Numbers 14:14 KJB
God had promised His chosen people, the Israelites, that He would liberate them from slavery in Egypt and bring them back to their ownership of the land of Canaan that God had promised to give to their fathers, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Genesis 50:24 (KJB). After God had liberated them from 400 years of slavery in Egypt, He brought the nation of Israel close to the promised land. Moses sent 12 men to spy in the land so that proper plans could be made as to where to attack it first and where the strongest and weakest forts were. Numbers 13:17-20 (KJB). When these 12 men returned to report to Moses, 10 of them had lost their faith in God when they had seen giants in the land and very strong and fortified cities. Numbers 13:26-33 (KJB). But 2 of the spies, Caleb and Joshua, still retained their faith that God had promised them the land, and He would give them the strength and courage they needed to conquer it. But the congregation lost their faith in God because they believed in the report of the 10 spies that they could not take the land. The people then rebelled against Moses, Caleb, and Joshua, and they threatened to stone them to death and elect a new leader to take them back to Egypt. Numbers 24:1-10 (KJB).
At that time, God appeared to the congregation in the Tabernacle. God told Moses that He intended to kill the entire nation of Israel and cause Moses to father a new nation of chosen people. Numbers 14:11-13 (KJB). Moses then began to pray to God, and he laid out logical reasons why God should not do that. But God inspired Moses to make that prayer. There were news reporters in that day just as there are today. Moses told God that the Egyptians would hear that God had killed them because He had failed to bring them into their promised land. The inhabitants of the land would also hear the news, and they would believe that God was weak. Moses reminded God that the people of the land already knew that God led His people with a cloud of mercy in the daytime of their faith, and He also punished them with His fiery wrath against evil in the nighttime of their sins. Numbers 14:13-14 (KJB). But God gave Moses the logic of his prayer. For these reasons, Caleb and Joshua were right that the people of the land had become terrified of the Israelites because they knew that their powerful God was with them. Numbers 14:9 (KJB).
Moses then changed his prayer, and he began to remind God that He was longsuffering, forgiving, and merciful. Moses begged God to forgive the iniquity of His people. God answered Moses that He would forgive His people because of Moses' prayer. Numbers 14:17-20 (KJB). If God forgave His rebellious people because of Moses' prayer, then surely God will answer the prayer of His Son on the cross that He should forgive the entire human race for their sins and evil that nailed Jesus to the cross. Luke 23:34 (KJB). God's Power, His Love, and His Intellect are Almighty, and He has devised a way to bring the entire human race to repentance and faith in His Son as their Savior. When God forgives, He also saves His people from eternal death, some by His grace and all others when He visits them in the end of the world. I Corinthians 13:8; John 5:24; Revelation 5:11-14 (KJB).
The Israelites who died in the wilderness because of their lack of faith represent all humans who hear the gospel but fail to repent and become saved by grace. Those Israelites who entered and conquered the promised land represent all humans who become saved by God's grace. God gives them special blessings, but He also commands them to fight against sin and evil. The nations who were not Israelites represent all of the people of the world who have never heard that God is merciful and that Jesus can save them. But God gave Moses a prophecy that "all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord." Numbers 14:21; Matthew 6:10; Isaiah 66:18; Habakkuk 2:14; Isaiah 45:21-25; Revelation 21:1-5 (KJB). When Jesus prayed that His Father's will be the same on earth as it is in Heaven, then He had to have meant that His father would save the entire human race with a higher or lesser form of salvation. Matthew 6:10; II Peter 3:9; I Timothy 2:3-4; I Timothy 4:10; John 5:24; Revelation 5:11-14; Revelation 21:1-5 (KJB).