Welcome to Numbers

Father in heaven, thank you for this moment. We are here by your grace! Your Word open before us and your Spirit active in us. Speak to us, we pray, in Jesus’s name, amen.

Today we’re starting a new series in the Old Testament book of Numbers, and I just want to go ahead and tell you that this book is going to surprise you. If you’ve read the Book of Numbers before you may have noticed that, unsurprisingly, there’s a lot of numbers. There are two big census reports of Israel in Chapter 1 and Chapter 26, and there’s also a few parts that might be a little hard to understand, but mainly, this book is packed with action and suspense …

There is conflict and resolution, obedience and rebellion, espionage and war, celebration and complaint, blessings and curses — There is meat that falls from the sky, the ground that swallows men alive, a rock that gushes water, poisonous snakes that kill people, and a donkey that talks. 

It’s an amazing book, and the main point overall is that we might learn how to live with God on the road. 

The ultimate goal of everything (and I mean everything) is that God’s glory be magnified in our hearts being satisfied in all that he is for us in Christ — and that means that God is our God and we are his people, and he is with us forever. That’s what heaven is! That’s home, Christian! But we’re not there yet. For right now, we are on the road, we’re still on a journey, and the Book of Numbers is meant to help us. 

We’re gonna be in this book over the next 11 weeks, and what I’d like to do today is give you a short introduction to this book as a whole. And I want to tell you three things that the Book of Numbers is gonna help you do (and this goes for everyone, but I’m especially thinking about those of you who heard we were doing a series on Numbers and thought, “Oh man, Numbers??”. 

Here are three things you can prepare to do in response to this book:

    1. Enter the wild

    2. Hear the word

    3. Heed the warning

And before we look closer at these three things, I want to make sure we’re all on same page when it comes to the storyline. For the last several years we’ve been working our way through the Torah, the first five books of the Old Testament. Numbers is book #4 of 5, and it only makes sense if we understand it in the context of these other books. So let’s back up for a second and remember where we are.

Genesis

Everything starts in Genesis 1:1 — “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth…” God is the First Cause. He’s the Unmoved Mover. He is dependent on nothing, but all things are dependent upon him, which magnifies his glory. After Adam’s fall into sin, the entire world was corrupted and broken, but God, by his grace, was determined to have a people who lived under his blessing. And so he chose Abraham and blessed him — God said: I will bless you and make you a blessing; through your offspring all the families of the earth will be blessed, and your descendants will be as many as the stars (Genesis 12:1–3; 15:5–6). And God also promised him a certain land — the land of the Canaanites (Gen. 12:7; 15:18–21; 26:1–5; 28:4; 35:12). God repeats this promise to Isaac and then to Jacob. Jacob’s name is changed to Israel, and he has 12 sons.

Exodus 

Fast-forward to the Book of Exodus, and all the children of Israel had migrated to Egypt because of a famine; they had grown in number, which threatened Pharaoh, so he makes them slaves, but then God raises up Moses to lead the people out of Egypt in the exodus. God does this dramatically, through many signs and wonders, executing judgment on the false gods of Egypt (see Num. 33:4). The people of Israel escape, through the Red Sea, and they journey to Mount Sinai. 

And Mount Sinai is the place where God comes down on the mountain to speak with Moses. God gives Israel the law and instructions for the tabernacle, which will be God’s dwelling place among his people. 

God will be with his people, but how? That’s the vital question that emerges in the story. How will this Holy God, Creator of all things, dwell with this sinful people? — because one thing that becomes clear by the end of the Book of Exodus is that the people of Israel are sinful. They grumble about almost everything. They’re bent away from God. So how can a people like that have a relationship with this God? 

Leviticus 

That’s the big question that Leviticus takes on, and the answer is atonement. The Day of Atonement is the center of the Book of Leviticus, and Leviticus is the center of the Torah. Through blood sacrifice, the people’s sins can be forgiven and they can worship God — they can live with God’s presence at the center of their lives! God makes a way for sinners to be close to him, and this is all pointing to the gospel of Jesus Christ. That’s Leviticus.

Numbers

And now here is Numbers. For location and timing, Numbers opens and the people of Israel are still in the wilderness of Sinai. This is continuing the Book of Exodus. Numbers 1 picks up where Exodus 40 left off. So Leviticus comes between Exodus and Numbers because of its theme, but in terms of timing, Numbers happens right after Exodus. 

The people of Israel had built the Tabernacle and received the law, and now they’re just about to set out on a journey from the wilderness of Sinai to the Promised Land (that same land that God promised Abraham back in Genesis).

They’re leaving from where they are (Mount Sinai) to go to their promised home, but they don’t want to leave the presence of Yahweh. That’s the whole point of the Tabernacle — it’s a mobile dwelling place for God. The people must have God go with them — as a cloud by day and fire by night. 

