Chapter 41
Apostasy at the Jordan
[This chapter is based on Numbers 25.]
WITH joyful hearts and renewed faith in God, the victorious armies of Israel had returned
from Bashan. They had already gained possession of a valuable territory, and they were
confident of the immediate conquest of Canaan. Only the river Jordan lay between them and
the Promised Land. Just across the river was a rich plain, covered with verdure, watered
with streams from copious fountains, and shaded by luxuriant palm trees. On the western
border of the plain rose the towers and palaces of Jericho, so embosomed in its palm-tree
groves that it was called "the city of palm trees."
On the eastern side of Jordan, between the river and the high tableland which they had
been traversing, was also a plain, several miles in width and extending some distance
along the river. This sheltered valley had the climate of the tropics; here flourished the
shittim, or acacia, tree, giving to the plain the name, "Vale of Shittim." It
was here that the Israelites encamped, and in the acacia groves by the riverside they
found an agreeable retreat.
But amid these attractive surroundings they were to encounter an evil more deadly than
mighty hosts of armed men or the wild beasts of the wilderness. That country, so rich in
natural advantages, had been defiled by the inhabitants. In the public worship of Baal,
the leading deity, the most degrading and iniquitous scenes were constantly enacted. On
every side were places noted for idolatry and licentiousness, the very names being
suggestive of the vileness and corruption of the people.
These surroundings exerted a polluting influence upon the Israelites. Their minds became
familiar with the vile thoughts constantly suggested; their life of ease and inaction
produced its demoralizing effect; and almost unconsciously to themselves they were
departing from God and coming into a condition where they would fall an easy prey to
temptation.
During the time of their encampment beside Jordan, Moses was preparing for the occupation
of Canaan. In this work the great leader was fully employed; but to the people this time
of suspense and expectation was most trying, and before many weeks had elapsed their
history was marred by the most frightful departures from virtue and integrity.
At first there was little intercourse between the Israelites and their heathen neighbors,
but after a time Midianitish women began to steal into the camp. Their appearance excited
no alarm, and so quietly were their plans conducted that the attention of Moses was not
called to the matter. It was the object of these women, in their association with the
Hebrews, to seduce them into transgression of the law of God, to draw their attention to
heathen rites and customs, and lead them into idolatry. These motives were studiously
concealed under the garb of friendship, so that they were not suspected, even by the
guardians of the people.
At Balaam's suggestion, a grand festival in honor of their gods was appointed by the king
of Moab, and it was secretly arranged that Balaam should induce the Israelites to attend.
He was regarded by them as a prophet of God, and hence had little difficulty in
accomplishing his purpose. Great numbers of the people joined him in witnessing the
festivities. They ventured upon the forbidden ground, and were entangled in the snare of
Satan. Beguiled with music and dancing, and allured by the beauty of heathen vestals, they
cast off their fealty to Jehovah. As they united in mirth and feasting, indulgence in wine
beclouded their senses and broke down the barriers of self-control. Passion had full sway;
and having defiled their consciences by lewdness, they were persuaded to bow down to
idols. They offered sacrifice upon heathen altars and participated in the most degrading
rites.
It was not long before the poison had spread, like a deadly infection, through the camp of
Israel. Those who would have conquered their enemies in battle were overcome by the wiles
of heathen women. The people seemed to be infatuated. The rulers and the leading men were
among the first to transgress, and so many of the people were guilty that the apostasy
became national. "Israel joined himself unto Baalpeor." When Moses was aroused
to perceive the evil, the plots of their enemies had been so successful that not only were
the Israelites participating in the licentious worship at Mount Peor, but the heathen
rites were coming to be observed in the camp of Israel. The aged leader was filled with
indignation, and the wrath of God was kindled.
Their iniquitous practices did that for Israel which all the enchantments of Balaam could
not do--they separated them from God. By swift-coming judgments the people were awakened
to the enormity of their sin. A terrible pestilence broke out in the camp, to which tens
of thousands speedily fell a prey. God commanded that the leaders in this apostasy be put
to death by the magistrates. This order was promptly obeyed. The offenders were slain,
then their bodies were hung up in sight of all Israel that the congregation, seeing the
leaders so severely dealt with, might have a deep sense of God's abhorrence of their sin
and the terror of His wrath against them.
