Preamble:
This week, with the sound of Independence Day still close enough to hear, the question is not simply, “Who has authority?”
That is usually the world’s question. Who is in charge? Who gives the orders? Who gets obeyed? Who has the rank, the title, the office, the badge, the pulpit, the uniform, the flag, or the seat?
And in a nation now standing near the weight of 250 years, we know that authority is never a small question. Freedom has always had to wrestle with power. Liberty has always had to ask what kind of authority it will answer to. A people can declare independence from kings and still have to learn dependence on righteousness, justice, mercy, and God.
Scripture presses us there.
Matthew gives us a centurion, a man who knows how authority works. He has soldiers under him. He can say, “Go,” and they go. He can say, “Come,” and they come. Yet when he comes before Messiah, he does not come standing on rank. He comes bowing in faith. He says, “I also am a man under authority.”
That word under changes the whole lesson.
The centurion is powerful, but he is not free from accountability. He commands others, but he knows he is still commanded. He carries authority, but he does not worship it. And because his authority bows, healing can reach his house.
Then Pinchas gives us Moses near the end of his journey. Moses has carried people through wilderness, complaint, rebellion, grief, hunger, thirst, fire, plague, and disappointment. But when he learns his season is closing, he does not first ask God to protect his legacy. He asks God to protect the people.
He says, “Let the Lord, the God of the spirits of all flesh, appoint someone over the congregation.”
That is the hidden jewel.
Moses does not say, “Give them a manager.”
He does not say, “Give them a general.”
He does not say, “Give them somebody who can keep everybody in line.”
He says, in effect:
“Lord, You know every spirit.
You know every temperament.
You know every wound.
You know every fear.
You know every stubborn place and every tender place.
Give them somebody who can shepherd what only You fully understand.”
The old rabbis saw this. Rashi says Moses is asking for a leader who can bear with each person according to that person’s own mind, because no two people are alike. Bamidbar Rabbah says that just as human faces are not all the same, human dispositions are not all the same.
That is a word for any house, any church, any union, any family, and any nation that wants freedom without losing its soul.
So this Sunday, we are not just studying authority.
We are studying the God of the spirits and the Word that heals.
Authority that bows.
Authority that heals.
Authority that transfers.
Authority that shepherds.
Authority that knows people are not just bodies in seats, names on a list, members in a church, workers on a schedule, citizens in a count, or numbers in a census.
They are spirits before God.
And the measure of holy authority is not how loudly it commands, but whether it can bring the wounded safely home.