness toward
them is touchingly portrayed: "As an eagle stirreth up her nest,
fluttereth over her young, spreadeth abroad her wings, taketh them,
beareth them on her wings: so the Lord alone did lead him." And yet what
swift and severe retribution was visited upon them for their
transgressions!
The infinite love of God has been manifested in the gift of His
only-begotten Son to redeem a lost race. Christ came to the earth to
reveal to men the character of His Father, and His life was filled with
deeds of divine tenderness and compassion. And yet Christ Himself
declares, "Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one title shall in no
wise pass from the law." Matthew 5:18. The same voice that with patient,
loving entreaty invites the sinner to come to Him and find pardon and
peace, will in the judgment bid the rejecters of His mercy, "Depart from
Me, ye cursed." Matthew 25:41. In all the Bible, God is represented not
only as a tender father but as a righteous judge. Though He delights in
showing mercy, and "forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin," yet
He "will by no means clear the guilty." Exodus 34:7.
The great Ruler of nations had declared that Moses was not to lead the
congregation of Israel into the goodly land, and the earnest pleading of
God's servant could not secure a reversing of His sentence. He knew that
he must die. Yet he had not for a moment faltered in his care for
Israel. He had faithfully sought to prepare the congregation to enter
upon the promised inheritance. At the divine command Moses and Joshua
repaired to the tabernacle, while the pillar of cloud came and stood
over the door. Here the people were solemnly committed to the charge of
Joshua. The work of Moses as leader of Israel was ended. Still he forgot
himself in his interest for his people. In the presence of the assembled
multitude Moses, in the name of God, addressed to his successor these
words of holy cheer: "Be strong and of a good courage: for thou shalt
bring the children of Israel into the land which I sware unto them: and
I will be with thee." He then turned to the elders and officers of the
people, giving them a solemn charge to obey faithfully the instructions
he had communicated to them from God.
As the people gazed upon the aged man, so soon to be taken from them,
they recalled, with a new and deeper appreciation, his parental
tenderness, his wise counsels, and his untiring labors. How often, when
their sins had invited the just judgments of God, the prayers of Moses
had prevailed with Him to spare them! Their grief was heightened by
remorse. They bitterly remembered that their own perversity had provoked
Moses to the sin for which he must die.
The removal of their beloved leader would be a far stronger rebuke to
Israel than any which they could have received had his life and mission
been continued. God would lead them to feel that they were not to make
the life of their future leader as trying as they had made that of
Moses. God speaks to His people in blessings bestowed; and when these
are not appreciated, He speaks to them in blessings removed, that they
may be led to see their sins, and return to Him with all the heart.
That very day there came to Moses the command, "Get thee up . . . unto
Mount Nebo, . . . and behold the land of Canaan, which I give unto the
children of Israel for a possession: and die in the mount whither thou
goest up, and be gathered unto thy people." Moses had often left the
camp, in obedience to the divine summons, to commune with God; but he
was now to depart on a new and mysterious errand. He must go forth to
resign his life into the hands of his Creator. Moses knew that he was to
die alone; no earthly friend would be permitted to minister to him in
his last hours. There was a mystery and awfulness about the scene before
him, from which his heart shrank. The severest trial was his separation
from the people of his care and love--the people with whom his interest
and his life had so long been united. But he had learned to trust in
God, and with unquestioning faith he committed himself and his people to
His love and mercy.
For the last time Moses stood in the assembly of his people. Again the
Spirit of God rested upon him, and in the most sublime and touching
language he pronounced a blessing upon each of the tribes, closing with
a benediction upon them all:
"There is none like unto God, O Jeshurun,
Who rideth upon the heaven for thy help,
And in His excellency on the skies.
The eternal God is thy dwelling place,
And underneath are the everlasting arms:
And He thrust out the enemy from before thee,
And said, Destroy.
And Israel dwelleth in safety,
The fountain of Jacob alone,
In a land of corn and wine;
Yea, His heavens drop down dew.
Happy art thou, O Israel:
Who is like unto thee, a people saved by Jehovah,
The shield of thy help."
Deuteronomy 33:26-29, R.V.
Moses turned from the congregation, and in silence and alone made his
way up the mountainside. He went to "the mountain of Nebo, to the top of
Pisgah." Upon that lonely height he stood, and gazed with undimmed eye
upon the scene spread out before him. Far away to the west lay the blue
waters of the Great Sea; in the north, Mount Hermon stood out against
the sky; to the east was the tableland of Moab, and beyond lay Bashan,
the scene of Israel's triumph; and away to the south stretched the
desert of their long wanderings.