All felt that the punishment was just, and the people hastened to the tabernacle, and with
tears and deep humiliation confessed their sin. While they were thus weeping before God,
at the door of the tabernacle, while the plague was still doing its work of death, and the
magistrates were executing their terrible commission, Zimri, one of the nobles of Israel,
came boldly into the camp, accompanied by a Midianitish harlot, a princess "of a
chief house in Midian," whom he escorted to his tent. Never was vice bolder or more
stubborn. Inflamed with wine, Zimri declared his "sin as Sodom," and gloried in
his shame. The priests and leaders had prostrated themselves in grief and humiliation,
weeping "between the porch and the altar," and entreating the Lord to spare His
people, and give not His heritage to reproach, when this prince in Israel flaunted his sin
in the sight of the congregation, as if to defy the vengeance of God and mock the judges
of the nation. Phinehas, the son of Eleazar the high priest, rose up from among the
congregation, and seizing a javelin, "he went after the man of Israel into the
tent," and slew them both. Thus the plague was stayed, while the priest who had
executed the divine judgment was honored before all Israel, and the priesthood was
confirmed to him and to his house forever.
Phinehas "hath turned My wrath away from the children of Israel," was the divine
message; "wherefore say, Behold, I give unto him My covenant of peace: and he shall
have it, and his seed after him, even the covenant of an everlasting priesthood; because
he was zealous for His God, and made an atonement for the children of Israel."
The judgments visited upon Israel for their sin at Shittim, destroyed the survivors of
that vast company, who, nearly forty years before, had incurred the sentence, "They
shall surely die in the wilderness." The numbering of the people by divine direction,
during their encampment on the plains of Jordan, showed that "of them whom Moses and
Aaron the priest numbered, when they numbered the children of Israel in the wilderness of
Sinai, . . . there was not left a man of them, save Caleb the son of Jephunneh, and Joshua
the son of Nun." Numbers 26:64,65.
God had sent judgments upon Israel for yielding to the enticements of the Midianites; but
the tempters were not to escape the wrath of divine justice. The Amalekites, who had
attacked Israel at Rephidim, falling upon those who were faint and weary behind the host,
were not punished till long after; but the Midianites who seduced them into sin were
speedily made to feel God's judgments, as being the more dangerous enemies. "Avenge
the children of Israel of the Midianites" (Numbers 31:2), was the command of God to
Moses; "afterward shalt thou be gathered unto thy people." This mandate was
immediately obeyed. One thousand men were chosen from each of the tribes and sent out
under the leadership of Phinehas. "And they warred against the Midianites, as the
Lord commanded Moses. . . . And they slew the kings of Midian, beside the rest of them
that were slain; . . . five kings of Midian: Balaam also the son of Beor they slew with
the sword." Verses 7, 8. The women also, who had been made captives by the attacking
army, were put to death at the command of Moses, as the most guilty and most dangerous of
the foes of Israel.
Such was the end of them that devised mischief against God's people. Says the psalmist:
"The heathen are sunk down in the pit that they made: in the net which they hid is
their own foot taken." Psalm 9:15. "For the Lord will not cast off His people,
neither will He forsake His inheritance. But judgment shall return unto
righteousness." When men "gather themselves together against the soul of the
righteous," the Lord " shall bring upon them their own iniquity, and shall cut
them off in their own wickedness." Psalm 94:14, 15, 21, 23.
When Balaam was called to curse the Hebrews he could not, by all his enchantments, bring
evil upon them; for the Lord had not "beheld iniquity in Jacob," neither had He
"seen perverseness in Israel." Numbers 23:21, 23. But when through yielding to
temptation they transgressed God's law, their defense departed from them. When the people
of God are faithful to His commandments, "there is no enchantment against Jacob,
neither is there any divination against Israel." Hence all the power and wily arts of
Satan are exerted to seduce them into sin. If those who profess to be the depositaries of
God's law become transgressors of its precepts, they separate themselves from God, and
they will be unable to stand before their enemies.
