09 August 2007

Thirsty?

"...the people thirsted there..." Exodus 17:3

In this passage of scripture we see the Israelites camping at a place called Rephidim. They had reached Rephidim not according to their own plan, but according to the plan of the Lord. The reason why they were at Rephidim was because they had obeyed the Lord’s command to journey in stages and God had specifically led them there. “…the whole congregation of the Israelites journeyed by stages, as the Lord commanded…” Exodus 17:1. In other words, the Israelites were walking under the perfect will of God.

They carried with them the testimony and experience of a fascinating account of God’s power and provision. God with his mighty hand had delivered them from slavery and from Pharaoh. He had split open the red sea before them. They had seen their enemies dead on the seashore. Bread had rained from heaven for them each morning and quails in the evening. Now, the Lord had led them to Rephidim.

It was obedience to the Lord’s command that brought them to Rephidim. However, at Rephidim there was no water for the people to drink. Walking in the perfect will of God, yet lacking provision! Is it possible to walk in complete obedience to God and yet lack His provision? Note verse 3 – “…the people thirsted there for water…” The keyword in that phrase is “there.” Where? - At Rephidim. Where? - At the very place that they God had led them to. What caused them to reach that place? – Their obedience to the Lord’s command. Was it not natural for the Israelites to expect God to provide them with water? They were not asking for anything extravagant. Just plain water to drink. After all, God had provided bread and meat from heaven. Has it ever occurred to you that God has withheld his blessings that you really, really, really need and you could not figure out why?

It was such a test that the Israelites encountered at Rephidim. The people complained against Moses and said, “Why did you bring us out of Egypt, to kill us and our children and livestock with thirst?” Why did they say that? They said that because even though they were slaves in Egypt, they at least had water to drink. Even though they were being lashed by whips by the Egyptians, they at least had water to drink. Even though they had to work and toil hard to make bricks for Pharaoh, they at least had water to drink. In other words, they would have preferred to be in Egypt under slavery than come to Rephidim and die of thirst. In other words, they preferred security over freedom.

Why did God bring them out of Egypt? Was it to give them food, water, clothing and a good home? No. The primary reason was that they would worship God! That a relationship between the Israelites and God would be established and that they would become heirs to the covenants of promise. Food, water, clothing and every other blessing was a by-product – not the main product. The main product was that they would have the privilege to have God to speak to them and live amongst them and have a relationship with them.

Allow me to expand along this line of thought with an illustration. I love the beach for its sheer beauty and hence I visit it whenever I can. That is the main product – the sand and the waves. However, when I go to the beach for the sand and the waves, I am also allowed other privileges: The privilege of feeling the sea breeze; The privilege of watching birds fly around; The privilege of observing fishermen casting nets; The privilege of witnessing the joy of a child playing in water; all this and a lot more. All these are by-products of the main product.

If you were to take any of these by-products away, I would still return to the beach. This reveals the real reason behind my visit to the beach. If you were to take the fishermen away, I would still want to visit the beach. If you were to take the birds away, I would still want to visit the beach. However, if you were to take the sand and the water and waves away, I would not return to the beach, regardless of the presence of the by-products. The entity, upon whose elimination, I lose the desire to visit the beach, is the essential and actual stimulus behind my visit to the beach.

Coming back to the Israelites, when the entity of water to drink was eliminated for a while, they expressed that it would have been better for them to remain in Egypt. What does that reveal? It reveals that all along it was not God they were after but His blessings! They considered His blessings the main product! When God withholds His blessings from your life for a while – as elementary as drinking water – do you feel your faith staggering? Do you feel the flame diminishing? Do you start complaining and murmuring? Do you start questioning God’s love? If you are honest and take a close look at yourself you will come to the humiliating revelation that you have been serving God for your own means. You considered His blessings to be the main product. You will realize that your devotion to God is based on the work of His hands and not on Him. Search your heart today. Why do you serve God? Is it because you need Him to serve your means? There were plenty of people around Jesus when He was alive and doing miracles, but there was only one at His tomb when He was dead and doing nothing.

Let us look at God’s response to the complaint. “The Lord said to Moses, ‘Go on ahead of the people, and take some of the elders of Israel with you; take in your hand the staff with which you struck the Nile, and go. I will be standing there in front of you on the rock at Horeb. Strike the rock, and water will come out of it, so that the people may drink.’ Moses did so in the sight of the elders of Israel” Exodus 17: 5-6. God provides water for them, not at Rephidim, but at Horeb, where God stood. In other words, the Israelites had to travel from the “place they thirsted” to the “place where God was.”

The journey from Rephidim to Horeb is one every believer has to take. Sooner or later God will engineer circumstances in your life that will make you realize that you have not been seeking His face, but the work of His hands. Once this revelation comes, be humble enough to take the journey from Rephidim to Horeb.

The word Rephidim means “support”. The word Horeb means “desolate”, “parched”, “dry” etc. The Israelites questioned God’s capability on whether He could give them water at the place of “support.” God’s response to the complaint was to lead them to the “parched, dry, desolate” place and made water gush from it to quench their thirst. You could call this a mighty display of God’s power. You could call it the magnificent provision of God. However, I must add God has a tremendous sense of humour!