Matthew Henry
After thirty-eight years’ tedious marches, or rather tedious rests, in the wilderness, backward towards the Red Sea, the armies of Israel now at length set their faces towards Canaan again, and had come not far off from the place where they were when, by the righteous sentence of divine Justice, they were made to begin their wanderings. Hitherto they had been led about as in a maze or labyrinth, while execution was doing upon the rebels that were sentenced; but they were now brought into the right way again: they abode in Kadesh (Num 20:1), not Kadesh-barnea, which was near the borders of Canaan, but another Kadesh on the confines of Edom, further off from the land of promise, yet in the way to it from the Red Sea, to which they had been hurried back. Now,
Miriam died there, Num 20:1. She was a prophetess, and had been an instrument of much good to Israel, Mic 6:4. When Moses and Aaron with their rod went before them, to work wonders for them, Miriam with her timbrel went before them in praising God for these wondrous works (Exod 15:20), and therein did them real service; yet she had once been a murmurer (Num 12:1), and must not enter Canaan.
because of the chiding of the children of Israel, Exod 17:7. And now we have another place, at the latter end of their march, which bears the same name for the same reason:
This is the water of Meribah, Num 20:13. What was there done was here re-acted.
There was no water for the congregation, Num 20:2. The water out of the rock of Rephidim had followed them while there was need of it; but it is probable that for some time they had been in a country where they were supplied in an ordinary way, and when common providence supplied them it was fit that the miracle should cease. But in this place it fell out that there was no water, or not sufficient for the congregation. Note, We live in a wanting world, and, wherever we are, must expect to meet with some inconvenience or other. It is a great mercy to have plenty of water, a mercy which if we found the want of we should own the worth of.
gathered themselves together, and took up arms
against Moses and Aaron. They chid with them (Num 20:3), spoke the same absurd and brutish language that their fathers had done before them.
Would God that we had died when our brethren died before the Lord! Instead of giving God thanks, as they ought to have done, for sparing them, they not only despise the mercy of their reprieve, but quarrel with it, as if God had done them a great deal of wrong in giving them their lives for a prey, and snatching them as brands out of the burning. But they need not wish that they had died with their brethren, they are here taking the ready way to die like their brethren in a little while.
Woe unto those that desire the day of the Lord, Amos 5:18.
They had borne their whoredomsnow almost
forty years in the wilderness(Num 14:33); and yet they ventured in the same steps, and, as is charged upon Belshazzar,
humbled not their hearts, though they knew all this, Dan 5:22.
fell on their faces, as formerly on the like occasion, to deprecate the wrath of God and to entreat direction from him. Here is no mention of any thing they said; they knew that God heard the murmurings of the people, and before him they humbly prostrate themselves, making intercessions with
groanings that cannot be uttered. There they lay waiting for orders
Speak, Lord, for thy servants hear.
will not return to destroy Ephraim(Hos 11:9), will
not always chide; see Gen 8:21. But he appeared,
glory of the Lord appeared, to
still the tumult of the people, by striking an awe upon them. Note, A believing sight of the glory of the Lord would be an effectual check to our lusts and passions, and would keep our mouths as with a bridle.
rod of God, the
rod of his strength, as the gospel is called (Ps 110:2), perhaps in allusion to it.
The water came out abundantly. This is an instance, not only of the power of God, that he could thus fetch
honey out of the rock, and
oil out of the flinty rock, but of his mercy and grace, that he would do it for such a provoking people. This was a new generation (most of the old stock were by this time worn off), yet they were as bad as those that went before them; murmuring ran in the blood, yet the entail of the divine favour was not cut off, but in this instance of it the divine patience shines as brightly as the divine power. He is God and not man, in sparing and pardoning; nay, he not only here gave them the drink which they drank of in common with their beasts (Num 20:8), but in it he made them to drink spiritual drink, which typified spiritual blessings,
for that rock was Christ.
First, They did not punctually observe their orders, but in some things varied from their commission; God bade them
speak to the rock, and they spoke
to the people, and
smote the rock, which at this time they were not ordered to do, but they thought speaking would not do. When, in distrust of the power of the word, we have recourse to the secular power in matters of pure conscience, we do, as Moses here, smite the rock to which we should only speak,
Secondly, They assumed too much of the glory of this work of wonder to themselves:
Must we fetch water? as if it were done by some power or worthiness of theirs. Therefore it is charged upon them (Num 20:12) that
they did not sanctify God, that is, they did not give him that glory of this miracle which was due unto his name.
Thirdly, Unbelief was the great transgression (Num 20:12):
You believed me not; nay, it is called
rebelling against God’s commandment, Num 27:14. The command was to bring water out of the rock, but they rebelled against this command, by distrusting it, and doubting whether it would take effect or no. They speak doubtfully:
Must we fetch water? And probably they did in some other ways discover an uncertainty in their own minds whether water would come or no for such a rebellious generation as this was. And perhaps they the rather questioned it, though God had promised it, because the glory of the Lord did not appear before them upon this rock, as it had done upon the rock in Rephidim, Exod 17:6. They would not take God’s word without a sign. Dr. Lightfoot’s notion of their unbelief is that they doubted whether now at last, when the forty years had expired, they should enter Canaan, and whether they must not for the murmurings of the people be condemned to another period of toil, because a new rock was now opened for their supply, which they took for an indication of their longer stay. And, if so, justly were they kept out of Canaan themselves, while the people entered at the time appointed.
Fourthly, They said and did all in heat and passion; this is the account given of the sin (Ps 106:33):
They provoked his spirit, so that he spoke unadvisedly with his lips. It was in his passion that he called them
rebels. It is true they were so; God had called them so; and Moses afterwards, in the way of a just reproof (Deut 9:24), calls them so without offence; but now it came from a provoked spirit, and was spoken unadvisedly: it was too much like
Raca, and
Thou fool. His smiting the rock twice (it should seem, not waiting at all for the eruption of the water upon the first stroke) shows that he was in a heat. The same thing said and done with meekness may be justifiable which when said and done in anger may be highly culpable; see Jas 1:20.
Fifthly, That which aggravated all the rest, and made it the more provoking, was that it was public,
before the eyes of the children of Israel, to whom they should have been examples of faith, and hope, and meekness. We find Moses guilty of sinful distrust, Num 11:22, Num 11:23. That was private between God and him, and therefore was only checked. But his was public; it dishonoured God before Israel, as if he grudged them his favours, and discouraged the people’s hope in God, and therefore this was severely punished, and the more because of the dignity and eminency of those that offended.
let him that thinks he stands take heed lest he fall.
his judgment is according to truth, when it agrees not with ours.
Thou wast a God that forgavest them, though thou tookest vengeance on their inventions. As many are spared in this life and punished in the other, so many are punished in this life and saved in the other.
Lastly
, The place is hereupon called Meribah
, Num 20:13. It is called Meribah-Kadesh
(Deut 32:51), to distinguish it from the other Meribah. It is the water of strife
; to perpetuate the remembrance of the people’s sin, and Moses’s, and yet of God’s mercy, who supplied them with water, and owned and honoured Moses notwithstanding. Thus he was sanctified in the, as the Holy One of Israel
, so he is called when his mercy rejoices against judgment, Hos 11:9. Moses and Aaron did not sanctify God as they ought in the eyes of Israel (Num 20:12), but God was sanctified in them; for he will not be a loser in his honour by any man. If he be not glorified by us, he will be glorified upon us.