03/02/08: Deuteronomy 32-34
Category: Deuteronomy
Posted by: sejje
It is a strange mystery to me concerning the body of Moses. Moses died and God buried him; yet his grave was never found (Deuteronomy 34:5,6). Many (including by myself) believe that Moses and Elijah probably will be the two witnesses who will prophecy in Jerusalem for 1,260 days (Revelation 11:3), which will be the final 3½ years of the 70th Week. (Both Moses and Elijah appeared at Jesus' transfiguration in Matthew 17:1-4, and it is expected that they will "witness" to the world about the coming of Jesus in the clouds prior to His appearance.)
The thing is that "man is destined to die once, and after that to face judgment" (Hebrews 9:27). Since the two witnesses will be killed at the end of the seven-year period (Revelation 11:7), there is a question about whether or not Moses could die twice.
My opinion is that God cannot be put into a box and that He makes occasional exceptions to many of His rules. For instance, consider Lazarus (among others), whom Jesus raised from the dead (John 11:38-44). Is Lazarus still alive? No. He died, Jesus raised him from the dead, and then, at some point thereafter, he died again. So he died twice.
We know that there was a dispute between the archangel Michael and Satan, concerning the body of Moses (Jude 9). Moses' body would be of no value to Satan, so what dispute would he have? Was there something different about the "death" and/or "burial" of Moses' body that was different from the norm? I don't know.
But in Hebrews 9:27, I do notice how it indicates that after a man dies, he faces judgment. It sounds like the "judgment" comes immediately after death, but we know it does not--just at some point after death. In fact, for most, there will be at least 1,000 years between death and judgment, since the great white throne judgment of unbelievers will take place at the end of the Millennium (Revelation 20:11-15).
Could it be that, technically speaking, physical "death" is defined as "separation of the soul from the body until that person is judged by God"? If so, perhaps one is not technically "dead" (from God's point of view) until the final judgment for that person has taken place. Maybe if somebody is resurrected (like Lazarus was), the first "death" is "nullified," as if it hadn't happened. So if Moses "died" but will return to earth again, whether in the same or in a different body, maybe his death in the desert, way back when, was "annulled" or "invalidated" by God.
We know that Elijah was taken up to heaven in his body without dying (2 Kings 2:11). So another possibility is that (like Lazarus), Moses died, God buried Him, and then (unbeknownst to us) God resurrected him and took him to heaven in his original body. Perhaps Satan protested this, knowing that Moses would be a key end-time player in counteracting the work of Satan. Maybe Satan's dispute with Michael (Jude 9) was an insistence that Moses' body belonged in the ground. After all, Moses' grave (and, therefore, body) were never found (Deuteronomy 34:6).