Matthew Henry
Here is,
appeared in the tabernaclewe may suppose that Moses took it for a call to him immediately to come and attend there, as before the tabernacle was erected he went up to the mount in a similar case, Exod 32:30. Thus, while the people were studying to disgrace him, God publicly put honour upon him, as the man of his counsel. Now here we are told what God said to him there.
revealing his secret to his servant the prophet, Amos 3:7. Two things God justly complains of to Moses:—
provoke me, or (as the word signifies) they
reject, reproach, despiseme, for
they will not believe me. This was the bitter root which bore the gall and wormwood. It was their unbelief that made this a day of provocation in the wilderness, Heb 3:8. Note, Distrust of God, of his power and promise, is itself a very great provocation, and at the bottom of many other provocations. Unbelief is a great sin (1John 5:10), and a root sin, Heb 3:12.
How long will they do so? Note, The God of heaven keeps an account how long sinners persist in their provocations; and the longer they persist the more he is displeased. The aggravations of their sin were,
This people, a peculiar people, a professing people. The nearer any are to God in name and profession, the more he is provoked by their sins, especially their unbelief.
all the signswhich he
had shown among them, by which, one would think, he had effectually obliged them to trust him and follow him. The more God has done for us the greater is the provocation if we distrust him.
I will smite them with the pestilence, not leave a man of them alive, but wholly blot out their name and race, and so disinherit them, and be no more troubled with them.
Ah, I will ease me of my adversaries. They wish to die; and let them die, and neither root nor branch be left of them. Such rebellious children deserve to be disinherited.” And if it be asked, “What will become of God’s covenant with Abraham then?” here is an answer, “I shall be preserved in the family of Moses:
I will make of thee a greater nation.” Thus,
prayed for thosethat
despitefully usedhim, leaving us an example to his own rule, Matt 5:44.
Pardon, I beseech thee, the iniquity of this people(Num 14:19. With this he begins, and somewhat abruptly, taking occasion from that dreadful word,
I will disinherit them. Lord(says he),
then the Egyptians shall hear it. God’s honour lay nearer to his heart than any interests of his own. Observe how he
orders this causebefore God. He pleads,
that thou, Lord, art among this people, Num 14:14. The neighbouring countries rang of it, how much this people were the particular care of heaven, so as never any people under the sun were.
Egyptians will hear it(Num 14:13), for they have their spies among us, and they will
tell it to the inhabitants of the land” (Num 14:14); for there was great correspondence between Egypt and Canaan, although not by the way of this wilderness. “If this people that have made so great a noise be all consumed, if their mighty pretensions come to nothing, and their light go out in a snuff, it will be told with pleasure in Gath, and published in the streets of Askelon; and what construction will the heathen put upon it? It will be impossible to make them understand it as an act of God’s justice, and as such redounding to God’s honour;
brutish men know not this(Ps 92:6): but they will impute it to the failing of God’s power, and so turn it to his reproach, Num 14:16. They will say, He slew them in the wilderness because he was not able to bring them to Canaan, his arm being shortened, and his stock of miracles being spent. Now, Lord, let not one attribute be glorified at the expense of another; rather let mercy
rejoice against judgmentthan that almighty power should be impeached.” Note, The best pleas in prayer are those that are taken from God’s honour; for they agree with the first petition of the Lord’s Prayer,
Hallowed be thy name. Do not disgrace the throne of thy glory. God pleads it with himself (Deut 32:27),
I feareth the wrath of the enemy; and we should use it as an argument with ourselves to walk so in every thing as to give no occasion to the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme, 1Tim 6:1.
Let the power of the Lord be great. Power is here put for pardoning mercy; it is his power over his own anger. If he should destroy them, God’s power would be questioned; if he should continue and complete their salvation, notwithstanding the difficulties that arose, not only from the strength of their enemies, but from their own provocations, this would greatly magnify the divine power: what cannot he do who could make so weak a people conquerors and such an unworthy people favourites? The more danger there is of others reproaching God’s power the more desirous we should be to see it glorified. To enforce this petition, he refers to the word which God had spoken:
The Lord is long-suffering and of great mercy. God’s goodness had there been spoken of as his glory; God gloried in it, Exod 34:6, Exod 34:7. Now here he prays that upon this occasion he would glorify it. Note, We must take our encouragement in prayer from the word of God, upon which he has
caused us to hope, Ps 119:49. “Lord, be and do
according as thou hast spoken; for hast thou spoken, and wilt thou not make it good?” Three things God had solemnly made a declaration of, which Moses here fastens upon, and improves for the enforcing of his petition:—
Forgiving iniquity and transgression, sins of all sorts.
That will by no means make quite desolate, in visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children. God had indeed said in the second commandment that he would thus visit, but here he promises not to make a full end of families, churches, and nations, at once; and so it is very applicable to this occasion, for Moses cannot beg that God would not at all punish this sin (it would be too great an encouragement to rebellion if he should set no mark of his displeasure upon it), but that he would not
kill all this people as one man, Num 14:15. He does not ask that they may not be corrected, but that they may not be disinherited. And this proclamation of God’s name was the more apposite to his purpose because it was made upon occasion of the pardoning of their sin in making the golden calf. This sin which they had now fallen into was bad enough, but it was not idolatry.
As thou hast forgiven this people from Egypt, Num 14:19. This seemed to make against him. Why should those be forgiven any more who, after they had been so often forgiven, revolted yet more and more, and seemed hardened and encouraged in their rebellion by the lenity and patience of their God, and the frequent pardons they had obtained? Among men it would have been thought impolitic to take notice of such a circumstance in a request of this nature, as it might operate to the prejudice of the petitioner: but, as in other things so in pardoning sin, God’s thoughts and ways are infinitely above ours, Isa 55:9. Moses looks upon it as a good plea,
Lord, forgive, as thou hast forgiven. It will be no more a reproach to thy justice, nor any less the praise of thy mercy, to forgive now, than it has been formerly. Therefore the
sons of Jacob are not consumed, because they have to do with a
God that changes not, Mal 3:6.