And the Lord said to Moses, “I have seen this people, and behold, it is a stiff-necked people.” [Exodus 32:9 ESV)]
And he [Moses] said, “If now I have found favor in your sight, O Lord, please let the Lord go in the midst of us, for it is a stiff-necked people, and pardon our iniquity and our sin, and take us for your inheritance.” [Exodus 34:8-9 (ESV)]
For the most part, being a “stiff-necked people” is a pejorative label, but could there be occasions when that’s exactly what we should be? Are there times we should be intractable, stubborn, and uncompromising—even instances we should disregard the law?
After noting “the natural innate obstinacy of the race,” Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch (1808-1888) believed that very quality is what, “made Israel the most suitable for the revelation of the Divinity of His Torah.” In spite of their willfulness and disobedience to God, would anyone but a stiff-necked people have managed to retain their belief in Jehovah and His word during seventy years of captivity in idolatrous Babylon? Would anyone but a stiff-necked people have insisted on returning to the ruins of Jerusalem to rebuild their Temple so they could worship the one true God? Would anyone but a stiff-necked person have refused to bow down to Haman (an Amalekite and ancient enemy of Israel), as did Mordecai? Wouldn’t you have to be stiff-necked to be hungry and yet refuse to eat “unclean” Babylonian food as did Daniel and his friends; to face death by staunchly refusing to worship Nebuchadnezzar’s gold statue as did Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego; or to blatantly break the law by praying to God rather than King Darius as did Daniel? As troublesome as their stiff-necked nature was at times, it allowed our Jewish brothers and sisters to persevere more than 3,400 years through captivity, diaspora, pogroms and the Holocaust.
As for being stiff-necked and obstinate (even contumacious), let’s look at the early church. Peter and the apostles were so stiff-necked that even after being arrested and ordered by the Sanhedrin to stop speaking of Jesus, they boldly continued to do so. Stephen, Christianity’s first martyr, was so stiff-necked that he openly debated with the Jews, stood his ground before the Sanhedrin, and continued to speak of Jesus until his dying breath. The Apostle Paul was stiff-necked enough to persevere for Christ through beatings, stonings, floggings, shipwrecks, trials, and imprisonment. In fact, John is the only one of the apostles believed to have died a natural death (the rest having been martyred) and church tradition holds that he’d once been boiled in oil! They all were stiff-necked when it came to following Jesus!
Ancient Rome would have been tolerant of Christians had they just been willing to make a sacrifice to the emperor as if he were divine. With their “stiff-necks,” however, the early church refused to compromise their faith and were persecuted because of their treason to the Empire. As for being contumacious (stubbornly or willfully disobedient to authority)—for most of the time between 100 and 313 AD (and the Edict of Milan), it was illegal to be a Christian and yet about a tenth of the Roman Empire were Christians! Christianity survived because of its “stiff-necked,” inflexible, and uncompromising faith in Jesus!
There is a fine line between being steadfast and obstinate but let us remember that we are called to be inflexible and uncompromising when it comes to our faith and loyalty to the Lord!
Although the Israelites often have been called the “Chosen People,” God chose a far less complimentary term early in the exodus when He called them “a stiff-necked people.” Having nothing to do with the stiff neck that comes with a long drive, sleeping in an awkward position, or hunching long hours over the computer, “stiff-necked” figuratively means stubborn, inflexibly obstinate, and even contumacious (which means flagrantly disobedient, rebellious or persistently refusing to obey a court order).
Today’s email contained a meme of that lovable loser Charlie Brown with the caption: “The smile on my face doesn’t mean my life is perfect. It means I appreciate what I have and what I have been blessed with. I choose to be happy.” The meme reminded me of words spoken by Jane Marczweski when she appeared on America’s Got Talent last week: “You can’t wait until life isn’t hard anymore before you decide to be happy.” Known as Nightbirde, the 30-year-old vocalist sang an original song called “It’s Okay” and received the “golden buzzer” from judge Simon Cowell. She said she wrote the song as a reminder that, “You can be happy and also be going through something really hard at the same time—you don’t have to pick one or the other.”
“The luckiest traitor ever,” are the words historian Mary Beard used to describe Flavius Josephus, a first-century Jewish general who ended up allying himself with the Romans—the very people who destroyed his homeland and demolished the Temple during the Great Revolt (66-70 AD). Born in 37 AD, Josephus grew up in Jerusalem and studied with the Pharisees, Sadducees, and Essenes before serving as a general during the Jewish rebellion against Rome. According to Josephus, when fleeing the Roman army, he led his troop of 40 men into a cave. Rather than surrender, they agreed to commit suicide and drew lots to determine the order in which they would die. Either Josephus was incredibly lucky or he’d fixed the lottery but, when only he and another man remained, he convinced him to join in surrender to the Romans. In support of his story, excavations at Jotapata in the 1990s revealed the remains of 30 to 40 men assumed to have been Josephus’ men.
Since 1890, a common teaching method in a surgical residency is to “see one, do one, teach one.” The med student learns the basics by watching an experienced physician do a procedure and then puts his knowledge into practice by doing the procedure himself. He hasn’t mastered the procedure, however, until he’s taught someone else to do it; it is only when we can teach something that we truly understand it.