|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE NEED TO RISE ABOVE THE ‘ SEE LEVEL’
Yes, you got me all right (there is no spelling error in the penultimate word of the above-title).
I am not referring to some balloon-aided visit to a high mountaintop. Rather the need for all of us to rise
(propelled by faith) to that level of discernment, which goes beyond visualizing what merely, meets the eye.
Tale of 2 salesmen…
Before coming to the Biblical text of my message, I would like to recite the tale of 2 footwear salesmen
sent on a ‘Market survey’ errand by their employers to explore the possibility of opening a shop in a
certain village of their country. As opening a shop entails sizeable investment, their footwear firm
wanted these men to survey the market potential available therein & give the feasibility report thereof.
However, when these men reached that particular village to assess the potential, they were in for a surprise.
None in that village wore any footwear! On seeing the bare-footed residents of that village, the first salesman
immediately wired a message to the HQ of his firm that asserting that a footwear venture in that village would be
totally an unviable proposition. However, the second salesman viewed the same situation positively. He wired
a message to his HQ urging his firm to immediately open a shop in that village before any of their competitors do since
according to him there was a vast untapped potential waiting to be tapped. No prizes for guessing whose report won the
acclaims of the management!
The second salesman simply put, rose above his ‘natural see level’ & saw opportunities, which the other did not
know existed, entrenched as he was at his natural ‘see level’.
The Biblical equivalent…
Now coming to the Bible equivalent of this story. Ever tried to find out why the desert sojourn of the redeemed
people (from Egyptian bondage) of Israel took 40 long years? Surely distance between these 2 places could not
have been a factor even given the fact there were no means of modern transport available to them?
So what really was the reason? Intertwined with this subject is case of 2 types of ‘salesmen’ or the
‘market surveyors’ of those times. The positive & the negative ones’.
The 13th & 14th chapters of the Book of Numbers provide the answers to the above-questions. At the beginning of
13th chapter, we see the people of Israel at the threshold of the Promised Land with the clear instruction from
their redeemer God to war against those nations in that land of Canaan & annihilate them. It must be noted here
that these Canaanite nations having sold themselves to all kinds of vileness including perverse sexual
relationship with animals (of the horror of it all -
Lev 20:15-23) were at that time ripe for God’s punishment
(Genesis 15:16).
However at the request of the people
(Deuteronomy 1:22) to initially send spies to that blessed land so as to formulate the
military strategy later on the basis of their report (which cities in that land to conquer first, which to invade later…so on
& so forth), Moses on having obtained God’s approval towards that request sends 12 spies (one from each of the 12 tribes of
Israel) for this classified task.
Verse 25 of the 13th chapter of Numbers 13 says that these spies were at their work for 40 days exploring the land
thoroughly, marveling as much at its fertility as quavering (this applies to at least 10 of the spies) at the massive
physique of its residents. Bible commentators point out from the cluster of grapes they brought with them as a sample (verse
23) that their mission would have started in August & concluded in September coinciding as it was with the traditional grape
harvest season of that land.
No harm done, when the majority of the spies on coming back from their mission extol the bountiful nature of the land. So
far, so good. But it is when they (10 of them) speak about the build & strength of its residents that their knees start
jerking. Just as holiness is not contagious but impurity is
(Haggai 2:13), cowardice is infectious, bravery isn’t! Just shout
in a crowded mall that a fire has broken out & you would understand, what I am driving at. The people of Israel were no
different from the modern-day crowd in a mall who would run helter-skelter on hearing a fire alarm.
The public frenzy & the
mass panic reaction that follows amongst the people of Israel as they contemplate warring against ‘giants’ is at best
regrettable, since it culminates in a rebellious consensus being arrived at of ‘going back to Egypt’
(Numbers13:32
-Numbers:4). Yes, strange as it may seem, of going back to that ‘very land, from where they sought deliverance’. How often, a
Christian faces the temptation of going back to the world of sin, whenever the daunting prospect of battling ‘some giants’
looms before him/her. These ‘giants’ for a Christian are however highly subjective. They may range from an unpleasant
prospect of being ex-communicated by the family members for embracing a faith of the lower caste people (in the Indian
context) to the need of stepping out of the ‘comfort zone’ on having been called to full-time work from the pleasant & secure
environs of a lucrative job in a flourishing public sector enterprise (again in the Indian context).
Can any mature Christian worth his salt ever deny that he wasn’t in the same shoes like the panic-stricken people of Israel
described in the afore-referred verses? While, a Christian may have hung onto God in his time of severe testing, the people
of Israel at this poignant moment in their nation’s history didn’t! At least majority of them didn’t. The result? Divine
indictment of being condemned to wandering in the desert for 40 long years, one year for every day the spies spent in the
Promised Land
(Numbers 14:34-35).
At the end of it all, a pathetic scene perfectly fitting the label ‘So near, yet so far’ emerges. And what happened to the 10
spies who were the main cause for this terrible mess-up? Verse 36 soberly records their exit from the scene as having been
struck dead.
A somber picture of gloom & doom, all around? NO! Not all spies were condemned to die in the wilderness. In fact, 2 of the 12
namely Caleb & Joshua not only survive the fate that befell their associates in mission but make their way all the way into
the Promised Land. Reason? They did not give a damming report their other associates in that mission did. On the other hand,
‘rising above their natural see-level’, which would have triggered personal panic in them too (for after all they also saw
the strong giants during their mission), they perceived with their eyes of faith the unfathomable power of God which would
guide them through any hurdles…man-made or natural.
Having done that, they stood firm in their stance for their redeemer God
(Numbers14: 6-9). ‘The Lord is with us, so why
panic’ was their appeal to their rebellious brethren, only that they were very few takers to their bold claim. At all times,
in human history isn’t that realization ‘God is with us’ amidst all surrounding trauma that has becalmed His faithful lot &
spurred them onto great victories? YES! Public leaders/Kings such as a Jehoshaphat
(II Chronicles 290:17) or an Hezekiah
(II Chronicles 32:7)
who would come much later in Israel’s history after Joshua & Caleb would readily testify to this, as would
many great men & women of faith. (Heb11: 33).
From Numbers 14th chapter, if we were to fast-forward 45 years thence to
Joshua 14th chapter 6:15, we see these 2 positive
‘market-surveyors’ reminding each other of God’s faithfulness RIGHT IN THE PROMISED LAND ENJOYING ITS FRUITS THEREOF.
Alls well that ends well? A fairy-tale ending with its distinct ring…they all lived happily ever after? Yes, only that, as
always it applies only to those who fuelled by faith rise ‘above their natural see-levels’.
Yours in His service,
(Suresh Manoharan)
|
|
|
|
|