Chapter 31
The Sin of
Nadab and Abihu
[This
chapter is based on Leviticus 10:1-11.]
AFTER
the dedication of the tabernacle, the priests were consecrated to their
sacred office. These services occupied seven days, each marked by special
ceremonies. On the eight day they entered upon their ministration.
Assisted by his sons, Aaron offered the sacrifices that God required, and
he lifted up his hands and blessed the people. All had been done as God
commanded, and He accepted the sacrifice, and revealed His glory in a
remarkable manner; fire came from the Lord and consumed the offering upon
the altar. The people looked upon this wonderful manifestation of divine
power with awe and intense interest. They saw in it a token of God's glory
and favor, and they raised a universal shout of praise and adoration and
fell on their faces as if in the immediate presence of Jehovah.
But soon
afterward a sudden and terrible calamity fell upon the family of the high
priest. At the hour of worship, as the prayers and praise of the people
were ascending to God, two of the sons of Aaron took each his censer and
burned fragrant incense thereon, to rise as a sweet odor before the Lord.
But they transgressed His command by the use of "strange fire."
For burning the incense they took common instead of the sacred fire which
God Himself had kindled, and which He had commanded to be used for this
purpose. For this sin a fire went out from the Lord and devoured them in
the sight of the people.
Next to Moses
and Aaron, Nadab and Abihu had stood highest in Israel. They had been
especially honored by the Lord, having been permitted with the seventy
elders to behold His glory in the mount. But their transgression was not
therefore to be excused or lightly regarded. All this rendered their sin
more grievous. Because men have received great light, because they have,
like the princes of Israel, ascended to the mount, and been privileged to
have communion with God, and to dwell in
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the light of His glory, let them
not flatter themselves that they can afterward sin with impunity, that
because they have been thus honored, God will not be strict to punish
their iniquity. This is a fatal deception. The great light and privileges
bestowed require returns of virtue and holiness corresponding to the light
given. Anything short of this, God cannot accept. Great blessings or
privileges should never lull to security or carelessness. They should
never give license to sin or cause the recipients to feel that God will
not be exact with them. All the advantages which God has given are His
means to throw ardor into the spirit, zeal into effort, and vigor into the
carrying out of His holy will.
Nadab and
Abihu had not in their youth been trained to habits of self-control. The
father's yielding disposition, his lack of firmness for right, had led him
to neglect the discipline of his children. His sons had been permitted to
follow inclination. Habits of self-indulgence, long cherished, obtained a
hold upon them which even the responsibility of the most sacred office had
not power to break. They had not been taught to respect the authority of
their father, and they did not realize the necessity of exact obedience to
the requirements of God. Aaron's mistaken indulgence of his sons prepared
them to become the subjects of the divine judgments.
God designed
to teach the people that they must approach Him with reverence and awe,
and in His own appointed manner. He cannot accept partial obedience. It
was not enough that in this solemn season of worship nearly everything
was done as He had directed. God has pronounced a curse upon those who
depart from His commandments, and put no difference between common and
holy things. He declares by the prophet: "Woe unto them that call
evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for
darkness! . . . Woe unto them that are wise in their own eyes, and prudent
in their own sight! . . . which justify the wicked for reward, and take
away the righteousness of the righteous from him! . . . They have cast
away the law of the Lord of hosts, and despised the word of the Holy One
of Israel." Isaiah 5:20-24. Let no one deceive himself with the
belief that a part of God's commandments are nonessential, or that He will
accept a substitute for that which He has required. Said the prophet
Jeremiah, "Who is he that saith, and it cometh to pass, when the Lord
commandeth it not?" Lamentations 3:37. God has placed in His word no
command which men
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may obey or disobey at will and not suffer the
consequences. If men choose any other path than that of strict obedience,
they will find that "the end thereof are the ways of death."
Proverbs 14:12.
"Moses
said unto Aaron, and unto Eleazar and unto Ithamar, his sons, Uncover not
your heads, neither rend your clothes; lest ye die, . . . for the
anointing oil of the Lord is upon you." The great leader reminded his
brother of the words of God, "I will be sanctified in them that come
nigh Me, and before all the people I will be glorified." Aaron was
silent. The death of his sons, cut down without warning, in so terrible a
sin--a sin which he now saw to be the result of his own neglect of
duty--wrung the father's heart with anguish, but he gave his feelings no
expression. By no manifestation of grief must he seem to sympathize with
sin. The congregation must not be led to murmur against God.
The Lord
would teach His people to acknowledge the justice of His corrections, that
others may fear. There were those in Israel whom the warning of this
terrible judgment might save from presuming upon God's forbearance until
they, too, should seal their own destiny. The divine rebuke is upon that
false sympathy for the sinner which endeavors to excuse his sin. It is the
effect of sin to deaden the moral perceptions, so that the wrongdoer does
not realize the enormity of transgression, and without the convicting
power of the Holy Spirit he remains in partial blindness to his sin. It is
the duty of Christ's servants to show these erring ones their peril. Those
who destroy the effect of the warning by blinding the eyes of sinners to
the real character and results of sin often flatter themselves that they
thus give evidence of their charity; but they are working directly to
oppose and hinder the work of God's Holy Spirit; they are lulling the
sinner to rest on the brink of destruction; they are making themselves
partakers in his guilt and incurring a fearful responsibility for his
impenitence. Many, many, have gone down to ruin as the result of this
false and deceptive sympathy.
Nadab and
Abihu would never have committed that fatal sin had they not first become
partially intoxicated by the free use of wine. They understood that the
most careful and solemn preparation was necessary before presenting
themselves in the sanctuary, where the divine Presence was manifested; but
by intemperance they were disqualified for their holy office. Their minds
became
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confused and their moral perceptions dulled so that they could not
discern the difference between the sacred and the common. To Aaron and his
surviving sons was given the warning: "Do not drink wine nor strong
drink, thou, nor thy sons with thee, when ye go into the tabernacle of the
congregation, lest ye die: it shall be a statute forever throughout your
generations: and that ye may put difference between holy and unholy, and
between unclean and clean; and that ye may teach the children of Israel
all the statutes which the Lord hath spoken." The use of spirituous
liquors has the effect to weaken the body, confuse the mind, and debase
the morals. It prevents men from realizing the sacredness of holy things
or the binding force of God's requirements. All who occupied positions of
sacred responsibility were to be men of strict temperance, that their
minds might be clear to discriminate between right and wrong, that they
might possess firmness of principle, and wisdom to administer justice and
to show mercy.
The same
obligation rests upon every follower of Christ. The apostle Peter
declares, "Ye are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy
nation, a peculiar people. 1 Peter 2:9. We are required by God to preserve
every power in the best possible condition, that we may render acceptable
service to our Creator. When intoxicants are used, the same effects will
follow as in the case of those priests of Israel. The conscience will lose
its sensibility to sin, and a process of hardening to iniquity will most
certainly take place, till the common and the sacred will lose all
difference of significance. How can we then meet the standard of the
divine requirements?" "Know ye not that your body is the temple
of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not
your own? For ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your
body, and in your spirit, which are Gods." 1 Corinthians 6:19, 20.
"Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to
the glory of God." 1 Corinthians 10:31. To the church of Christ in
all ages is addressed the solemn and fearful warning, "If any man
defile the temple of God, him shall God destroy; for the temple of God is
holy, which temple ye are." 1 Corinthians 3:17.
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