In solitude Moses reviewed his life of vicissitudes and hardships since
he turned from courtly honors and from a prospective kingdom in Egypt,
to cast in his lot with God's chosen people. He called to mind those
long years in the desert with the flocks of Jethro, the appearance of
the Angel in the burning bush, and his own call to deliver Israel. Again
he beheld the mighty miracles of God's power displayed in behalf of the
chosen people, and His long-suffering mercy during the years of their
wandering and rebellion. Notwithstanding all that God had wrought for
them, notwithstanding his own prayers and labors, only two of all the
adults in the vast army that left Egypt had been found so faithful that
they could enter the Promised Land. As Moses reviewed the result of his
labors, his life of trial and sacrifice seemed to have been almost in
vain.
Yet he did not regret the burdens he had borne. He knew that his mission
and work were of God's own appointing. When first called to become the
leader of Israel from bondage, he shrank from the responsibility; but
since he had taken up the work he had not cast aside the burden. Even
when the Lord had proposed to release him, and destroy rebellious
Israel, Moses could not consent. Though his trials had been great, he
had enjoyed special tokens of God's favor; he had obtained a rich
experience during the sojourn in the wilderness, in witnessing the
manifestations of God's power and glory, and in the communion of His
love; he felt that he had made a wise decision in choosing to suffer
affliction with the people of God, rather than to enjoy the pleasures of
sin for a season.
As he looked back upon his experience as a leader of God's people, one
wrong act marred the record. If that transgression could be blotted out,
he felt that he would not shrink from death. He was assured that
repentance, and faith in the promised Sacrifice, were all that God
required, and again Moses confessed his sin and implored pardon in the
name of Jesus.
And now a panoramic view of the Land of Promise was presented to him.
Every part of the country was spread out before him, not faint and
uncertain in the dim distance, but standing out clear, distinct, and
beautiful to his delighted vision. In this scene it was presented, not
as it then appeared, but as it would become, with God's blessing upon
it, in the possession of Israel. He seemed to be looking upon a second
Eden. There were mountains clothed with cedars of Lebanon, hills gray
with olives and fragrant with the odor of the vine, wide green plains
bright with flowers and rich in fruitfulness, here the palm trees of the
tropics, there waving fields of wheat and barley, sunny valleys musical
with the ripple of brooks and the song of birds, goodly cities and fair
gardens, lakes rich in "the abundance of the seas," grazing flocks upon
the hillsides, and even amid the rocks the wild bee's hoarded treasures.
It was indeed such a land as Moses, inspired by the Spirit of God, had
described to Israel: "Blessed of the Lord . . . for the precious things
of heaven, for the dew, and for the deep that coucheth beneath, and for
the precious fruits brought forth by the sun, . . . and for the chief
things of the ancient mountains, . . . and for the precious things of
the earth and fullness thereof."
Moses saw the chosen people established in Canaan, each of the tribes in
its own possession. He had a view of their history after the settlement
of the Promised Land; the long, sad story of their apostasy and its
punishment was spread out before him. He saw them, because of their
sins, dispersed among the heathen, the glory departed from Israel, her
beautiful city in ruins, and her people captives in strange lands. He
saw them restored to the land of their fathers, and at last brought
under the dominion of Rome.
He was permitted to look down the stream of time and behold the first
advent of our Saviour. He saw Jesus as a babe in Bethlehem. He heard the
voices of the angelic host break forth in the glad song of praise to God
and peace on earth. He beheld in the heavens the star guiding the Wise
Men of the East to Jesus, and a great light flooded his mind as he
called those prophetic words, "There shall come a Star out of Jacob, and
a Scepter shall rise out of Israel." Numbers 24:17. He beheld Christ's
humble life in Nazareth, His ministry of love and sympathy and healing,
His rejection by a proud, unbelieving nation. Amazed he listened to
their boastful exaltation of the law of God, while they despised and
rejected Him by whom the law was given. He saw Jesus upon Olivet as with
weeping He bade farewell to the city of His love. As Moses beheld the
final rejection of that people so highly blessed of Heaven--that people
for whom he had toiled and prayed and sacrificed, for whom he had been
willing that his own name should be blotted from the book of life; as he
listened to those fearful words, "Behold your house is left unto you
desolate" (Matthew 23:38), his heart was wrung with anguish, and bitter
tears fell from his eyes, in sympathy with the sorrow of the Son of God.
