“I will lead her into the desert
and speak tenderly to her there.”
(Hosea 2:14)
The Hebrew language is full of fascinating revelations, yet few believers know what they are.
For example, a Christian who reads an English Bible would not realize that the Hebrew word for "desert" and "speaking" are the same Hebrew word!
It is no coincidence that these two words are one, since it is in the most desolate places where God has made His most significant appearances and
where He speaks into the lives of His people.
This had been especially true at Mount Horeb. Mount Horeb, Har Charev, is also known as Mount Sinai or “the mountain of God.” Charev comes from the Hebrew
word charab, which means to make desolate. This desolate mountain of God is the place where Moses is redeemed, even after committing murder (Exodus 2:11–15).
It is his encounters with God in the desert that molded his character and allowed him to see the Glory of God, not only in his own lifetime here on earth
but also 1,500 years later when he appeared with Yeshua (Jesus) and Elijah on the mountain of Yeshua’s transfiguration. (Matthew 17).
We can encounter God in the desolation of our desert experiences, too.
In the Desert, the Lord redeems our desolation. We often think of redemption in terms of freeing us from the eternal damnation and desolation that our sin requires.
But, Yeshua already did that when He died and rose again. Abba — Father God — is our Redeemer from other forms of desolation and desperation.
We saw this when He delivered Moses out of his exile as a shepherd in the land of Midian and brought the Israelites out of slavery in Egypt.
Moses had spent the first 40 years of his life learning how to be a prince, only to be exiled for murder. He spent another 40 years as a shepherd in the
wilderness of Midian, learning how to lead and guide his flock with patience and compassion. After being fully trained for his life-calling and purpose, Moses the shepherd
“led the flock to the far side of the wilderness and came to Horeb, the mountain of God.” There at Horeb, he heard the voice of God calling him from within a burning bush (Exodus 3:2).
Now Moses kept the flock of Jethro his father-in-law, the priest of Midian:And the angel of the LORD appeared unto him in a flame of fire out of the midst of a bush:
and he looked, and, behold, the bush burned with fire, and the bush was not consumed.
(Exodus 3:1-2)
Imagine . . . In the desert, at 80 years old, Moses sees a bush on fire, but the fire is not consuming the bush, and out of that fire comes God’s voice speaking to him!
In that encounter, God redeemed Moses out of the wilderness as a shepherd of sheep and placed him in a new role as shepherd of 600,000 men, plus the women
and children (anywhere from 2.5 to 4 million Israelites).
To shepherd this nation, God hands Moses a new kind of staff to lead, protect, and intervene on behalf of His chosen people.
With staff in hand, Moses goes back to Egypt and challenges Pharaoh to set his people free so that they can worship and serve their God. Finally, after ten plagues,
Pharaoh allows the Israelites to leave Egypt. The Jews are set free. End of story. Or is it?
No, this is just the beginning. God has more to say.
“The LORD our God made a covenant with us at Horeb.” (Exodus 5:2)
Moses leads the Israelites across the Red Sea and where does he take them? To the same mountain in the desert of Horeb where God spoke to him from
the supernatural burning bush that did not become consumed!
At that mountain of God, Moses tells the people God’s conditions for their freedom:
“You yourselves have seen what I did to Egypt, and
how I carried you on eagles’ wings and brought you
to myself. Now if you obey me fully and keep my
covenant, then out of all nations you will be my
treasured possession. Although the whole earth is
mine, you will be for me a kingdom of priests and a
holy nation.’” “The people all answered as one:
’Everything that the Lord has spoken we will do.’”
(Exodus 19:4–6, 8)
In saying, “We do,” the redeemed nation entered into a marriage contract with their Redeemer. The ketubah (Jewish marriage contract) formalizes the various
requirements by Halakha (Jewish law) of a Jewish husband toward his wife. Likewise,
the Torah is the ketubah between God and His People at Sinai. Securely under His authority, the Jewish People are finally truly free to
worship and serve their new Master under His terms, not Pharaoh’s. All this happened when God spoke to His people in the desert.
In our prosperity, the Lord asks us to remember Him.
“Remember that you were slaves in Egypt and the LORD
your God redeemed you from there.” (Deuteronomy 24:18)
The precise reason that God allowed His beloved prophets and people to be in the desert was to cause them to be dependent on Him and Him alone.
Just as Moses was in the desert for 40 years, now the people of Israel are in the desert for 40 years, relying on their new Master to provide them with
heavenly bread (manna), fresh water, shelter from the sun in a pillar of cloud by day, and a pillar of fire to lead them by night.
And they had to depend on their marriage contract, His Torah (Word of God), to know how to live holy and righteous lives so they would stay in their
Master’s protection, provision, and blessing. It is in the desert that the Lord taught the Israelites valuable lessons so they would know how to receive
His protection and provision.
It is in the desert, where God wants to teach us valuable lessons, too, so that we can possess all that God has for us.
Too often, however, we focus on getting out as fast as possible: "Lord, deliver me from this terrible place or situation that I’m in.”, we pray.
Instead, we need to embrace what God has for us in times of trial. We need to say to Him, “Grow me, train me, build me so I can stand strong for you!”
As we listen and learn from our Father in Heaven how to move forward, we are to take note of how He and He alone sustains us with supernatural power to
endure these times of growth, as He did with Moses and the Israelites.
In the midst of all of this heavenly instruction and provision that our Father brings us through, it is the righteous jealousy of the Loving Father that says,
"Please don’t forget Me when things are going well!" However, the Israelites did just that. And if we are honest, quite often we forget Him as well.
But even in our forgetfulness, the Lover calls His beloved aside, and speaks tenderly to her:
“[Israel] … went after her lovers, and forgot me, says the Lord. Therefore, I will now allure her, and bring her into the wilderness, and speak tenderly to her.” (Hosea 2:13b–14)
Perhaps one of the most poignant passages in the Bible is when God refers back to the wilderness days, as with the longing of a jilted lover, remembering how He
drew His beloved to Himself:
“Go and proclaim in the hearing of Jerusalem, ‘Thus says the Lord: I remember the devotion of your youth, your love as a bride, how you followed Me in the
wilderness, in a land not sown.’” (Jeremiah 2:2)
How amazing it is that Almighty God remembers us and longs for us to cling to Him in those desert days. Our tendency to forget Him is why He is so strict
about idolatry. In fact, “God yearns jealously for the Spirit that He has placed in us.” (James 4:5)
When we forget Him, He will lead us back into the wilderness, the place where we must again be dependent on hearing His voice and His alone.
There, He will speak tenderly to us. And whatever He says, we must do, so we can move into all that He has waiting for us in our own Promised Land.
This is an article by Free Messianic Bible
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