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Malcom: Welcome To Immerse: The
Daily Bible Reading Experience.
Day 100 and 8
then Moses led the people of Israel
away from the Red Sea, and they
moved out into the desert of shore.
They traveled in this desert for
three days without finding any water.
When they came to the Oasis of Mera, the
water was too bitter to drink, so they
called the place Mera, which means bitter.
Then the people complained
and turned against Moses.
What are we going to drink?
They demanded, so Moses cried
out to the Lord for help and the
Lord showed him a piece of wood.
Moses threw it into the water, and
this made the water good to drink.
It was there at Mara that the
Lord set before them the following
decree as a standard to test
their faithfulness to him.
He said.
If you will listen carefully to the
voice of the Lord your God, and do
what is right in his sight, obeying his
commands and keeping all his decrees,
then I will not make you suffer any of
the diseases I sent on the Egyptians
for I am the Lord who heals you
after leaving Mera.
The Israelites traveled onto the
Oasis of Elam, where they found
12 springs and 70 palm trees.
They camped there beside the water.
Then the whole community of
Israel set out from Elam and
journeyed into the wilderness of
sin between Elam and Mount Sinai.
They arrived there on the 15th
day of the second month, one month
after leaving the land of Egypt.
There too.
The whole community of Israel
complained about Moses and Aaron.
If only the Lord had killed us
back in Egypt, they moaned there.
We set around pots filled with meat
and ate all the bread we wanted.
But now you have brought us into this
wilderness to starve us all to death.
Then the Lord said to Moses,
look, I'm going to reign down
food from heaven for you.
Each day the people can go out and pick
up as much food as they need for that day.
I will test them in this to see whether
or not they will follow my instructions.
On the sixth day, they will gather
food and when they prepare it, there
will be twice as much as usual.
So Moses and Aaron said to all the
people of Israel, by evening, you
will realize it was the Lord who
brought you out of the land of Egypt.
In the morning, you will see
the glory of the Lord because he
has heard your complaints, which
are against him, not against us.
What have we done that you
should complain about us.
Then Moses added, the Lord will give you
meat to eat in the evening and bread to
satisfy you in the morning for he has
heard all your complaints against him.
What have we done?
Yes, your complaints are against
the Lord, not against us.
Then Moses said to Aaron, announce
this to the entire community of Israel.
Present yourselves before the Lord,
for he has heard your complaining.
And as Aaron spoke to the whole
community of Israel, they looked
out toward the wilderness.
There they could see the awesome
glory of the Lord in the cloud.
Then the Lord said to Moses, I have
heard the Israelites complaints.
Now tell them in the evening you will
have meat to eat and in the morning
you will have all the bread you want.
Then you will know that
I am the Lord your God.
That evening, that numbers of
quail flew in and covered the
camp and the next morning the area
around the camp was wet with dew.
When the dew evaporated a flaky substance
as finest, frost blanketed the ground.
The Israelites were
puzzled when they saw it.
What is it?
They asked each other?
They had no idea what it was, and
Moses told, told them, it is the
food the Lord has given you to eat.
These are the Lord's instructions.
Each household should
gather as much as it needs.
Pick up two courts for
each person in your tent.
So the people of Israel
did, as they were told.
Some, gathered a lot, some only
a little, but when they measured
it out, everyone had just enough.
Those who gathered a lot, had
nothing left over, and those who
gathered only a little had enough.
Each family had just what it needed.
Then Moses told them, do not keep
any of it until mourning, but some of
them didn't listen and kept some of it
until mourning, but by then it was full
of maggots and had a terrible smell.
Moses was very angry with them.
After this, the people gathered the
food mourning by mourning each, each
family according to its need, and as
the sun became hot, the flakes they had
not picked up, melted and disappeared.
On the sixth day, they gathered
twice as much as usual, four courts
for each person instead of two.
Then all the leaders of the community
came and asked Moses for an explanation.
He told them, this is
what the Lord commanded.
Tomorrow will be a day of complete rest.
A Holy Sabbath day set apart for the Lord.
So bake or boil as much as you want today
and set aside what is left for tomorrow.
So they put some aside until morning,
just as Moses had commanded and in the
morning the leftover food was wholesome
and good without maggots or odor.
Moses said.
Eat this food today.
For today is a Sabbath
day dedicated to the Lord.
There will be no food on the ground today.
You may gather the food for six days,
but the seventh day is the Sabbath.
There will be no food
on the ground that day.
Some of the people went out anyway on
the seventh day, but they found no food.
The Lord asked Moses.
How long will these people refuse to
obey my commands and instructions?
They must realize that the
Sabbath is the Lord's gift to you.
That is why he gives you a two day
supply on the sixth day, so there will be
enough for two days on the Sabbath day.
You must each stay in your place.
Do not go out to pick up food on the
seventh day, so the people did not
gather any food on the seventh day.
The Israelites called the food manna.
It was white like coriander seed,
and it tasted like honey wafers.
Then Moses said, this is
what the Lord has commanded.
Fill a two court container with manna
to preserve it for your descendants.
Then later generations will be able
to see the food I gave you in the
wilderness when I set you free from Egypt.
Moses said to Aaron, get a jar and
fill it with two courts of manna.
Then put it in a sacred place
before the Lord to preserve
it for all future generations.
Aaron did, just as the Lord had
commanded Moses, he eventually placed
it in the Ark of the Covenant in
front of the stone tablets, inscribed
with the terms of the covenant.
So the people of Israel ate manna
for 40 years until they arrived at
the land where they would settle.
They ate manna until they came to
the border of the land of Canaan.
The container used to measure the manna
was an omer, which was one 10th of an e a.
It held about two courts.
This concludes today's
Immer Reading experience.
Thank you for joining us.