Numbers 15-16
This year, I plan on reading the Old Testament of the Bible within the 2012 calendar year. Follow me on this journey!
Scripture Thought (What I Learned):
Chapter 15: Garments
There are
various sacrificial ordinances, as we have discusses throughout the books of Leviticus
and the earlier chapters in Numbers to receive a forgiveness of your sins, or that
of the congregation through Atonement.
Those who
sin, with the knowledge of their sin, are shut out from among the congregation.
Those however, who sin ignorantly are not and can be forgiven of their sins. But
if they were to repeat them a second time, then they could be shut off from the
people, because they would now be willfully sinning.
A group of
Israelites go out into the wilderness and find a man who was gathering sticks on
the Sabbath day, they take the man to Moses and Aaron to decide what should happen
to the man. Aaron and Moses consult with the Lord, and are commanded to have the
man stoned to death. So the entire congregation gathers stones and throws them at
the man, until he dies. This, although severe,
reminds us of the importance of keeping the Lord's commandments. He puts those commandments
in place, for us to follow them.
The Lord,
then speaks to Moses and commands him to make garments or fringes around their garments,
so that they might remember the Lord and his commandments always. The Lord commands the Israelites to not follow
after their own heart and eyes, to go a whoring.
These garments
are similar to sacred garments used, by worthy members of the LDS church throughout
the world. Although the media and ant-mormon groups go about telling the world about
"the secret mormon underwear", the truth of the matter is... that the
garments (which are just underwear) are to remind the person wearing them to keep
the commandments of God.
Chapter 16: Israel Murmurs
Koran the
son of Ishar, the son of Kohath, the son of Levi and Dethan and Abiram, the sons
of Eliab, and On, the son of Peleth, sons of Reuben took 250 men (who were princes
and leaders) to rise up against Moses, because they sought after priesthood offices.
The Earth
opens and swallows up three of the rebels and their families. Fire comes down and
consumes the 250 other rebels. The congregation of Israel then murmurs to Moses
and Aaron, because of their deaths. The Lord doesn't appreciate the murmurings and
sends a plague that kills 14,700! The Moral of the Story... STOP MURMURING!
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