And this is the answer to Moses’s prayer going back to Exodus 33. Remember God promised Moses, “My presence will go with you”, and Moses said to God — one of the high points of Scripture — Moses said,

“If your presence will not go with me, do not bring us up from here. 16 For how shall it be known that I have found favor in your sight, I and your people? Is it not in your going with us, so that we are distinct, I and your people, from every other people on the face of the earth?” 

17 And the Lord said to Moses, “This very thing that you have spoken I will do …” (vv. 15–17)

So the Book of Numbers focuses in on God’s holy presence going with his people, even as they go deeper into the wilderness. That’s where we are.

Three things this book will help you do …

1. Enter the Wild

Back in 1992 there was a guy named Chris McCandless who died of starvation in an abandoned bus on Stampede Trail in Alaska. If you’ve seen the movie or watched the documentary or read the book, you know the story. He graduated at the top of his class at Emory University, but gave away all his money and accomplishments to become a vagabond, and he ended up hitchhiking to Alaska — because he wanted to be deep in the wild. He wanted the adventure of the wilderness and it killed him, and he’s been criticized for this. 

Apparently, he was ill-prepared and under-equipped for where he went. He went hiking and didn’t even have a map, and sadly, if he did have a map he would have seen that he wasn’t as remote as he thought. With a map, he could have easily walked out from where he was to safety. So this a tragic story — it was an avoidable death in the wilderness.

And we’re actually gonna see this same thing in the Book of Numbers. The people of Israel are also in the wilderness — but it’s not because they want to be — they’re in the wilderness because God leads them there to test them, because he wants their faith. All they have to do is trust him, but they don’t, and therefore a whole generation of Israel does not make it out alive. A big part of the story of Numbers is a whole generation of people dying an avoidable death in the wilderness.  

That’s what the wild can do to you. 

And this is important for us because, similar to Israel, we as Christians are currently in the wild. It might not feel like we are, but it’s true. Notice in verse 1 we’re told that the story of Numbers is taking place after God rescued his people from Egypt. The events of this book are after salvation but before making it home. The in-between. That’s where the wilderness is, and that’s where we are.

As Christians, we also live after salvation and before making it home. Jesus has rescued us — he has died for us and been raised from the dead, we are free in him — but we’re not in heaven yet. This is the in-between. We need to recognize that we’ve entered the wild … and not all of us make it out.

And I’m just being honest with you. I’ve been a Christian long enough to know some tragic stories of people who fall away … and it’s all avoidable. But how? 

We’ve entered the wild, and now we ask: How do we make it through the wild?

2. Hear the Word

Now in our English Bibles, we call the Book of Numbers Numbers, but in the Hebrew Bible it’s known as bĕmidbar — which means “in the wilderness.” Those are the very first words of Numbers in the Hebrew Bible. The book starts: “In the wilderness Yahweh spoke to Moses.”

And one fascinating little detail in the Hebrew that we can’t see in English is that the words for “wilderness” and “spoke” in that first sentence sound the same. The Hebrew word for “wilderness” (or desert) is midbar; and the Hebrew word for “spoke” (or word) is dibbur — midbar … dibbur. 

This would be like us saying wild and word. Wild … word. They kinda sound the same.

And ancient Jewish interpreters picked up on the wordplay here — that the words just don’t sound the same, but they’re closely connected in this story. And this connection is made plain in the Book of Deuteronomy, the book right after Numbers.

In Deuteronomy Chapter 8, reflecting back on the Book of Numbers, Moses says:

2 And you shall remember the whole way that the Lord your God has led you these forty years in the wilderness, that he might humble you, testing you to know what was in your heart, whether you would keep his commandments or not. 3 And he humbled you and let you hunger and fed you with manna, which you did not know, nor did your fathers know, that he might make you know that man does not live by bread alone, but man lives by every word that comes from the mouth of the Lord.

I want you to get this, and this is a little bit of spoiler, but here it goes: the only way that Israel can live in the wild is to listen to the word

And if we had to capture that in a single idea it would be the idea of guidance. I think that’s what we could call the overall theme of the Book of Numbers. 

If Genesis is Beginnings, Exodus is Rescue, Leviticus is Atonement, Numbers would be Guidance. That’s what it means when God’s presence goes with his people. Where God guides, the people go. And that includes literal direction in this story, but it’s also more than that. God’s guidance is moral — he is showing his people how to live together as his people, under his care, trusting him everyday. That’s what guidance is for.

Need Guidance?

Anybody in here need any guidance? Do you think our lives in this world, in the in-between, need to be guided by God?

Absolutely. 

This is why God has given us the Bible — we have his word to us in Holy Scripture!

Look, we have get over our worry about legalism when it comes to daily Bible reading. Can we just grow up out of that? Settle this: reading the Bible is not what makes God love you. Okay? Settled. And, now … I don’t know how you survive as a Christian without reading the Bible.

