Intro
The command to put a snake on a pole must have sounded ridiculous to some of 
the Israelites.  Stare at a bronze snake and you’ll be healed?  Who came up 
with that stupid idea?  It must’ve just sounded silly enough that some 
Israelites started to look for more reasonable solutions to the snakebites.  

Main Body
Now, one elder among the Israelites couldn’t bear telling people that these 
poisonous vipers were the result of God’s judgment on their sinful behavior.  
He didn’t want to wound people’s self-worth and hurt their sensitive, 
inner-child.  So, instead of directing people to the snake on the pole, Elder 
Self Esteem set up support groups, hoping to make people feel better.  And 
people did feel better.  But they still died, because they never bothered 
looking at the snake on the pole. 

We can chuckle, but don’t we think the same way?  Don’t we prefer those who 
make us feel happy about ourselves instead of telling us the truth?  But what 
happens when this happens in the Church?  We then never see that sin has 
poisoned us and that we are dying of its venom.  Then, we never look to the 
snake on the pole--I mean, the Christ on the cross--to get the life that God is 
giving us. 

One elder in the Israelite camp believed the real problem was the people’s lack 
of faith.  “We need to speak faith into what’s happening here,” Elder Look 
Within shouted.  He said that it’s faith that saves!  So, Elder Look Within 
taught people to look to their own faith for salvation, instead of looking at 
some stupid snake on a pole.  What did it matter, anyway?  The snake merely 
represented what God was doing.  And so, some of these inward-looking people 
died because they didn’t look at the snake on the pole.  

Some in the camp became angry with Moses.  Who was this man not allowing women 
to help hold up the snake on the pole?  One woman complained, “I’m not going to 
look at any snake on a pole that only men are holding up.”  Soon after that, 
she died of snakebite.  Many in the camp held a candlelight vigil in her honor. 

Others asked, “Did God tell Moses to put a snake on a pole?  Or did Moses just 
make that up?”  One group, led by Elder Higher Criticism, felt that this was 
merely Moses’ opinion.  After all, he could explain any healings that had taken 
place by natural causes.  

Another group doggedly defended the divine inspiration of Moses.  Elder 
Fundamental led this group.  What was essential to him was that people realize 
that what Moses said was true.  So, that became his focus.  But sadly, Elder 
Fundamental’s teachings reduced the opportunities for people to see the snake 
on the pole.  For, when they were proving what Moses said was true, they 
weren’t looking at the snake, and so some died. 

One elder believed that each person had to decide for the snake, whether he 
would look at the snake on the pole.  And so, Elder Make A. Decision 
concentrated on that.  He began having gatherings where he would first condemn 
the horror of poisonous vipers.  Later, he would invite people to come forward 
and decide to look at the snake on the pole.  

One elder agreed that life in the camp had, indeed, become dire.  But he 
thought the idea of immediately directing people to a snake on the pole was a 
poor business model.  “We should find out what people are looking for,” he 
said.  Elder Synagogue Growth asserted that it might take up to six months of 
working with “snake-seekers” before they would be willing to look at the snake 
on the pole.  So instead, he surveyed the people to find out what they wanted.  

Some wanted aerobics, so they could more quickly run away from the snakes.  
Others wanted to learn real-life, practical principles for living in a camp 
infested with snakes on the loose.  Others wanted only to get together and sing 
lighthearted, emotional songs to forget about the snakes.  Yet, while Elder 
Synagogue Growth waited for people to be willing to look at the snake on the 
pole, many died. 

Elder Moderate, a new leader within the camp, felt that his reasoning had 
advanced beyond everyone else’s.  He simply smiled at all the constant 
bickering.  “People, please,” he begged, “in the end, the differences we have 
about the snake on the pole won’t matter.  After all, they’re just mere matters 
of practical application.  Can’t we just get along?”  

Some these allegories may make you laugh.  Others may hit close to home.  But 
when the poisonous snakes attacked, God had set up only one specific way for 
the children of Israel to survive.  They had to reject everything else.  They 
had to look up at the bronze snake that Moses made and placed on the pole.  If 
a snake had bitten them and they did this, they would live; if not, they would 
die.  

