‘The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his face to shine upon you and be gracious to you; the Lord lift up his countenance upon you and give you peace.’ (Numbers 6:24-26).
My earliest memory of the above verses is the use of them at the end of School Assemblies. Two things struck me about them. The first was what a beautiful picture they create of God. The second was they were by far the most coherent words uttered during the Assembly. The Church of England School which I attended was rather liberal in its theology; hence anything that was said, other than scripture, during the assembly was generally unhelpful!
But what is it about these verses that bring people comfort in difficult times as they did for my mother when she was suffering from mental illness?
The blessing comes after the description of the Nazirite Vow (Numbers 6:1-21). At first it might seem that the vow and this blessing have little in common. But Gordon Keddie suggests that the placing of them together here is no accident. In his words: ‘Holiness and blessing are inseparable. Indeed the blessing of God precedes our desire to do his will, undergirds our present obedience and reinforces us for future discipleship.’[1] The verses preceding the actual blessing show the Lord instructs Moses that the blessing is to be given by: ‘Aaron and his sons’ (v22-23). Hence, in later times, the blessing was given by priests who were descended from Aaron. Some have even surmised that it is possible that this is the blessing that Jesus gave his disciples before his ascension (Luke 24: 50-51).
The blessing itself is a three line poem. It’s possible that with the deduction of the three occurrences of the word: ‘LORD’, the 12 words that are left represent the 12 tribes of Israel.[2] There are basically three blessings that are bestowed upon the people. The first blessing is that the Lord would keep his people under his protection. The second with its phrase: ‘make his face to shine upon you and be gracious to you’ indicates the Lord’s benevolence towards his people. The last shows that he is attentive to their needs and offers them his peace. The threefold nature of the blessing is not incidental as three’s in Jewish thinking spoke of the fullness and completeness, illustrating that the only genuine blessing comes from the Lord.
There’s something else that can also be denoted from the threefold nature of this blessing. But as those saints of yesteryear Henry and Scott point out, what was a mystery to the Jews, the New Testament has explained. We are to: expect ‘blessing from the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of the Father and the communion of the Holy Ghost.’[3]
The phrase: ‘So shall they put my name upon the people of Israel, and I will bless them’ in verse 27 indicates the Lord’s ownership of his people, or as we would say in this day and age ‘Christians’. As Gordon Keddie puts it: ‘How shall we wear his name upon our daily lives? We have turned full circle: from consecration to blessing, to consecration again, we are called to walk with our Lord, in dependence upon his grace.’[4] These verses, with their description of God’s character and his intentions towards his people, act as a major encouragement to live lives that reflect this!
[1]Gordon J. Keddie, According to Promise, The Message of the Book of Numbers (Darlington, Evangelical Press, 1992) 48.
[2] Gordon J. Wenham, Numbers, Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries (Leicester Inter Varsity Press, 1981) 90.
[3] Henry and Scott, A Commentary on the Holy Bible, Genesis to Deuteronomy (London, The Religious Tract Society 1833) 275.
[4] Keddie, Numbers, 49.