"So Moses the servant of the Lord died. " - Deuteronomy 34:5
My soul! close the month, in contemplating the death of this highly-
favoured servant of the Lord: and mark in him the sure event of all
flesh: "Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return." What a blessed
account hath the Holy Ghost give of this man. "There arose not a
prophet (we are told) like unto Moses, whom Jehovah knew face to face."
But, as if to draw an everlasting line of distinction between him and
his Master; between the highest prophet, and the Lord God of the
prophets; the Holy Ghost was pleased, by the ministry of his servant
the apostle, to state the vast distinction: "Moses verily was faithful
(saith he) in all his house, as a servant, for a testimony of those
things which were to be spoken after: but Christ as a Son over his own
house, whose house are we;" Heb. iii. 5, 6. Indeed all the great and
distinguishing events in the life of Moses became more or less
brilliant, as they set forth, in their typical representations, the
person, work, or offices of the Lord Jesus Christ. Was Moses the Lord's
minister to bring the people out of Egypt? and what was this but a
representation of the Lord Jesus, bringing his people out of the Egypt
of sin, death, and hell? If Moses led the people through the Red Sea,
and opened a path through the mighty waters; what was this, but a type
of the ever blessed Jesus, bringing his redeemed through the red sea of
his blood, and opening a new and living way into the presence of God?
If Moses kept the Passover, and the sprinkling of blood through faith,
what was the great object of his faith looked at, but Christ, our
Passover, and the blood of his sacrifice? Did he bring the people
through the wilderness; and is not Jesus bringing all his people
through? Did he feed them with manna, and give them water from the
rock; and what did the manna prefigure, but Jesus, the bread of life;
and what was the rock, but Christ, the water of life, in all ages of
the church, to his people? In short, everything momentous in the
church's history, wherein Moses ministered to the people, pointed, both
in law and sacrifice, to Jesus, the Lamb of God, and his one
all-sufficient sacrifice for the salvation of his redeemed. And even
the death of Moses, the servant of the Lord, over and above the event
of death, common to all, had this peculiar signification annexed to it,
that, as the great lawgiver to the people, it set forth the inefficacy
of the law to bring into Canaan: this could only be accomplished by
Christ, who "is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone that
believeth, to the Jew first, and also to the Gentile." Farewell, Moses!
thou servant of the Lord! Thou, when thou had served thy generation,
wast gathered to thy fathers, and, like all the patriarchs, didst see
corruption: but Jesus saw no corruption; he ever liveth, and is the
same "yesterday, and today, and forever." Hail, thou glorious
Mediator of "a better covenant, established upon better promises!" Be
thou the Alpha and Omega of thy word, thine ordinances, thy sanctuary,
thy servants! To thee all ministered; from thee all come; in thee all
centered; and to thine everlasting praise all terminate, in bringing
glory to Jehovah, Father, Son, and Spirit, through Jesus Christ. Amen.
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