THE WAY OF THE WILDERNESS
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Exodus 15:22
1-25-59 8:15 a.m.
You are sharing with us the services of the First
Baptist Church in Dallas. This is the pastor bringing the 8:15 o'clock morning
message entitled The Way of the Wilderness. We are following the life
of Moses. Last Sunday morning, we followed Moses through the Exodus. All of
that host of people, slaves, now having crossed the Red Sea, standing on a new
continent, a new people, a new nation with a new destiny, pilgrims now toward
the Promised Land.
The Apostle Paul says that all of these things are
written for our ensamples, our types, our examples, our figures, and when we
follow Moses and that marching host through the wilderness, we are following
our own life in our pilgrimage from this world to the promised world that is
yet to come. And the things that fell out to God's people back there, are
things that fall out to us today. Their murmurings, their thirstings, their
hungerings, their trials, their battles are all shared by us in our
pilgrimage. Their triumphs, their crying unto God and God's ableness to help
them, is God's ableness to help us today. So, when we follow the story, we are
following an outline of our own Christian pilgrimage, all of us who have our
faces toward Canaan's Promised Land.
Now, today we begin in Exodus 15, the fifteenth
chapter of Exodus and the twenty-second verse. Last Sunday morning, we
followed the children of Israel and Moses through the Red Sea. Then, the song
of Moses, and Miriam, the prophetess, his sister, joined in singing it.
And the twenty-first verse of Exodus 15 closes
that story:
And
Miriam answered them, ‘Sing ye to the Lord, for He has triumphed gloriously.
The horse and his rider hath He thrown into the sea.’—now we begin the story of
The Way of the Wilderness.—
So Moses
brought Israel from the Red Sea, and they went out into the wilderness of Shur;
and they went three days into the wilderness, and found no water.
[Exodus 15:21, 22]
To us that's a sentence, but oh, what it meant to
them! That wilderness was the hottest, the driest, the most forbidding of all
the lands that you could describe, mountain ranges after mountains, piled up
inextricable confusion such as no hand could imagine, such as no eye could
describe. The Peninsula of Sinai is a waste, a dry, dreary, mountainous, rocky
waste, treeless, waterless, furiously hot, a burning desert. And think of the
indescribable contrast between the place that they had lived, and the place
into which God is leading them.
Of all places that you could describe, the Valley
of the Nile is lush. For centuries and untold millenniums, the inundation of
the Nile River has kept fertile and more fertile and still more fertile that
ribbon of the Valley of the Nile. Tropical in its vegetation, it was able to
produce every kind of food that man's heart could delight in; produce,
vegetables, all kinds of flocks and herds grazing and feeding on the lush and
succulent plants, a land of majestic glory and stakes and temple and pyramid.
And, now, out of that beautiful emerald land of
Egypt, the Valley of the Nile, into the burning wilderness whose silence and
stillness is so intense, you could feel it. Yet, the cloud led into the
wilderness and Moses brought Israel from the Red Sea and they went into the
wilderness. And for forty years that was God's schoolhouse, teaching these
people the law of Almighty God.
What a change! What a destiny! What a life! But
the Holy Spirit led them into the wilderness and there they were to be taught
of the Lord. He leads us into the wilderness to be taught of the Lord. These
things that happen to you, God permits them and if you are God's child, He
leads you through them. That's God's way of teaching His people and the things
that happen unto them are examples. They are things that happen unto us. In
the fiery furnace, in the burning sands, in the wilderness of this life, God
teaches His children and He teaches you.
So, they go one day, journey into the wilderness,
hot, treeless, burning, and there is no water and there is no shade. How
trying and desperate! They go the second day into the wilderness and it is no
less dry and hot and treeless and waterless. And the third day, the situation
became desperate and the people began to break in their spirit. Three days
now, journeying into that burning, blistering, rocky peninsula and no water in
sight and the people were thirsty and weary and it was trying. And on the
third day, in the distance, there were palm trees on the far horizon.
Can you imagine with what shouts of joy and
gladness they lifted up their eyes and looked, there was water, water, water,
palm trees, an oasis, water. And when they came to the place they could not
drink of the water, for the waters were nauseous, bitter, poisonous, therefore,
the name of it was called Marah, “bitter.”
