Preamble:
Before God lets Israel become powerful, God teaches Israel how not to become Pharaoh.
That is the quiet thunder inside Deuteronomy. Israel has land now. Israel has fields now. Israel has crops, wages, workers, courts, debts, garments, olives, grapes, and grain. In other words, Israel now has enough power to forget what pain taught them. So God says: remember Egypt. Remember what it felt like to live under somebody else’s economy. Remember what it felt like when your body was useful but your name was not honored. Remember what it felt like to build somebody else’s world while your own children waited for bread.
And maybe that word lands close to home this Sunday, even here in Anchorage, where women and girls of all ages will gather for a triathlon — moving through water, road, and running path, some racing, some volunteering, some cheering, all bearing witness in their own way. It is a living reminder that bodies are not machines, effort is not invisible, and strength is not always loud. Every person on the course is more than a number on a roster.
So when the worker needs wages before sunset, pay them.
When the foreigner needs justice, give it.
When the orphan stands in court, do not let the child stand alone.
When the widow has only one garment, do not turn her covering into collateral.
When the field has extra grain, do not harvest mercy out of the soil.
Then Numbers brings us into the wilderness and starts counting everybody.
Tribe by tribe.
House by house.
Name by name.
But suddenly the counting stops.
The Levites are not numbered with the rest. Not because they do not matter. Not because they are invisible. Not because God forgot them. They are not counted with the army because they are carrying something the army cannot carry.
They are carrying the center.
That is the word for this week:
Do not mistake public counting for divine value.
Do not mistake hidden labor for lesser labor.
Do not mistake the edge for emptiness.
Do not mistake the center for decoration.
God may be holding the whole community together through the people nobody thought to count. And the scandal of holiness is that God keeps noticing the worker, the widow, the stranger, the orphan, and the quiet Levite carrying the weight while everybody else is busy reading the numbers.