Verses 1–3
EXODUS - CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Verses 1-3:
Israel left Elim and continued their journey. The camp in Elim was a pleasant one, with ample water and pasturage for their flocks. The area through which they next traveled was in sharp contrast to this. The "Wilderness of Sin (Zin)" denotes the entire sandy plain along the shore of the Red Sea, from Israel’s encampment at Elim to the southern end of the Sinai Peninsula. Its modern name is El Markha, and is a desolate region whose name comes from a long ridge of white chalk hills. In the distance, behind these hills, they could see the purple streaks of the granite mountains of the Sinai range. To the west was the Red Sea, and beyond it the fertile fields of Egypt.
Israel made camp in the Wilderness of Sin, exactly one month from the day they left Egypt. By this time their food supply was seriously depleted. They could see no possibility of securing any food in the near future. So, they began to murmur and complain. They remembered the generous meals available in Egypt, and saw only their empty pots in the present camp. They charged Moses with bringing them into this desolate land to die from hunger.
Jehovah provided this test, to demonstrate His power to supply every need of His people. He today may lead to an apparently desolate place, that His child may learn to rely on Him to supply in seeming hopeless circumstances, Php 4:19; Mt 6:33.