And the
people murmured against Moses saying, What shall we drink?—three days now
without water.
And
Moses cried unto the Lord and the Lord showed him a tree, which, when he had
cast into the waters the waters were made sweet. There he made for them a
statute and an ordinance and there God proved them… For, said the Lord, I am
the Lord that healeth My people.
[Exodus 15:24-26]
Those are the waters of Marah, waters of
bitterness, the waters of disappointment, and all of God's people by and by
visit the wells of Marah. By and by, all of God's children come to Marah and
they mingle their bitter tears with the bitter waters.
Haven't you had that experience? What hopes you
had, what dreams you had! There on the horizon palm trees, an oasis, water to
drink, water to drink. Then, when they came to them and drew from the wells
and the springs, what had been high hopes, anticipation, turned into bitterness
and disappointment. We, all of us, have visited the wells of Marah, great
expectations, high hopes, and they turned to tears, vanity, futility,
bitterness and disappointment. What things we expected, what things we dreamed
of and now, how finally, it came to pass!
I went to our Baptist hospital one time to visit a
young mother. While I talked with her, there was another young mother on the
other side of the room. While I talked to this girl that belonged to our
congregation, this girl over here just sobbed and cried. So, I asked this
girl, who belonged to our congregation, why she was crying. She said she
didn't know.
So, when I had a prayer and went into the hallway,
I asked the nurse. I said, "The girl on the other side cries so
heartbrokenly, why does she cry?"
And the nurse said, "It is because since she
has had her baby, her young husband has not even taken the time to come up and
see their new baby."
Well, I said, "Is this her first child?"
The nurse said, "Yes. This is her first
child."
I walked back into the hospital room and I sat
down by her side and I told her I was the pastor of the First Baptist Church
and that in visiting with our member here, I noticed that she cried. And I
said, "I asked the nurse why you cry and the nurse told me that it was
because your young husband has not even taken the time or the trouble to come
to see the new baby."
And as I sat there, I listened once again, to a
story that I have listened to the Lord only knows how many, many times. Here
is a girl and she falls in love and everything about her sparkles and shines.
There is not anything so bright as the eyes of a girl in love. Everything is
glory, and happiness, and gladness, and anticipation. Why there is not any
dream in the world so full of the rainbow colors of God, as a girl who is in
love and her home and her marriage and a baby. And, then, the wells of Marah,
cry, cry, cry, bitter, bitter tears! That's everywhere, in one way or in
another way.
There was a father who had two boys. The older
boy was like some of you fellows here this morning. I see you come to church,
tall and strong and athletic. And he was a four-letter man in the university;
just the glorious picture of strength and health, and the father and mother so
proud of him. And that boy away in college had a little brother. And the
little brother was just like his big brother. He was just so strong and fine
looking and gave every promise of being just like his big brother in college.
And upon a day, you don't know how these things
happen, the boy on his bicycle got all tangled up with a heavy truck. And in
the hospital, the doctor turned to the father and said, "To save the boy's
life we must amputate his right arm and his left leg."
And the father said, "When I looked down into
the face of my boy, for the first time I realized what it meant when it says in
the Book, ‘as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that
trust Him.’"
The wells of Marah, such anticipation, such high
hopes, such rainbow dreams. Then, when you get there and it comes to pass the
waters are bitter, that's Marah. Did I not say that Paul said these things are
examples? They are types; they are figures of our pilgrimage. And the people
cried just like you have cried.
“And the people cried unto Moses, What shall we
drink?” [Exodus 15:24] What shall we
do? And Moses cried unto the Lord and the Lord showed him a tree. Of all
things I wonder why these things are just like this? Because God was writing
His gospel hundreds and hundreds of years before it actually came. And the
Lord showed Moses a tree, cut it down and cast it into the waters. And when
Moses cut it down and cast the tree into the waters, the waters were made
sweet.
There is never a Marah that by its side there
grows a tree which when cast into the waters, make the waters sweet. “Thy
salvation is nigh thee, even in thy mouth and in thy heart!” I know sometimes
it is hard to believe in the all-sufficient grace. I know sometimes we are so
filled with disappointment and tears and murmuring, that we can hardly seek it
to find it, but it is always there, that tree, that cross. “For I, the Lord,
am the healer of My people!”
