ವ್ಯಾಖ್ಯಾನ ಪ್ರಸ್ತುತ ಇಂಗ್ಲಿಷ್ನಲ್ಲಿ ಮಾತ್ರ ಲಭ್ಯವಿದೆ. ಕನ್ನಡ ಅನುವಾದ ಪ್ರಗತಿಯಲ್ಲಿದೆ.
Exodus 16 — Bread from Heaven
Six weeks after leaving Egypt, the people murmur for food. God promises bread from heaven. That evening, quail cover the camp. In the morning, a small round thing — manna — lies on the ground. They gather it daily, an omer per person. On the sixth day, double. On the seventh day, none — the Sabbath rest is established. A pot of manna is kept for memorial.
“Behold, I will rain bread from heaven for you.”
— Exodus 16:4
- v.1-3 The murmuring for food
- v.4-12 The promise of bread; the glory in the cloud
- v.13-21 The quail and the manna; daily gathering
- v.22-30 The Sabbath instituted by the manna pattern
- v.31-36 A memorial pot of manna kept
That I may prove them. The manna was a test as much as a provision. God gave it daily on purpose — to teach dependence one day at a time.
Many a believer would handle a year's supply at once with thanksgiving for a week and self-reliance for the remaining 51. God gives daily bread precisely so that daily prayer is required.
Manna is from the Hebrew man hu, literally "what is it?" The name preserves their first question about it. They never fully knew what manna was; they only knew Who gave it.
There are mysteries in God's provision we never fully understand. We learn to call them by His name and eat them gratefully.
Paul quotes this in 2 Corinthians 8:15 to teach Christian generosity. The same God who balanced the manna can balance the wealth of His people across the church — through their willing sharing.
The principle of sufficiency runs through Scripture. Whoever has more than enough has been entrusted with the surplus for those who have less.
They could not store it overnight. Hoarded grace stinks. The provision was given for the day; the next day required fresh provision.
2 Corinthians 4:16 — the inward man is renewed day by day. Yesterday's spiritual experience is yesterday's bread. Today requires its own fresh gathering. Many believers try to live on stored manna and wonder why their souls reek.
The Sabbath is established here, before Sinai. The manna pattern itself teaches it — six days of gathering, one day of rest. The seventh day's manna kept overnight; the other six days' did not.
God built rest into the rhythm of provision itself. The Sabbath is not first a commandment to obey but a pattern of creation honored.
Forty years of daily bread from heaven. Six days a week for over two thousand weeks. The faithfulness of God to provide is monotonous in its consistency — and that is its glory.
Joshua 5:12 records the moment the manna ceased — on the morrow after they had eaten of the old corn of the land. God's extraordinary provision ends when His ordinary provision through human work resumes.
Stored manna stinks. Yesterday's devotional life will not feed today. Go out fresh and gather. The bread was provided every morning — and every morning required the effort of going out for it. Many believers want yesterday's grace to last all week. It does not. Gather today.
Jesus claimed Exodus 16 in John 6 — I am the bread of life... Your fathers did eat manna in the wilderness, and are dead. This is the bread which cometh down from heaven, that a man may eat thereof, and not die (John 6:48-50). The manna was an Old Testament shadow of the true bread who is Christ Himself. To eat Him by faith is to live forever; manna only sustained for a day.
The shortest memory in the Bible. Six weeks after the Red Sea, Israel is wishing they had died in Egypt — the place of slavery they had cried out to be delivered from.
The flesh pots of Egypt remembered fondly. The slave remembers the meals and forgets the chains. The pattern still operates — the recovering addict remembers the high and forgets the bondage.