We need God’s word for the life of faith like we need oxygen. Don’t think about Bible reading as a duty, but think: Do I want to breathe?

You’re not reading just to read; you’re not trying to check a box, but you need to know how to live in this world. You need to hear from God on how to live in the wild! We need God’s guidance! And there’s a book for that. God has given us his word.

Church, hear the word. 

3. Heed the Warning

The Book of Numbers can be divided up or outlined in a couple of different ways, and one way is to see the book as really the story of two generations. 

The first generation goes from Chapter 1 through 18; and the second generation from Chapter 20 through 36.

The second generation is faithful and they make it to the Promised Land, but the first generation is faithless and they die in the wilderness. 

Numbers is a fascinating book in and of itself, but then we also have the New Testament, and in the book of 1 Corinthians Chapter 10, the apostle Paul makes some comments about the Book of Numbers that are pretty important. 

In 1 Corinthians 10 most English Bibles put a little heading there that says something like “Warning Against Idolatry” because that’s what Paul is doing. He gives a warning, and look where he goes:

In verses 1–5 he talks about that first generation in Numbers. God had rescued them from Egypt; they had seen God’s provision, nevertheless, verse 5: “with most of them God was not pleased, for they were overthrown in the wilderness.” That was the first generation — we’re gonna study all about this over the next several weeks. But notice what Paul says in verse 6.

1 Corinthians 10:6,

“Now these things took place [the events in Numbers — these things took place] as examples for us, that we might not desire evil as they did.”

Again, look at verse 11: 

“Now these things happened to them as an example, but they were written down for our instruction, on whom the end of the ages has come.”

And that word for “instruction” could also be translated as “warning.” Paul is saying that the purpose of this book — the reason the events of Numbers were written down — was so that we Christians would read it as a cautionary tale! Verse 12: 

“Therefore let anyone who thinks that he stands take heed lest he fall.”

According to the apostle Paul, this is the attitude we should bring to this book.

Sober up, church! Listen closely! Take heed! 

Do not be like the first generation in Numbers.

In short, flee idolatry

Flee Idolatry

Paul mentions idolatry twice here, in verse 7 and verse 14. And that tells us that, fundamentally, Israel’s problem of unbelief in Numbers was a failure to obey the first commandment: “You shall have no other gods before me” (Exodus 20:3).

That was the real reason behind all their grumbling and suspicion — they didn’t worship the true God! And this all comes to light in Numbers 25.

Numbers 25 is the last event of the first generation, (right before Chapter 26 gives us the census for the new generation). 

And in Chapter 25, this is verse 1:

“While Israel lived in Shittim, the people began to whore with the daughters of Moab. 2 These invited the people to the sacrifices of their gods, and the people ate and bowed down to their gods. 3 So Israel yoked himself to Baal of Peor.”

Now this is eerily similar to Exodus 32 when Israel made the golden calf, except this is worse! In Exodus 32, the people clearly break the second commandment, “You shall not make for yourself a carved image” (Exodus 20:4), but here in Numbers 25 they’re not making images, they are literally putting other gods before Yahweh!

It’s like Numbers has pulled back the layers and got to the real issue. The people of Israel have not learned from their sin in Exodus 32, but they’ve doubled down in it. They’ve dug in their heels to make clear they want other gods besides Yahweh — which is disgusting and ridiculous and terrifying.

We don’t want to do that! We must flee idolatry! 

And in the Book of Numbers, we’re gonna learn how to flee. We are going to heed Paul’s warning and we’re going to reject idolatry.

And so we should expect a kind of testing through this book over the next several weeks.

And I want to invite all of us, through this series, to open our hearts to God, and ask him to search us. We want him to expose any idols we might be harboring. Is there anything that we might want more than God?

Questions to Consider

And to get us started with that heart attitude, I’d like to close with some self-assessment questions. And I know this is a little different. We’ve never done this before, but this is an intro sermon. I want us to prepare for this book, and so here are a few questions for us to think about…

(1) When it comes to entering the wild …

Do you demonstrate a recognition that this world is not your home? How does your life show that you’re on a journey to heaven?

(2) When it comes to hearing the word …

Are you determined to love what God loves and to do what God says? How often do you look to God for guidance?

(3) When it comes to heeding the warning …

Is Jesus your all-consuming passion and all-satisfying treasure? 

If he’s not, who is?

The Table

The Book of Numbers is a kind of call to action. It’s an “on your feet” book, but the action is faith, and faith is the empty-handed embrace of who God is. We bring nothing to him, and this Table reminds us of that.

We come to him, hands open, to receive his grace, to lean on his mercy, to rest in his love, which he has shown us most vividly in the death of Jesus for us. 

This Table reminds us of that, and we give God thanks for the gospel. 

Jonathan Parnell

JONATHAN PARNELL is the lead pastor of Cities Church in Saint Paul, MN.

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