Ex 32:28
The Levites did
as Moses commanded, and that day about three thousand of the people
died.
This speaks of the day Moses returned
from the mountain Sinai with God’s Law written on stone tablets, only to find
that in his brief (40days) absence, the people had made a golden calf and had
started worshipping this idol as their god. The approximately three thousand
were the ringleaders in this wickedness, and were slain by the swords of their
kinsmen from the tribe of Levi. Interesting to note that nobody need to have
died this way, because when Moses uttered the words, “Whoever is on the
Lord’s side, let him come to me” in verse 26, he was offering God’s pardon
to all who would choose to run to him, shamefaced, and admit their wrongdoing.
The rabbis of old calculated that the
feast of Shavuot, or Pentecost, was the time that Moses ascended Mount Sinai to
receive the Law. And so Shavuot became
the day that Jews commemmorate the giving of the Law to Israel even unto this
day.
But something exciting happened on
this exact same day of Pentecost in the New Testament – the Holy Spirit filled
the waiting believers in the upper room utterly, manifesting as tongues of fire
upon each of them, which lead to the following:
Acts 2:41
Those who
believed what Peter said were baptized and added to the church that day—about
3,000 in all.
About three thousand people received
eternal life on that day, after hearing the gospel supernaturally preached to
them in their own languages. (According to rabbinic tradition, the soul of
every Jew throughout history was present at Mont Sinai when the Law was given,
and each person heard the giving of the Law in their own native tongue!) These
two events, happening on the same day of Pentecost even though centuries apart,
link the initiations of both the Old and the New Covenant through the use of
the same phrase ‘about three thousand’. Three thousand died on the day of the
giving of the Law, and three thousand received life on the same day hundreds of
years later, the day of the giving of the Spirit.
It shows in a tangible way what Paul
meant when he said: “The letter kills, but the Spirit gives life” in 2 Cor
3:5. The Law can show us what the will of God is, but we need the Spirit to
give us the power and insight to live it.
Points to ponder: What
‘rules’ and ‘regulations’ am I keeping - whether self-imposed or insisted upon
by my church or other religious people - without which I feel that I am not a
good-enough Christian? Am I giving the Holy Spirit free reign in my life?
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