It didn’t matter what else the Israelites did, how they felt, or how spiritual 
they seemed.  It didn’t matter if they prayed to the transcendent Father in 
heaven, or sought the immediate aid of the Spirit.  If they didn’t look at the 
bronze snake, they would die.  For that snake on the pole was how God said He 
would come to them and save them.  What God chose to do was not up to debate. 

Do you find yourself struggling against God, wanting to live life on your terms 
instead of His?  Can you feel the snakebites?  Whatever snakes have slithered 
into your life, they are there to turn your heart back to God, to cause you to 
fall before Him, and admit that you are a dying sinner--just like I am.  

But thank God that we have a way out, just like the Israelites did.  Of course, 
it’s not a bronze snake, but the God who stood behind the bronze snake.  You 
see, the power of the snake was in God’s Word of promise.  Without God’s 
command and promise, looking at that bronze snake would have been stupid and 
foolish.  But because God said it was so, it was so: the snake on the pole 
brought life to those in the throes of death.  

Those who trusted God’s promise looked at the snake and lived.  Those who 
refused to believe that something so stupid and unreasonable could save them 
never looked at the snake.  They died although God’s promise and healing were 
given and meant for them, as well!

Jesus is the anti-venom for the snakebite of sin.  Just like in the Old 
Testament, the cure resembles the sickness.  Why did God put a snake on the 
pole?  It wasn’t just to save the Israelites from death, but to show them--and 
us--how He was going to save us from death.  The snake on the pole pointed 
forward to Jesus’ crucifixion.  As John 3 says, “Just as Moses lifted up the 
snake in the wilderness, so the Son of Man must be lifted up, so whoever 
believes in Him may have eternal life” (John 3:14-15). 

On the cross, we see the image of our sin and God’s wrath.  The Son hangs dead, 
abandoned by His Father, cursed and damned in our place.  How despicable He 
looks!  People turn away and hide their faces.  

Do not join them.  Do not look away from that cross.  No matter how stupid it 
may seem, that instrument of execution is God’s way of saving you.  On the 
pole, the Israelites saw their healing and God’s mercy.  On the cross, we see 
our healing and God’s mercy.  

But here is where it gets sticky.  For today, we can’t run to the cross and 
receive Jesus’ blood-bought forgiveness.  Oh, I can tell you to look at the 
cross for healing, but the cross that Jesus died on is no more.  Even if it did 
exist, Jesus isn’t there.  

So, where can you look today to see Christ on the cross?  Where can you find 
Him here in Kimberling City?  You can find God where He tells you to look for 
Him.  God told the Israelites to look at some foolish-looking bronze snake 
hanging on a pole to live.  Today, He tells us to look to look at what we may 
think is foolish to find Christ hanging on a cross, and so live. 

God says to look for the crucified Christ in Water, Words, and Bread and Wine.  
He says that we “are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus.  For as 
many of you who have been baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with 
Christ” (Galatians 3:26-27).  God says, “As many of you who have heard your 
pastor absolve your sins, you’ve been forgiven by the crucified Christ” (John 
20:23).  And God says, “As many of you who have received this bread and wine, 
you’ve received the body and blood of Christ, crucified for your sins.”   

Conclusion
So let nothing--nothing!--turn your attention from your snake on the pole--let 
nothing distract you from your Savior on the cross.  Confess your sins and hear 
God’s sin-slaying word of forgiveness spoken to you in the Absolution.  Soak up 
your Lord’s preached Word that puts His promises into your ears.  Run to the 
Supper, where Life itself is poured down your throats.  

Through such seemingly silly ways, God gives to you--not a snake on the 
pole--but His Son on the cross.  Through these channels of grace, God gives to 
you His anti-venom, His medicine of immortality, for the forgiveness of your 
sins.  For where there is the forgiveness of sins, there is also life and 
salvation.  Amen. 


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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