You have never met him (he lived about B.C.
1490), and it’s unlikely that you have ever met anyone bearing his name. You will however, meet plenty of boys that have been
given the names of Gaddiel’s more honored compatriots… Joshua and Caleb. According
to the “Baby Name Encyclopedia” Gaddiel has never featured in the top 1000
names for boys list, whereas Joshua consistently rates at number 4, and Caleb
always features in the top 50 most popular names.
Of the tribe of Zebulun, Gaddiel the son of Sodi. Numbers 13:10
Of the tribe of Zebulun, Gaddiel the son of Sodi. Numbers 13:10
The 12 "spies" were clearly not chosen at random. The significance of the task was of the utmost importance, and the honor of the role cannot be overstated.
Gaddiel was a leader among his people, possibly a prince, or man of high birth, a man of courage, his name means “the Lord my happiness” or
“blest of God”. Gaddiel had seen, first-hand, the miracles of God as He
devastated the religion of the Egyptians with plagues designed to ridicule the
power of their gods. Gaddiel had witnessed a heavenly WMD as God wiped-out
Pharaoh’s army, and then turned the natural barrier of the Red
Sea into a highway to allow the Israelites free passage into
Sinai’s barren wastes.
However he and his eleven fellow spies encountered
things that they had never before experienced. The scouts probably had not seen
walled cities, having lived in the land
of Goshen in Egypt, with
wide open living spaces. Whatever it was that they found in Canaan,
giants included, scared their shallow faith from their very beings.
Ten of the spies returned after “scouting” Canaan’s fair land for forty days, only to fill the
people’s hearts with fear.
So they brought the
Israelites an evil report of the land which they had scouted out, saying, “The
land through which we went to spy it out is a land that devours its
inhabitants. And all the people that we saw in it are men of great stature.
There we saw the Nephilim [or giants], the sons of Anak, who come from the
giants; and we were in our own sight as grasshoppers, and so we were in their
sight.” Numbers 13:32-33
What became of Gaddiel? He and his nine faithless compatriots were, in modern parlance, "terminated". They were stuck dead on the spot, either by an all consuming disease, or some other judgement.
A lonely stone marked desert grave. |
And the men whom Moses
sent to search the land, who returned and made all the congregation grumble and
complain against him by bringing back a slanderous report of the land. Even
those men who brought the evil report of the land died by a plague before the
Lord. Numbers 14:36-37
Thus ten of the twelve that searched out
the land were struck dead, by the justice of God, on the spot! Caleb, of the
tribe of Judah, and Joshua, of the tribe of Ephraim, alone escaped, because
they had followed God fully.
If ever there were “forgotten men” in the
Bible, then Gaddiel and the nine other “cowards” fit the bill. They forgot
about God, and His miraculous ways during their 40 day mission.
They, like the rest of the nation… “despised
the pleasant land; they did not believe
His promise. They grumbled in their tents and did not obey the Lord. So
He swore to them with uplifted hand that He would make them fall in the desert,
make their descendants fall among the nations and scatter them throughout the
lands
Psalm
106:24-27
Gaddiel and his nay-saying friends looked
at the circumstances with human eyes… and fulfilled their own prophecy. Joshua
and Caleb saw the situation with heavenly vision. They and their children were
blessed (and remembered for 3,000 years or more) because of their faith!
1 comment:
The book of Numbers has seemingly over 100 specific names of Israelite men - indicating that it was written by someone who was There in the desert.Some slight editing has been done on the book - but the bulk of the text has likely remained unchanged.
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