God’s Promises: A Great People
Foundations of a Worldview
Deuteronomy 10:22
“Your fathers went down to Egypt with seventy persons, and now the LORD your God has made you as the stars of heaven in multitude.”
God’s promises to His people, first held out to Abraham in the Law of God, are a jewel of six facets.
The first promise of God’s covenant, the first facet, was that He would make of Abraham a great nation (Gen. 12:2). By this God meant him to understand that a people great in numbers—as numerous as the stars of heaven—would descend from him and form a great nation in the earth (cf. Gen. 15:5).
As the people prepared to enter the land of promise, Moses reminded them of their history, and that, even now, God was bringing that promise to fulfillment. Even in their misery and adversity, God had been faithful to His promise. The people had indeed become “as numerous as the stars of heaven,” and yet the promise of God’s Law was that, in the land, as they walked in obedience to their gracious God, their numbers and influence would increase even more (cf. Deut. 4:1-8).
Earlier, as Israel prepared for the journey to the land, God reminded them, in dramatic fashion, of just how far He had already brought them from their humble beginnings under the patriarchs to become the great people they now were under Moses. He called together seventy elders to assist Moses early on in their project, that they might come together with Moses and Aaron and receive the renewed covenant of the Lord (Ex. 24:1, 9). Later, God renewed that special relationship and gave a measure of His Spirit to the seventy (Num. 11:16, 24, 25)—a portent of a yet more-distant development of God’s covenant (Acts 2).
As the people finally moved to go from Sinai to the land of promise, God called for a series of offerings in which each tribe was required to bring a silver basin weighing seventy shekels (cf. Num. 7). It was as if God was reminding the people, in symbolic ways, that He had been faithful, from their beginnings (70 people) until now (a great multitude), and they could expect that His promises would not fail as they entered the land.
God cast a vision of numerical greatness for His people. They were to envision themselves filling the whole land, tribe by tribe, and spreading out into other lands around them as the Lord continued to give them increase.
This vision would have spurred the people on in bringing children into their homes, in partial fulfillment of the original covenant vision of Genesis 1:26-28.
This vision would have been in the minds of fathers as they taught their children the Law of God as the way into His promises, and as they provided inheritances for the generations to come, according to the precepts and statutes of the Law.
Though they could see how great they had already become under the graciousness of their covenant-remembering God, the people could, in their minds, envision an even greater growth of the descendants of Abraham, according to the promise of the their faithful God.
Act: Do the leaders of your church have a vision of numerical greatness for the Church in your community? Ask a few of them.
The book of Ecclesiastes is a crucial resource for understanding the Biblical worldview against the backdrop of our secular age. Follow T. M.’s studies in Ecclesiastes by downloading the free, weekly studies available in our Scriptorium Resources page at The Fellowship of Ailbe. Click here to see the weekly studies available thus far.
Except as indicated, Scripture taken from the New King James Version. © Copyright 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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In the Gates is a devotional series on the Law of God by Rev. T. M. Moore, editor of the Worldview Church. He serves as dean of the Centurions Program of the Wilberforce Forum and principal of The Fellowship of Ailbe, a spiritual fellowship in the Celtic Christian tradition. He is the author or editor of twenty books, and has contributed chapters to four others. His essays, reviews, articles, papers, and poetry have appeared in dozens of national and international journals, and on a wide range of websites. His most recent books are The Ailbe Psalter and The Ground for Christian Ethics (Waxed Tablet).
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