1.24 Perché il popolo d’Israele ha vagato nel deserto per 40 anni?

Eventi principali dell’Antico Testamento

Gli antenati della nazione che in seguito fu chiamata Israele erano andati in Egitto in tempo di carestia. Vennero poi oppressi dal faraone d’Egitto come schiavi. Dio scelse Mosè per liberare il suo popolo e condurlo ad una vita migliore nella terra che egli aveva promesso ai loro antenati secoli prima.

Il faraone non voleva lasciar partire gli Israeliti, e così Dio mandò delle calamità. Allora al popolo fu consentito partire e viaggiarono attraverso il deserto. Poiché gli Israeliti non obbedirono a Dio e infransero spesso i suoi comandamenti, furono puniti con 40 anni di peregrinazione prima di giungere nella Terra Promessa.

 

Dopo che Dio liberò il suo popolo dalla schiavitù, lo punì per la sua disobbedienza, e ci vollero 40 anni per raggiungere la Terra Promessa.
The Wisdom of the Church

How does God reveal himself in the Old Testament?

God shows himself in the Old Testament as God, who created the world out of love and remains faithful to men even when they have fallen away from him into sin.

God makes it possible to experience him in history: with Noah he establishes a covenant to save all living things. He calls Abraham so as to make him “the father of a multitude of nations” (Gen 17:5b) and to bless “all the families of the earth” in him (Gen 12:3b). The people Israel, sprung from Abraham, becomes his special possession. To Moses he introduces himself by name. His mysterious name Yhwh, usually transcribed Yahweh, means “I am who I am” (Ex 3:14). He frees Israel from slavery in Egypt, establishes a covenant with them on Sinai, and through Moses gives them the law. Again and again, God sends prophets to his people to call them to conversion and to the renewal of the covenant. The prophets proclaim that God will establish a new and everlasting covenant, which will bring about a radical renewal and definitive redemption. This covenant will be open to all human beings. [Youcat 8]

This is what the Popes say

The journey of the Jewish people from Egypt to the Promised Land lasts for 40 years, an appropriate span of time to experience God’s faithfulness. "You shall remember all the way which the Lord your God has led you these forty years in the wilderness… your clothing did not wear out upon you, and your foot did not swell, these forty years”, Moses says in Deuteronomy at the end of the 40 years' migration (8:2,4). [Pope Benedict XVI, General Audience, 22 Feb. 2012]