He followed the Saviour to Gethsemane, and beheld the agony in the
garden, the betrayal, the mockery and scourging-- the crucifixion. Moses
saw that as he had lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so the Son
of God must be lifted up, that whosoever would believe on Him "should
not perish, but have eternal life." John 3:15. Grief, indignation, and
horror filled the heart of Moses as he viewed the hypocrisy and satanic
hatred manifested by the Jewish nation against their Redeemer, the
mighty Angel who had gone before their fathers. He heard Christ's
agonizing cry, "My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" Mark 15:34.
He saw Him lying in Joseph's new tomb. The darkness of hopeless despair
seemed to enshroud the world. But he looked again, and beheld Him coming
forth a conqueror, and ascending to heaven escorted by adoring angels
and leading a multitude of captives. He saw the shining gates open to
receive Him, and the host of heaven with songs of triumph welcoming
their Commander. And it was there revealed to him that he himself would
be one who should attend the Saviour, and open to Him the everlasting
gates. As he looked upon the scene, his countenance shone with a holy
radiance. How small appeared the trials and sacrifices of his life when
compared with those of the Son of God! how light in contrast with the
"far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory"! 2 Corinthians 4:17. He
rejoiced that he had been permitted, even in a small measure, to be a
partaker in the sufferings of Christ.
Moses beheld the disciples of Jesus as they went forth to carry His
gospel to the world. He saw that though the people of Israel "according
to the flesh" had failed of the high destiny to which God had called
them, in their unbelief had failed to become the light of the world,
though they had despised God's mercy and forfeited their blessings as
His chosen people--yet God had not cast off the seed of Abraham; the
glorious purposes which He had undertaken to accomplish through Israel
were to be fulfilled. All who through Christ should become the children
of faith were to be counted as Abraham's seed; they were inheritors of
the covenant promises; like Abraham, they were called to guard and to
make known to the world the law of God and the gospel of His Son. Moses
saw the light of the gospel shining out through the disciples of Jesus
to them "which sat in darkness" (Matthew 4:16), and thousands from the
lands of the Gentiles flocking to the brightness of its rising. And
beholding, he rejoiced in the increase and prosperity of Israel.
And now another scene passed before him. He had been shown the work of
Satan in leading the Jews to reject Christ, while they professed to
honor His Father's law. He now saw the Christian world under a similar
deception in professing to accept Christ while they rejected God's law.
He had heard from the priests and elders the frenzied cry, "Away with
Him!" "Crucify Him, crucify Him!" and now he heard from professedly
Christian teachers the cry, "Away with the law!" He saw the Sabbath
trodden under foot, and a spurious institution established in its place.
Again Moses was filled with astonishment and horror. How could those who
believed in Christ reject the law spoken by His own voice upon the
sacred mount? How could any that feared God set aside the law which is
the foundation of His government in heaven and earth? With joy Moses saw
the law of God still honored and exalted by a faithful few. He saw the
last great struggle of earthly powers to destroy those who keep God's
law. He looked forward to the time when God shall arise to punish the
inhabitants of the earth for their iniquity, and those who have feared
His name shall be covered and hid in the day of His anger. He heard
God's covenant of peace with those who have kept His law, as He utters
His voice from His holy habitation and the heavens and the earth do
shake. He saw the second coming of Christ in glory, the righteous dead
raised to immortal life, and the living saints translated without seeing
death, and together ascending with songs of gladness to the City of God.
Still another scene opens to his view--the earth freed from the curse,
lovelier than the fair Land of Promise so lately spread out before him.
There is no sin, and death cannot enter. There the nations of the saved
find their eternal home. With joy unutterable Moses looks upon the
scene--the fulfillment of a more glorious deliverance than his brightest
hopes have ever pictured. Their earthly wanderings forever past, the
Israel of God have at last entered the goodly land.
Again the vision faded, and his eyes rested upon the land of Canaan as
it spread out in the distance. Then, like a tired warrior, he lay down
to rest. "So Moses the servant of the Lord died there in the land of
Moab, according to the word of the Lord. And He buried him in a valley
in the land of Moab, over against Beth-peor: but no man knoweth of his
sepulcher." Many who had been unwilling to heed the counsels of Moses
while he was with them would have been in danger of committing idolatry
over his dead body had they known the place of his burial. For this
reason it was concealed from men. But angels of God buried the body of
His faithful servant and watched over the lonely grave.
"There arose not a prophet since in Israel like unto Moses, whom Jehovah
knew face to face, in all the signs and the wonders which Jehovah sent
him to do . . . and in all that mighty hand, and in all the great terror
which Moses showed in the sight of all Israel."
