(6) Matna and Quail
(6) Matna and Quail
Exodus 16:2-5 “The whole congregation of Israel
grumbled against Moses and Aaron in the wilderness. The Israelites said to
them, ‘If only we had died by the
hand of the LORD in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the meat pots and ate
bread to the full! For you have brought us out into this wilderness to kill
this whole assembly with hunger.’ Then the LORD said to Moses,
‘See, I will rain bread from heaven
for you. The people shall go out and gather a certain amount each day, so that
I may test them, whether they will walk in my law or not. On the sixth day they
shall prepare what they gather; it shall be double what they gather each day.’”
"The whole congregation of the children of Israel grumbled
against Moses and Aaron in the wilderness," but the Hebrew Bible says,
"The whole congregation of the children of Israel stayed and stayed and
stayed in the wilderness on the shoulders of Moses and Aaron." In the
phrase "to stay" (run), rune means to spend the night. It means that
the children of Israel stayed on Moses (the Law) and on Aaron (the Gospel) to
receive the Gospel. Those who kept the Law well and lived out their lives
achieved true spiritual life.
However, someone among them complains. Numbers 11:4 describes
people who complained while eating matna: "And the mixed multitude that
was among them began to crave, and the children of Israel wept again, saying,
'Who will give us meat to eat?'" The "who" has the same meaning
as the mixed multitude that was among them.
Those who keep the letter of the law will find physical
satisfaction through it, but they will remain spiritually hungry. God provides
food to those who wish they had died in Egypt.
Those who die in Egypt realize that they are destined for death
by the law. Those who keep the law inevitably complain. It speaks of a being
who cannot survive on this physical diet and is destined for death.
"I will rain down bread from heaven." The Hebrew is Matir
Lachem Lechem (מַמְטִ֥יר לָכֶ֛ם לֶ֖חֶם). This translation is "I will cause it to rain (Matir),
bread (Matir: basic form is Matar) for you (Lachem)". This is a
combination of bread and rain, changing the meaning into one. It is translated
as "like rain" or "rain of bread." Matar means to rain, to
cause rain. The meaning becomes clear only when we separate rain and bread,
rather than combining rain and giving bread.
So, it's a symbolic sight of rain and bread falling
simultaneously. Rain symbolizes water, representing the fish in the miracle of
the five loaves and two fish, and the bread symbolizes the five barley loaves.
The above words resemble the miracle of the five loaves and two fish.
In the two
fish, the fish symbolize water, and the two represent the Ten Commandments of
the Old Testament and the two commandments of the New Testament. The two
commandments of the New Testament speak of life, which is the forgiveness of
sins. They symbolize the blood of Jesus. The five loaves are five barley
loaves, and the five symbolize the Law of the Pentateuch, signifying the
fulfillment of the Law. The fulfillment of the Law is the death of Jesus Christ
on the cross, and the resurrection to come. The symbolism of the five loaves
and two fish signifies dying on the cross with Jesus and being resurrected
together.
God commanded them
to double the bread on the sixth day. Giving them a double amount was a test
from God. He gave them a double amount so they wouldn't have to go out the next
day, which was the Sabbath. The promise of a double amount implies a promise of
rest on the seventh day.
The word
"double" signifies the time of the first Adam (death on the cross)
and the last Adam (resurrection), who becomes the rest. The first Adam
symbolizes the body of sin, and the last Adam (the second) symbolizes the body
of resurrection.
Exodus 16:8- “Moses said, ‘In the evening the Lord will give
you meat(basar) to eat, and in the morning you will be filled with bread,
because the Lord has heard your murmurings, which you murmur against him. Who
are we? Your murmurings are not against us, but against the Lord.’”
Basar
symbolizes Jesus Christ on the cross. Eating meat symbolizes uniting with Jesus
Christ on the cross. Evening symbolizes darkness, that is, death. The bread
eaten in the morning symbolizes resurrection. Morning comes after darkness.
God, wanting to become like Him, shows those who have turned away from Him how
to return. Complaints are not directed at Moses or Aaron, but at God.
Therefore, God is listening. Complaints are about trying to do things on one's
own, wanting to become like God.
Exodus 16:13-15 “And in the evening
quail came and covered the camp, and in the morning there was a layer of dew on
all around the camp. After the dew had dried up, there on the ground in the
wilderness was something small, round, fine like frost. When the Israelites saw
it, they said to one another, ‘What is it?’ But they
did not know what it was. Moses said to them, ‘It is the
bread the Lord has given you to eat.’”
Quail symbolizes
evening, signifying sin and death. However, sherab signifies the transformation
of mortality. It signifies the transformation that comes with death to sin into
life. Romans 6:5 states, "For if we have been united with him in a death
like his, we will certainly also be united with him in a resurrection like
his." Verse 7 says that the dead are freed from sin. Therefore, sherab
signifies that when the Word is fulfilled in the Father and the Son, the Holy
Spirit comes to them.
In the morning,
there is dew around Mahaneh, and when the lying dew rises, small, round things
like frost appear in the wilderness. This reveals the word of grace. The dew is
within the law of grace. The rising of the dew signifies resurrection. Thus,
the word of the Father, the Son, and I becoming one becomes visible.
Food is a round,
small, frost-like substance found in the wilderness. Later, it appears under
the name of Matna. God commands men to gather food for their mouths. He tells
them to gather food according to the number of men. An omer is a unit of
measurement. Numbers 1:20 says, "Of the sons of Reuben, the firstborn of
Israel, they numbered them by their clans and families, according to the number
of names, from twenty years old and upward, all who were able to go to war."
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