The Twelve Spies
The Lord
commanded Moses to send men to search the land of Canaan, which He
would give unto the children of Israel. A ruler from each tribe was
to be selected for this purpose. They went; and after forty days they
returned from their search, and came before Moses and Aaron, and all the
congregation of Israel, and showed them the fruit of the land. All agreed that
it was a good land, and they exhibited the rich fruit which
they had brought
as evidence. One cluster of grapes was so large that two men carried
it between them on a staff. They also brought of the figs and pomegranates
which grew there in abundance. After they had spoken of the fertility
of the land, all but two spoke very discouragingly of their ability to
possess it. They said that the people were very strong that dwelt in the land, and
the cities were surrounded with great and high walls,
and, more than
all this, they saw the children of the giant Anak there. They then described how the people were situated around Canaan and expressed the
fear that it would be impossible for them ever to possess this land. As the people
listened to this report, they gave vent to their disappointment
in bitter reproaches and wailing. They did not wait to reflect and reason
that God, who had brought them out thus far, would
certainly give
them the land. They left God out of the question. They acted as though
in taking the
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city of Jericho,
the key to the land of Canaan, they must depend solely on the power of
arms. God had declared that He would give them the country, and
they should have fully trusted Him to fulfill His word. But their unsubdued
hearts were not in harmony with His plans. They did not reflect how
wonderfully He had wrought in their behalf, bringing them out of their
Egyptian bondage, cutting a path for them through the waters of the sea, and
destroying the pursuing host of Pharaoh. In their unbelief
they were
limiting the work of God and distrusting the hand that had hitherto safely
guided them. In this instance they repeated their former error of
murmuring against Moses and Aaron. “This, then, is the end of all our high
hopes,” said they. “This is the land we have traveled all the way from
Egypt to possess.” They blamed their leaders for bringing trouble upon
Israel and again charged them with deceiving the people and
leading them
astray. Moses and Aaron
lay prostrate before God, their faces in the dust.
Caleb and
Joshua, the two who, of all the twelve spies, trusted in the word of God,
rent their clothes in distress when they perceived that these unfavorable
reports had discouraged the whole camp. They endeavored to reason with
them; but the congregation were filled with madness and disappointment,
and refused to listen to these two men. Finally Caleb urged his way to
the front, and his clear, ringing voice was heard above all the clamor
of the multitude. He opposed the cowardly views of his
fellow spies,
which had weakened the faith and courage of all Israel. He commanded the attention
of the people, and they hushed their complaints for a moment to
listen to him. He spoke of the land he had visited. Said he: “Let us go
up at once, and possess it; for we are well able to overcome it.” But as he
spoke, the unfaithful spies interrupted him, crying: “We be not able to go
up against the people; for they are stronger than we.” These men,
starting upon a wrong course, set their hearts against God, against Moses
and Aaron, and against Caleb
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and Joshua.
Every step they advanced in this wrong direction made them firmer in their
design to discourage every attempt to possess the land of Canaan. They
distorted the truth in order to carry their baneful purpose. They represented
the climate as being unhealthful and all the people of giant stature.
Said they: “And there we saw the giants, the sons of Anak, which come of
the giants: and we were in our own sight as grasshoppers, and so we were
in their sight.” This was not
only an evil report, but a lying one also. It was
contradictory; for if the land was unhealthy, and had eaten up
the inhabitants,
how was it that they had attained to such massive proportions?
When men in responsible positions yield their hearts to unbelief, there
are no bounds to the advance they will make in evil. Few realize, when
they start upon this dangerous course, the length that Satan will lead them. The evil report
had a terrible effect upon the people. They reproached Moses and Aaron
bitterly. Some groaned and wailed, saying: “Would God that we had
died in the land of Egypt! or would God we had died
in this
wilderness!” Then their feelings rose against the Lord; and they wept and
mourned, saying: “Wherefore hath the Lord brought us unto this land, to
fall by the sword, that our wives and our children should be a prey? were it
not better for us to return into Egypt? And they said one to another, Let
us make a captain, and let us return into Egypt.” Thus they
manifested their disrespect for God and for the leaders He had appointed to
conduct them. They did not ask the Lord what they should do, but
said: “Let us make a captain.” They took matters into their own hands,
feeling themselves competent to manage their affairs without divine
aid. They not only accused Moses of deception, but God also, in
promising them a land which they were not able to possess. They actually went so
far as to appoint one of their number as a captain to lead them back to the
land of their suffering and bondage, from which God
had delivered
them with His strong arm of omnipotence.