That cross is not only a sign of our redemption,
but it is a sign of our healing. “By His stripes we are healed.” And they
cast the cross, the tree into the bitter waters and they were made sweet. And
out of the valleys and the bitterness and the disappointment and the trials of
our lives come those virtues of longsuffering and patience and kindness and
sympathy and understanding and love, that otherwise we would never have known.
This is the school of the wilderness and we go
through it; all of us go through it. It is a part of our pilgrimage in the
earth. But, it is not all Marah. No! Look now at the verse, the twenty
seventh verse: “And they came to Elim, where were twelve wells of water and
threescore and ten palm trees: and they encamped by those waters.”
We don't encamp by Marah; that's a bitterness,
that's a shadow, that's a night, that's a crying, that's a weeping, that's a
disappointment, that's a heartache. We all go there. We all pass by it, but
we always come to an Elim. There are more Elim’s in life than there are Marah’s.
We just journey by the Marah’s of life until we come to the Elim’s of life and
there we encamp. We stay by the Elim’s, all the refreshment of those twelve
wells of sweet water and those seventy palm trees and that's the Lord's. “And
the lamb shall lead them unto living fountains of water and God, God shall wipe
away all tears from their eyes.” [Revelation
7:17] And we camp at Elim in the goodness of God under the shadow of
His mighty wings, drinking at the fountains of living waters, living in the
presence of the Lord, camping at Elim.
Now, the next chapter has to do with manna and I
have a specially prepared sermon on that. So, we come to the seventeeth
chapter to Rephidim. And the few minutes that remain I have so much to
encompass in this seventeenth chapter at Rephidim. After Marah, then, after
their encampment at Elim, they come now to Rephidim: “And all the congregation
of the children of Israel journeyed through the wilderness of Sin.” [Exodus 16:1]
You have it in the King James Version, “after
their journeys.” The Hebrew is “by stages, by stages.” What Moses means by
saying that is, that they came to this place and camped, then made a journey to
this place and camped, and so thereupon went through the wilderness by stages,
just like you do.
We come and this is our home, then we are in
college and then we are in our first pastorate or our first position or job and
then this. Well, that's the way the congregation of Israel went through the
wilderness, by stages, here and then there and then there. According to the
commandment of the Lord, as the cloud directed them. When the cloud moved,
they moved and when the cloud stayed, they stayed.
So, they went through the wilderness by stages
according to the commandment of the Lord and pitched in Rephidim and there was
no water for the people to drink which is certainly understandable in that
vast, dry, rocky wilderness of flint.
And the
people did chide with Moses and said, Give us water that we may drink. And
Moses said unto them, Why chide you with me, wherefore do you tempt the Lord?
And the
people thirsted there for water and the people murmured against Moses, and
said, Wherefore is this that thou hast brought us up out of Egypt, to kill us
and our children and our cattle with thirst?
And
Moses cried unto the Lord, saying, What shall I do? What shall I do? The
people be ready to stone me.
And the
Lord said unto Moses, Go on before the people and take with thee of the elders
of Israel; and thy rod, wherewith thou smotest the river, take in thine hand,
and go.
Behold,
I will stand before you there upon the rock in Horeb; and thou shalt smite the
rock, and there shall come water out of it, that the people may drink. And
Moses did so in the sight of the elders of Israel.
[Exodus 17:2-6]
And they called the name of that place Tempting
and Chiding. Now, that is an unusual thing. Where would you think you would
find water? Where? Well, I would never look for it in the solid rock, would
you? It would never occur to me and yet that's God. How God does with His people
is always an unusual thing. Who would have ever of thought that the Prime
Minister of Egypt was set there just on purpose to feed Israel and his family?
Who would of ever have thought for that? That's God!
Who would ever have planned it that the ravens,
the ravens should feed God's prophets? That's God, though! Who would ever
have thought that in the muddy, dirty waters of the river Jordan there would be
healing for Naaman, the leper? But that's the Lord! "Cast in a
branch," said Elisha, "and the iron will swim." Who would have
ever of thought of that? Who would have ever thought that Cyrus of all people,
would have let Israel back to the land of Palestine to build their temple and
their city of Zion? Who would ever have thought that out of the closed, steel
sepulcher of Joseph of Arimathea would come life, resurrection and least of
all, who would ever have thought that out of the crucifixion, out of the death,
the cross of Jesus of Nazareth would come those fountains of everlasting mercy
and shall save us and keep us forever? Who would ever have thought of that?
