History Often Gets Remembered Differently

Before I start, forgive me since my mind is not in this
today. We had a very contentious zoning meeting last night were things were
misrepresented and did not go our way. So emotionally I am a bit of a wreck
since this was something that God’s hand seemed to be on. I can’t tell if this
was God saying slow down for me or if it was him teaching me to control my
emotions or if it was not a God thing to begin with. Fortunately the Psalms
were really only a history lesson and were not deep theologically.

Verse 105:40 caught my attention since we just read the
story:

They asked, and He sent them coveys
of
 quail,
    satisfying their hunger with the food of heaven.

Since we just read this in Numbers I love that the word
“covey” is used. Covey is defined as a “small party or flock of birds” which is
laughable in this instance. Go back to the story in Numbers and see the
difference. Psalms makes it sound all nice and rosy, where the actually story
had so many birds the people had them “coming out their noses”. This is far
from a “covey” and more like an infestation.

The reason I pick on this is we see this so often throughout
history. The truth is embellished. Here the Psalmist made it seem like God
blessed them with quail for a plea. In reality this was far from the original
story where the people complained over what God provided to the point where God
gave them excess to prove a point.

Verse 106:23 sometime makes me wonder if God is
“unchanging”:

Therefore, He declared in
His anger
 that He would wipe them away.
    If Moses, His chosen one,
Had not pleaded for the people,
    His anger would have destroyed them.

Think about what the people did then and what they are doing
today. Many of the churches have built a golden calf in a prosperity gospel. We
tend to focus on glitz and not God. Our belief structure is being manipulated
away from God today I wonder when the proverbial hammer will fall. Granted the
people just witnessed God demolish the Egyptian gods with the 10 plagues and
part the Red Sea, I don’t see it as much different today.

The key is Moses was the “stopgap” to God destroying his
people. This happened more than once trough the wilderness to the point Moses
could not handle it and asked to die. Think about the immense responsibility
one must have to protect 600,000+ people. This with being the only conduit to
God, Moses must have been beside himself.

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