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Moses and Aaron
still remained prostrate before God in the presence of all the assembly, silently imploring divine mercy for rebellious Israel. Their distress
was too deep for words. Again Caleb and Joshua press to the front, and
the voice of Caleb once more rises in sorrowful earnestness above the
complaints of the congregation: “The land, which we passed through to
search it, is an exceeding good land. If the Lord delight in us, then He will
bring us into this land, and give it us; a land which floweth
with milk and
honey. Only rebel not ye against the Lord, neither fear ye the people of
the land; for they are bread for us: their defense is departed from them, and
the Lord is with us: fear them not.” The Canaanites
had filled up the measure of their iniquity, and the Lord would no
longer bear with them. His defense being removed from them, they would
fall an easy prey to the Hebrews. They were not prepared for
battle, for they felt so strong that they deceived themselves with the idea
that no army was formidable enough to prevail against them. Caleb reminded
the people that by the covenant of God the land was ensured to
Israel; but their hearts were filled with madness, and they
would hear no
more. If only the two men had brought the evil report, and all the ten
had encouraged them to possess the land in the name of the Lord, they
would still have taken the advice of the two in preference to the ten,
because of their wicked unbelief. But there were only two advocating the
right, while ten were in open rebellion against their leaders and against God. The greatest
excitement now rages among the people; their worst passions are
aroused, and they refuse to listen to reason. The ten unfaithful spies
join them in their denunciations of Caleb and Joshua, and the cry is
raised to stone them. The insane mob seize missiles with which to slay these
faithful men. They rush forward with yells of madness, when, lo! the
stones drop from their hands, a hush falls upon them, and they shake with
terror. God has interposed to check their rash design. The glory of His
presence, like a flame of light, illuminates the tabernacle, and
all the
congregation behold
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the signal of
the Lord. One mightier than they has revealed Himself, and not one dares
continue his resistance. Every murmurer is silenced, and the spies, who
have brought the evil report, crouch terror-stricken, with bated breath. Moses arises
from his humiliating position and enters the tabernacle to commune with
God. Then the Lord proposes to immediately destroy this rebellious
people. He desires to make of Moses a greater nation than Israel; but
the meek leader of His people will not consent to this
proposition.
“And Moses said unto the Lord, Then the Egyptians shall hear it, (for
Thou broughtest up this people in Thy might from among them;) and they
will tell it to the inhabitants of this land: for they have heard that Thou
Lord art among this people, that Thou Lord art seen face to face,
and that Thy cloud standeth over them, and that Thou goest before them, by
daytime in a pillar of a cloud, and in a pillar of fire by
night. Now if
Thou shalt kill all this people as one man, then the nations which have heard
the fame of Thee will speak, saying, Because the Lord was not able to
bring this people into the land which He sware unto them, therefore He
hath slain them in the wilderness.” Moses again
refuses to have Israel destroyed and himself made a mightier nation
than they. This favored servant of God manifests his love for Israel
and shows his zeal for the glory of his Master and the honor of His
people. Thou hast forgiven this people from Egypt even until now; Thou
hast been long-suffering and merciful hitherto toward this ungrateful
nation; and however unworthy they may be, Thy mercy
is the same. He
pleads: Wilt Thou not therefore spare them this one, and add this one
more instance of divine patience to the many Thou hast already given? Moses prevailed
with God to spare the people, but because of their arrogance and
unbelief the Lord could not go with them to work in a miraculous
manner in their behalf. Therefore in His divine mercy He bade them adopt
the safest course and turn back into the wilderness toward the Red
Sea. He
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also decreed
that, as a punishment for their rebellion, all the adults who left Egypt, with
the exception of Caleb and Joshua, should be forever excluded from
Canaan. They had utterly failed to keep their promise of obedience to
God, and this released Him from the covenant that they had so repeatedly
violated. He promised that their children should possess the goodly land,
but declared that their own bodies should be buried in the wilderness.
And the ten unfaithful spies, whose evil report had caused
Israel to murmur
and rebel, were destroyed by the power of God before the eyes of the
people. When Moses made
known to Israel the will of God concerning them, they seemed
sincerely to repent of their sinful conduct. But the Lord knew that they
sorrowed because of the result of their evil course, rather than from a deep
sense of their ingratitude and disobedience. But their repentance came
too late; the just anger of God was awakened, and their doom was
pronounced, from which there was no reprieve. When they found that the
Lord would not relent in His decree, their self-will again arose, and they
declared that they would not return into the wilderness. In commanding
them to retire from the land of their enemies, God tested their
apparent submission and found that it was not real. They knew that they
had deeply sinned in allowing their rash feelings to control them and in
seeking to slay the spies who had urged them to obey God; but they were
only terrified to find that they had made a fearful mistake, the consequences
of which would prove disastrous to themselves. Their hearts were
unchanged, and they only needed an excuse to occasion a similar
outbreak. This presented itself when Moses, by the authority ofGod, commanded
them to go back into the wilderness. They had
rebelled against His commands when He bade them go up and take the
land that He had promised them, and now, when He directed them to retreat
from it, they were equally insubordinate, and declared that
they would go to
battle with their enemies. They arrayed themselves in
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warriors’ dress
and armor, and presented themselves before Moses, in their own
estimation prepared for conflict, but sadly deficient in the sight of God and
His sorrowful servant. They refused to listen to the solemn warnings
of their leaders that disaster and death would be the consequence of
their audacity. When God
directed them to go up and take Jericho, He promised to go with them.
