As the
children of Israel marched toward Canaan, their magnitude and size drove fear
into the nations they encountered along the way. The most warlike nation they
encountered inhabited the lands of Gobolitis and Petra and were called
Amalekites (the descendants of Esau).
This is
what the Amalekites saw: a formidable army of strangers, which by their strength,
escaped the slavery of Egypt and which needed to be crushed before they came to
be prosperous and take over the cities and all their goods…..therefore they had
to be destroyed. (Josephus, “Jewish Antiquities” Book 3, Chapter 2:1).
The
Amalekites made two big mistakes. The first was making the wrong assumption of
the Hebrews which were ill prepared for war, who had nothing and only escaped
Egypt through the strength of their God. The second mistake they made was
cowardly attacking the rear end of the marching Israelites killing the feeble
and the faint and the weary. This did not sit well with God who commanded the
Israelites to “utterly put out the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven”
(Exodus 17:14; The Old Testament Student Manual p 123).
This
slaughter of their weak members drove incredible fear into the rest of the camp.
Lucky for them they had one great advantage over all the other nations they would
encounter in their sojourn. They had a living prophet among them. Moses
exhorted his people to be courageous and to look upon their entire prosperity
at the hands of God since they left Egypt and to believe that God will deliver
them again (Josephus,
"Jewish Antiquities" Book 3, 2:2).
Moses had a
brilliant battle strategy: First, he appointed as the captain of the army a man
of great courage, of great abilities and very serious in the worship of God,
and very much like Moses who the people could have confidence in. Enter Joshua,
the son of Nun, of the tribe of Ephraim. Secondly, he directed his brother
Aaron and Miriam’s husband, Hur, to stand on each side of him and uphold his
hands to be a beacon of God’s power which would ensure the victory (Exodus
17:8-13)
The
children of Israel won that war, terrified the neighbouring nations and enriched
themselves with the spoils, having not lost one soul while those of the enemy’s
army were too many to be numbered (“Jewish Antiquities” p 117).
I wasn’t
going to write about this part of the Israelite’s journey but I saw something
very significant in it. I saw the importance of a living prophet who represents
the one who stands at the head. The Israelites could never have made it to the
promised land if they did not have a prophet holding his hands up invoking the
power of Him who had said: “….and ye
shall know that I am the Lord your God” (Exodus 16:12)
Never in
the history of the world have we needed a living prophet as much as we do now. The
spiritual battle is raging, the evil power is the greatest it has ever been. The
battle ground is fierce. Our promised land awaits but we need not fear.
- CATHRYNE ALLEN
(Artist Unknown)

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