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These devotions are part of the Follow the Word Bible reading program at St. John Lutheran Church in Cypress, Texas. This year we are reading through the Scriptures together, listening for how God speaks through his Word day by day. I hope you will join me on this journey.
Today’s readings are Numbers 34-36, Psalm 77.
Numbers 34:1-12
The Lord spoke to Moses, saying, 2 “Command the people of Israel, and say to them, When you enter the land of Canaan (this is the land that shall fall to you for an inheritance, the land of Canaan as defined by its borders), 3 your south side shall be from the wilderness of Zin alongside Edom, and your southern border shall run from the end of the Salt Sea on the east. 4 And your border shall turn south of the ascent of Akrabbim, and cross to Zin, and its limit shall be south of Kadesh-barnea. Then it shall go on to Hazar-addar, and pass along to Azmon. 5 And the border shall turn from Azmon to the Brook of Egypt, and its limit shall be at the sea.
6 “For the western border, you shall have the Great Sea and its coast. This shall be your western border.
7 “This shall be your northern border: from the Great Sea you shall draw a line to Mount Hor. 8 From Mount Hor you shall draw a line to Lebo-hamath, and the limit of the border shall be at Zedad. 9 Then the border shall extend to Ziphron, and its limit shall be at Hazar-enan. This shall be your northern border.
10 “You shall draw a line for your eastern border from Hazar-enan to Shepham. 11 And the border shall go down from Shepham to Riblah on the east side of Ain. And the border shall go down and reach to the shoulder of the Sea of Chinnereth on the east. 12 And the border shall go down to the Jordan, and its limit shall be at the Salt Sea. This shall be your land as defined by its borders all around.”

The LORD described the borders of the Promised Land to Moses in Numbers 34. See below for an interpretation of that outline. I am intrigued when I compare it to the borders of modern-day Israel. But I have no desire to make any political comment or connection in that regard.
I want to talk about traffic! We’ll come back to Israel’s borders then and now.
Years ago the street on which St. John Lutheran Church is located was being expanded from a tree-covered two lane road to a divided four lane thoroughfare. It was disruptive to traffic and frustrating to many of our members. The quiet lane was soon to become a busy traffic artery. Our peaceful lane would be transformed to a noisy traffic-congested road. It’s true: bigger roads don’t really solve traffic issues; they just invite more traffic! But I digress.
I shared with our members how the Apostle Paul spoke of the movement and placement of people groups and peoples throughout the ages. He spoke of how God “made from one man every nation of mankind to live on all the face of the earth, having determined allotted periods and the boundaries of their dwelling place” (Acts 17:26). It was God’s providential determination where people lived and when they occupied the land.
I will admit to the frustration of traffic congestion, expanded streets and highways only serving to bring more people, cars, trucks and motorcycles to our neighborhoods. But then I recall the rest of what Paul said. He spoke of places and boundaries God has set so “that they should seek God, and perhaps feel their way toward him and find him.”
The placement of Israel’s boundaries and borders was not just about their right to the land or God’s command to take the land. It was to fulfill a promise that God had given Abraham years earlier, that he would give Abraham’s descendants the land, so that they would be a blessing to others. “In your seed all the nations of the earth shall be blessed,” God had promised.
The placement of Israel – and nations and tribes, churches and individuals down through the ages – was and is so that the grace and truth of God and his ways might be known, and people might be brought into a living relationship with him.
You nor I live where we do when we do by accident. God’s has placed us where we are here and now so that we may honor him and declare his glory among the nations. We and Abraham, Moses, and all God’s people throughout the ages are where we are so that we may be a blessing to those around us.