The ark containing His law was to be a symbol of Himself. Moses
and Aaron, God’s appointed leaders, were to conduct the expedition
under His watchful direction. With such supervision no
harm could have
come to them. But now, contrary to the command of God and the
solemn prohibition of their leaders, without the ark of God and without
Moses, they marched out to meet the armies of the enemy. During the time
consumed by the Israelites in their wicked insubordination,
the Amalekites and Canaanites had prepared for battle. The Israelites
presumptuously challenged the foe that had not dared to attack them; but
just as they had fairly entered the enemy’s territory, the Amalekites
and Canaanites met them in force and fiercely repulsed them, driving
them back with great loss. The field of carnage was red with their
blood, and their dead bodies strewed the ground. They were utterly routed
and defeated. Destruction and death were the result of their rebellious
experiment. But the faith of Caleb and Joshua was richly rewarded.
According to His word, God brought these faithful ones into the land that He
had promised them. The cowards and rebels perished in the wilderness,
but the righteous spies ate of the grapes of Eschol. The history of
the report of the twelve spies has an application to us as a people.
The scenes of cowardly complaining and drawing back
from action when
there are risks to be encountered are re-enacted among us today. The
same unwillingness is manifested to heed faithful reports and true counsel
as in the days of Caleb and Joshua. The servants of God, who bear
the burden of His cause, practicing strict self-denial and suffering
privation for the sake of helping His
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people, are
seldom better appreciated now than they were then. Ancient Israel
was repeatedly tested and found wanting. Few receive the faithful
warnings given them of God. Darkness and unbelief do not decrease as
we near the time of the second advent of Christ. Truth becomes less and
less palatable to the carnally minded; their hearts are
slow to believe
and tardy to repent. The servants of God might well become discouraged, were it not for the continual evidences their Master gives them of
His wisdom and assistance. Long has the Lord borne with His people. He
has forgiven their wanderings and waited for them to give Him room in
their hearts; but false ideas, jealousy, and distrust have crowded Him out. Few who are
professedly of Israel, and whose minds have been enlightened by
the revelations of divine wisdom, dare to come boldly forward, as did
Caleb, and stand firmly for God and the right. Because those whom the
Lord has chosen to conduct His work will not be turned from the course
of integrity to gratify the selfish and unconsecrated, they become the
target for hatred and malicious falsehood. Satan is wide awake and
working warily in these last days, and God calls for men of spiritual nerve
and stamina to resist his artifices. Thorough
conversion is necessary among those who profess to believe the
truth, in order for them to follow Jesus and obey the will of God—not a
submission born of circumstances, as was that of the terrified Israelites when
the power of the Infinite was revealed to them, but a deep and heartfelt
repentance and renunciation of sin. Those who are but half
converted are as
a tree whose boughs hang upon the side of truth, but whose roots,
firmly bedded in the earth, strike out into the barren soil of the world.
Jesus looks in vain for fruit upon its branches; He finds nothing but
leaves. Thousands would
accept the truth if they could do so without denying self, but this
class would never build up the cause of God. These would never march out
valiantly against the enemy,—the world, the love of self, and the lusts of
the flesh,—trusting their divine Leader to give them the victory.
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The church needs
faithful Calebs and Joshuas, who are ready to accept eternal life on
God’s simple condition of obedience. Our churches are suffering for
laborers. The world is our field. Missionaries are wanted in cities and
villages that are more certainly bound by idolatry than are the pagans of
the East, who have never seen the light of truth. The true missionary
spirit has deserted the churches that make so exalted a
profession;
their hearts are no longer aglow with love for souls and a desire to lead
them into the fold of Christ. We want earnest workers. Are there none to
respond to the cry that goes up from every quarter: “Come over ...and help
us”? Can those who
profess to be the depositaries of God’s law, and who look for the
soon coming of Jesus in the clouds of heaven, stand acquitted of the blood of
souls if they turn a deaf ear to the crying needs of the people who
walk in shadows? There are books to be prepared and distributed,
there are lessons to be given, there are self-sacrificing duties to be performed!
Who will come to the rescue! Who will, for Christ’s sake, deny self and
extend the light to those who sit in darkness?
REFERENCE
Testimonies for
the Church
Volume Four
Ellen G. White
1881
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