The Israelites, who could not be overcome by the arms or by the enchantments of Midian,
fell a prey to her harlots. Such is the power that woman, enlisted in the service of
Satan, has exerted to entrap and destroy souls. "She hath cast down many wounded:
yea, many strong men have been slain by her." Proverbs 7:26. It was thus that the
children of Seth were seduced from their integrity, and the holy seed became corrupt. It
was thus that Joseph was tempted. Thus Samson betrayed his strength, the defense of
Israel, into the hands of the Philistines. Here David stumbled. And Solomon, the wisest of
kings, who had thrice been called the beloved of his God, became a slave of passion, and
sacrificed his integrity to the same bewitching power.
"Now all these things happened unto them for ensamples: and they are written for our
admonition, upon whom the ends of the world are come. Wherefore let him that thinketh he
standeth take heed lest he fall." 1 Corinthians 10:11, 12. Satan well knows the
material with which he has to deal in the human heart. He knows--for he has studied with
fiendish intensity for thousands of years--the points most easily assailed in every
character; and through successive generations he has wrought to overthrow the strongest
men, princes in Israel, by the same temptations that were so successful at Baalpeor. All
along through the ages there are strewn wrecks of character that have been stranded upon
the rocks of sensual indulgence. As we approach the close of time, as the people of God
stand upon the borders of the heavenly Canaan, Satan will, as of old, redouble his efforts
to prevent them from entering the goodly land. He lays his snares for every soul. It is
not the ignorant and uncultured merely that need to be guarded; he will prepare his
temptations for those in the highest positions, in the most holy office; if he can lead
them to pollute their souls, he can through them destroy many. And he employs the same
agents now as he employed three thousand years ago. By worldly friendships, by the charms
of beauty, by pleasure seeking, mirth, feasting, or the wine cup, he tempts to the
violation of the seventh commandment.
Satan seduced Israel into licentiousness before leading them to idolatry. Those who will
dishonor God's image and defile His temple in their own persons will not scruple at any
dishonor to God that will gratify the desire of their depraved hearts. Sensual indulgence
weakens the mind and debases the soul. The moral and intellectual powers are benumbed and
paralyzed by the gratification of the animal propensities; and it is impossible for the
slave of passion to realize the sacred obligation of the law of God, to appreciate the
atonement, or to place a right value upon the soul. Goodness, purity, and truth, reverence
for God, and love for sacred things--all those holy affections and noble desires that link
men with the heavenly world--are consumed in the fires of lust. The soul becomes a
blackened and desolate waste, the habitation of the evil spirits, and the "cage of
every unclean and hateful bird." Beings formed in the image of God are dragged down
to a level with the brutes.
It was by associating with idolaters and joining in their festivities that the Hebrews
were led to transgress God's law and bring His judgments upon the nation. So now it is by
leading the followers of Christ to associate with the ungodly and unite in their
amusements that Satan is most successful in alluring them into sin. "Come out from
among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean." 2
Corinthians 6:17. God requires of His people now as great a distinction from the world, in
customs, habits, and principles, as He required of Israel anciently. If they faithfully
follow the teachings of His word, this distinction will exist; it cannot be otherwise. The
warnings given to the Hebrews against assimilating with the heathen were not more direct
or explicit than are those forbidding Christians to conform to the spirit and customs of
the ungodly. Christ speaks to us, "Love not the world, neither the things that are in
the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him." 1 John
2:15. "The friendship of the world is enmity with God; whosoever therefore will be a
friend of the world is the enemy of God." James 4:4. The followers of Christ are to
separate themselves from sinners, choosing their society only when there is opportunity to
do them good. We cannot be too decided in shunning the company of those who exert an
influence to draw us away from God. While we pray, "Lead us not into
temptation," we are to shun temptation, so far as possible.
It was when the Israelites were in a condition of outward ease and security that they were
led into sin. They failed to keep God ever before them, they neglected prayer and
cherished a spirit of self-confidence. Ease and self-indulgence left the citadel of the
soul unguarded, and debasing thoughts found entrance. It was the traitors within the walls
that overthrew the strongholds of principle and betrayed Israel into the power of Satan.
It is thus that Satan still seeks to compass the ruin of the soul. A long preparatory
process, unknown to the world, goes on in the heart before the Christian commits open sin.
The mind does not come down at once from purity and holiness to depravity, corruption, and
crime. It takes time to degrade those formed in the image of God to the brutal or the
satanic. By beholding we become changed. By the indulgence of impure thoughts man can so
educate his mind that sin which he once loathed will become pleasant to him.