Had not the life of Moses been marred with that one sin, in failing to
give God the glory of bringing water from the rock at Kadesh, he would
have entered the Promised Land, and would have been translated to heaven
without seeing death. But he was not long to remain in the tomb. Christ
Himself, with the angels who had buried Moses, came down from heaven to
call forth the sleeping saint. Satan had exulted at his success in
causing Moses to sin against God, and thus come under the dominion of
death. The great adversary declared that the divine sentence--"Dust thou
art, and unto dust shalt thou return" (Genesis 3:19)--gave him
possession of the dead. The power of the grave had never been broken,
and all who were in the tomb he claimed as his captives, never to be
released from his dark prison house.
For the first time Christ was about to give life to the dead. As the
Prince of life and the shining ones approached the grave, Satan was
alarmed for his supremacy. With his evil angels he stood to dispute an
invasion of the territory that he claimed as his own. He boasted that
the servant of God had become his prisoner. He declared that even Moses
was not able to keep the law of God; that he had taken to himself the
glory due to Jehovah--the very sin which had caused Satan's banishment
from heaven--and by transgression had come under the dominion of Satan.
The archtraitor reiterated the original charges that he had made against
the divine government, and repeated his complaints of God's injustice
toward him.
Christ did not stoop to enter into controversy with Satan. He might have
brought against him the cruel work which his deceptions had wrought in
heaven, causing the ruin of a vast number of its inhabitants. He might
have pointed to the falsehoods told in Eden, that had led to Adam's sin
and brought death upon the human race. He might have reminded Satan that
it was his own work in tempting Israel to murmuring and rebellion, which
had wearied the long-suffering patience of their leader, and in an
unguarded moment had surprised him into the sin for which he had fallen
under the power of death. But Christ referred all to His Father, saying,
"The Lord rebuke thee." Jude 9. The Saviour entered into no dispute with
His adversary, but He then and there began His work of breaking the
power of the fallen foe, and bringing the dead to life. Here was an
evidence that Satan could not controvert, of the supremacy of the Son of
God. The resurrection was forever made certain. Satan was despoiled of
his prey; the righteous dead would live again.
In consequence of sin Moses had come under the power of Satan. In his
own merits he was death's lawful captive; but he was raised to immortal
life, holding his title in the name of the Redeemer. Moses came forth
from the tomb glorified, and ascended with his Deliverer to the City of
God.
Never, till exemplified in the sacrifice of Christ, were the justice and
the love of God more strikingly displayed than in His dealings with
Moses. God shut Moses out of Canaan, to teach a lesson which should
never be forgotten--that He requires exact obedience, and that men are
to beware of taking to themselves the glory which is due to their Maker.
He could not grant the prayer of Moses that he might share the
inheritance of Israel, but He did not forget or forsake His servant. The
God of heaven understood the suffering that Moses had endured; He had
noted every act of faithful service through those long years of conflict
and trial. On the top of Pisgah, God called Moses to an inheritance
infinitely more glorious than the earthly Canaan.
Upon the mount of transfiguration Moses was present with Elijah, who had
been translated. They were sent as bearers of light and glory from the
Father to His Son. And thus the prayer of Moses, uttered so many
centuries before, was at last fulfilled. He stood upon the "goodly
mountain," within the heritage of his people, bearing witness to Him in
whom all the promises to Israel centered. Such is the last scene
revealed to mortal vision in the history of that man so highly honored
of Heaven.
Moses was a type of Christ. He himself had declared to Israel, "The Lord
thy God will raise up unto thee a Prophet from the midst of thee, of thy
brethren, like unto me; unto Him ye shall hearken." Deuteronomy 18:15.
God saw fit to discipline Moses in the school of affliction and poverty
before he could be prepared to lead the hosts of Israel to the earthly
Canaan. The Israel of God, journeying to the heavenly Canaan, have a
Captain who needed no human teaching to prepare Him for His mission as a
divine leader; yet He was made perfect through sufferings; and "in that
He Himself hath suffered being tempted, He is able to succor them that
are tempted." Hebrews 2:10, 18. Our Redeemer manifested no human
weakness or imperfection; yet He died to obtain for us an entrance into
the Promised Land.
"And Moses verily was faithful in all his house as a servant, for a
testimony of those things which were to be spoken after; but Christ as a
son over His own house; whose house are we, if we hold fast the
confidence and the rejoicing of the hope firm unto the end." Hebrews
3:5, 6.
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