Chapters 16 and 17 record the rebellion of

Korah. Korah was a Levite who was not content to

minister in the Tabernacle; he wanted to serve as a

Priest as well (verse 10). Of course, this attitude was

direct rebellion against the Word of God as given by

Moses, since it was God who made the Tabernacle

appointments. Korah was not content to rebel alone; he

gathered 250 princes of Israel, as well as three men

from the tribe of Reuben, Jacob's firstborn son. In

name, number, unity, and attitude, these rebels seemed

to have a strong case against Aaron and Moses. It

appears that Korah and his followers defied Aaron, while

Dathan, Abiram, and On questioned the authority of

Moses.

Moses and Aaron did not defend themselves; they

let God do the defending. Moses instructed Korah and his

250 men to bring censors (pots for burning incense) to

the Tabernacle where God would demonstrate who was right

in the dispute. He called for Dathan and Abiram to come,

but they defied Moses' authority and refused to obey. In

verse 25 Moses goes to them. Note how the men blamed

Moses for their failure to enter the Promised Land

(verses 13,14), when in reality it was their own

unbelief that blocked the way. For these men to rebel

against Moses meant rejecting the Word of God, for he

was God's prophet; and to rebel against Aaron meant

rejecting the work of God on the altar, for he was God's

Priest. Men and women should be very careful about

rebelling against the authority of government and the

church. We must realize that the "king's heart is in the

hand of the Lord, as the rivers of water: he turneth it

whithersoever he will." No leader, whether he be

president, governor, pastor, or whatever, is in a

position he may fulfill without God allowing him to be

there. With one twinkle of an eye God can remove

presidents from office and pastors from the leadership

of a church; through sickness, death, or whatever. Never

be guilty of trying to run God's business for Him, but

believe, in every situation, that He is in full control.

Satan is the prince of the power of the air, and the

ruler of this world, but he is God's unwilling servant.

He can do nothing without God's permission.

There are several practical applications to be

learned from today's reading: (1) The servant of God

need not defend himself. If his work and walk are what

they ought to be, God will step in and defend him. Read

Psalm 37 very carefully. This is my favorite chapter in

the Bible and, if applied to your life daily, it will

completely change your life. (2) Rebellion against

authority is a dangerous sin. We see it on every hand

today and we wonder how long it will be before God will

step in with judgment. (3) In Christ we have all the

authority we need. When a person receives Christ as his

own personal Saviour, he becomes joint heirs with Him,

part of the family of God (John 1:12). What other

authority could anyone ask for?


Index of Daily Devotions