Numbers 21:4-9

Numbers 21:4-9

[4] And they journeyed  from mount  Hor  by the way  of the Red  sea,  to compass  the land  of Edom:  and the soul  of the people  was much discouraged  because of the way.  [5] And the people  spake  against God,  and against Moses,  Wherefore have ye brought us up  out of Egypt  to die  in the wilderness?  for there is no bread,  neither is there any water;  and our soul  loatheth  this light  bread.  [6] And the LORD  sent  fiery  serpents  among the people,  and they bit  the people;  and much  people  of Israel  died.  [7] Therefore the people  came  to Moses,  and said,  We have sinned,  for we have spoken  against the LORD,  and against thee; pray  unto the LORD,  that he take away  the serpents  from us. And Moses  prayed  for the people.  [8] And the LORD  said  unto Moses,  Make  thee a fiery serpent,  and set  it upon a pole:  and it shall come to pass, that every one that is bitten,  when he looketh  upon it, shall live.  [9] And Moses  made  a serpent  of brass,  and put  it upon a pole,  and it came to pass, that if a serpent  had bitten  any man,  when he beheld  the serpent  of brass,  he lived. 

What does Numbers 21:4-9 Mean?

Contextual Meaning

The Israelites next traveled to the southeast around the southern border of Edom. They took "the way of the Red Sea" ( Numbers 21:4), a road to the town of Elath that stood at the northern tip of the Gulf of Aqabah. [1] This route took them through the Arabah. The Arabah was a low-lying plain that runs from north of the Sea of Chinnereth (Galilee), through that Sea, the Jordan Valley, and the Dead Sea, south to the Gulf of Aqabah. Steep mountain walls border the Arabah to the south of the Dead Sea.
It Isaiah , ". . . a horrible desert, with a loose sandy soil, and drifts of granite and other stones, where terrible sandstorms sometimes arise from the neighborhood of the Red Sea...." [2]
It is easy to understand why the Israelites grumbled again ( Numbers 21:4-5), though this is the last mention of their complaining during the march to the Promised Land.
The serpents that the Lord sent to discipline the people were "fiery" probably because their bite caused intense burning. [3] However poisonous snakes with red spots on their bodies still afflict the Bedouins in this desert. [4]
God"s discipline moved the Israelites to confess their sin and to request Moses" intercession ( Numbers 21:7; cf. Numbers 11:2). As usual, this proved effective ( Numbers 21:8).
The serpent that God told Moses to make was probably copper or bronze to resemble the color of the real snakes. It was not a real snake but an image, ". . . in which the fiery serpent was stiffened, as it were, into dead brass, as a sign that the deadly poison of the fiery serpents was overcome in this brazen serpent." [5]
"I suggest that the clue to the symbolism should be sought in the general principles underlying the sacrifices and purificatory rites in the Old Testament. Animals are killed, so that sinful men who deserve to die may live. Blood which pollutes when it is spilled can be used to sanctify and purify men and articles. The ashes of a dead heifer cleanse those who suffer from the impurity caused by death. In all these rituals there is an inversion: normally polluting substances or actions may in a ritual context have the opposite effect and serve to purify. In the case of the copper serpent similar principles operate. Those inflamed and dying through the bite of living snakes were restored to life by a dead reddish-coloured snake. It may be that copper was chosen not only because its hue matched the inflammation caused by the bites, but because red is the colour that symbolizes atonement and purification." [6]
We see a similar inversion in some of Jesus" healing miracles. Rather than becoming unclean by touching those who were unclean, Jesus" touch cleansed them. Rather than physically touching the substitute sacrifice, as God normally required, visual contact was all that was necessary in this case.
The Israelites preserved this metal serpent and later in their history offered incense to it ( 2 Kings 18:4). King Hezekiah finally had it broken up and destroyed since the Israelites were venerating it as a holy relic.
This narrative, as the previous one, also has a parallel earlier in the Pentateuch, namely, when Moses threw down his staff in Pharaoh"s presence and it became a snake ( Exodus 4:3; Exodus 4:30). The context of both incidents is the people"s complaining.
"The purpose of such parallels is to underscore the basic themes of the book. In both narratives, the writer emphasizes the necessity of the people"s response of faith in the sign. They must look to the sign in faith before they can be delivered." [7]
Jesus Christ identified the copper serpent as a type of Himself ( John 3:14). Like Christ, someone lifted this serpent up from the earth on a pole. Both Christ and this serpent were completely harmless as they hung on their poles. Furthermore if a fatally wounded person wanted deliverance, he or she had simply to look on the serpent or on Christ in faith relying on God"s promise of salvation.
"If ever there were a less expected pairing of types, this would be it. The manna was an altogether gracious gift of God, which the people turned against with stomach revulsion. The snakes were an instrument of God"s judgment because of the peoples" ingratitude and rebellious spirits; yet it was a metal copy of just such a snake that became the means for their deliverance.
"The bread is a picture of Jesus; as the Bread of Heaven he is the proper nourisher of his people. The bronze snake is a picture of Jesus, who became sin for us as he hung on that awful tree. The manna had to be eaten. The snake had to be seen. The commands of Scripture are for doing. The manna was no good if left to rot. The metal snake would not avail if none looked at it. The manna and the snake are twin aspects of the grace of God." [8]