You turn to 1 Corinthians 10:4: “And they did all
drink the same spiritual drink, for they drank of that spiritual rock that
follows them and that rock was Christ,” 1 Corinthians 10:4: “And that rock was
Christ…”
“Stand there—said God to Moses—with the rod in
thine hand, take the elders of the children of Israel that they may behold it,
and strike the rock…” [from Exodus 17:5, 6] “He
shall grow up before him as a root out of a dry ground. He hath no form nor
comeliness; and when we shall see Him, there is no beauty that we should desire
Him….” [Isaiah 53:2] “His face and His
form were marred more than the form and visage of man.” [Isaiah 52:14]
Who would ever have thought that out of that
dreary, dull, dry, formalism that you know of by the name of Judaism, would
ever have come the salvation of God's people in the earth? “Strike the rock,
smite the rock, and water shall pour out of it, and that rock was Christ.” The
smitten rock, our crucified Lord, opened the floodgates of blessings and mercy,
wherein we find the forgiveness of our sins and God's open door into glory.
Now, may I say just a word about the rest of the
chapter? I haven't time to read it. At Rephidim they were attacked and God's
children, all of them, will find themselves someday landed in Rephidim. Don't
you think you will escape. Hard, furious, in a way that maybe you haven't
thought for or expected, they came to Rephidim and there Amalek attacked them.
Who was Amalek? The best I can find out Amalek seems to be a descendant of
Esau. They were a fierce, furious, warlike desert tribe. And they came to
destroy God's people. Haman was an Amalekite and under the days of those kings
Haman sought to emcompass the entire annihilation of God's people. That's why
God said to Saul, "Saul, I have commissioned thee to destroy Amalek."
The Lord said, "The Lord hath sworn I will
have war with Amalek from generation to generation.” You will never resolve
the conflict in this world, not until Satan is overcome, and not until there is
a final triumph over the prince of the power of darkness and disease and war
and hate and destruction and death. God hath sworn to have war with Satan
forever and forever. There is never going to be a compromise on God's part
with evil and with death, with darkness, and we're in that raging battle
ourselves and in the pilgrimage of this life, we all come to Rephidim and we
all are attacked by Amalek.
Now, I must hasten to this close. I want you to
look how Moses has changed. It came to pass when Amalek came to fight that
“Moses said to Joshua, Joshua, choose out men, go out and fight with Amalek,
and I'll stand on the hill with the rod of God in mine hand.” And while you
fight, Joshua, I'll be praying.
Now, just this sentence about the change in Moses;
when he was a young man before his schooling in the desert, when he was a young
man, it would never have occurred to Moses to fight a battle by prayer. Why,
when he was a young man, he bared his arm and he doubled his fist and he struck
with all of his might. By the fierceness of the strike he slew the Egyptian,
but even there, he harshly belabored one of his brethren. And when Moses was
on the throne the crown prince, heir apparent, he planned the deliverance of
his people by might and by strength.
Now, look at him after he's been in the wilderness
for forty years and after he's been taught of God, Moses is on top of the hill
with the rod of God in his hand praying while Joshua, his young lieutenant, is
down there in the valley with the warriors. That's a great lesson to learn,
that you can also win by prayer. And it's a great lesson for the church to
learn, that we go forward the farthest and the fastest on our knees. Our
weapons are spiritual: intercession, crying to the Lord, prayer, looking unto
God, asking heaven’s help. These are the things that Moses learned in the
wilderness and these are things that we are learning, we who also are in that
pilgrimage.
Now, while we sing our song somebody this day to
give his heart to the Lord, somebody to put his life in the church, a family or
just one, somebody you. While we make the appeal, would you come and stand by
me in the balcony around, coming down the stairwells or on the lower floors into
the aisle and up to the front, “Today, I give my heart in trust to Jesus, or
today we're putting our lives in the church.” While we sing this song, would
you come, while we stand and sing?