Og, an ancient king, once slept in a ginormous bed, big even by our standards. Moses recorded the exact dimensions: Nine cubits was its length, and four cubits its breadth. Or in modern terms, thirteen and half feet long by six feet wide and made of iron.
The Israelites lived as nomads as they wandered, laying their bedrolls on the ground every night. To them such a bed felt like an extravagance, like a personal jacuzzi might today.
Why would Moses choose to detail a bed in his record of Israel’s journey through the wilderness? Because Og’s bed represented a giant of a man, and God overcame giants as he led his children to a new and better home. A huge problem once slept in that bed, and its empty frame represented the ease with which God swept problems away.
The lesson is simple. No obstacle thwarts the plans of the Lord. Our colossal problems appear as minor tasks for God.
The size of a bed (and the man who sleeps in it) might impress you and me, but not our Father in heaven.
Deuteronomy 3 in Through the Bible in 2024
Photo by Samuel Ryde