Satan is using every means to make crime and debasing vice popular. We cannot walk the
streets of our cities without encountering flaring notices of crime presented in some
novel, or to be acted at some theater. The mind is educated to familiarity with sin. The
course pursued by the base and vile is kept before the people in the periodicals of the
day, and everything that can excite passion is brought before them in exciting stories.
They hear and read so much of debasing crime that the once tender conscience, which would
have recoiled with horror from such scenes, becomes hardened, and they dwell upon these
things with greedy interest.
Many of the amusements popular in the world today, even with those who claim to be
Christians, tend to the same end as did those of the heathen. There are indeed few among
them that Satan does not turn to account in destroying souls. Through the drama he has
worked for ages to excite passion and glorify vice. The opera, with its fascinating
display and bewildering music, the masquerade, the dance, the card table, Satan employs to
break down the barriers of principle and open the door to sensual indulgence. In every
gathering for pleasure where pride is fostered or appetite indulged, where one is led to
forget God and lose sight of eternal interests, there Satan is binding his chains about
the soul.
"Keep thy heart with all diligence," is the counsel of the wise man; "for
out of it are the issues of life." Proverbs 4:23. As man "thinketh in his heart,
so is he." Proverbs 23:7. The heart must be renewed by divine grace, or it will be in
vain to seek for purity of life. He who attempts to build up a noble, virtuous character
independent of the grace of Christ is building his house upon the shifting sand. In the
fierce storms of temptation it will surely be overthrown. David's prayer should be the
petition of every soul: "Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit
within me." Psalm 51:10. And having become partakers of the heavenly gift, we are to
go on unto perfection, being "kept by the power of God through faith." 1 Peter
1:5.
Yet we have a work to do to resist temptation. Those who would not fall a prey to Satan's
devices must guard well the avenues of the soul; they must avoid reading, seeing, or
hearing that which will suggest impure thoughts. The mind should not be left to wander at
random upon every subject that the adversary of souls may suggest. "Girding up the
loins of your mind," says the apostle Peter, "Be sober, . . . not fashioning
yourselves according to your former lusts in . . . your ignorance: but like as He which
called you is holy, be ye yourselves also holy in all manner of living." 1 Peter
1:13-15, R.V. Says Paul, "Whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest,
whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely,
whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise,
think on these things." Philippians 4:8. This will require earnest prayer and
unceasing watchfulness. We must be aided by the abiding influence of the Holy Spirit,
which will attract the mind upward, and habituate it to dwell on pure and holy things. And
we must give diligent study to the word of God. "Wherewithal shall a young man
cleanse his way? by taking heed thereto according to Thy word." "Thy word,"
says the psalmist, "have I hid in mine heart, that I might not sin against
Thee." Psalm 119:9, 11.
Israel's sin at Beth-peor brought the judgments of God upon the nation, and though the
same sins may not now be punished as speedily, they will as surely meet retribution.
"If any man defile the temple of God, him shall God destroy." 1 Corinthians
3:17. Nature has affixed terrible penalties to these crimes--penalties which, sooner or
later, will be inflicted upon every transgressor. It is these sins more than any other
that have caused the fearful degeneracy of our race, and the weight of disease and misery
with which the world is cursed. Men may succeed in concealing their transgression from
their fellow men, but they will no less surely reap the result, in suffering, disease,
imbecility, or death. And beyond this life stands the tribunal of the judgment, with its
award of eternal penalties. "They which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom
of God," but with Satan and evil angels shall have their part in that "lake of
fire" which "is the second death." Galatians 5:21; Revelation 20:14.
"The lips of a strange woman drop as an honeycomb, and her mouth is smoother than
oil: but her end is bitter as wormwood, sharp as a two-edged sword." Proverbs 5:3, 4.
"Remove thy way far from her, and come not nigh the door of her house: lest thou give
thine honor unto others, and thy years unto the cruel: lest strangers be filled with thy
wealth; and thy labors be in the house of a stranger; and thou mourn at the last, when thy
flesh and thy body are consumed." Verses 8-11. "Her house inclineth unto
death." "None that go unto her return again." Proverbs 2:18, 19. "Her
guests are in the depths of hell." Proverbs 9:18.
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