The
issue we encounter at the beginning of Parashat Pinchas has already been
introduced to us at the end of last week’s Parashat Balak. Pinchas, A’haron’s
grandson who is his son’s El’azar’s firstborn, observed the sinful act
committed by an Israelite, a leader of the tribe of Shim’on (Simeon) with a
Midianite woman, and slew both of them. He thus “made atonement” (25:13) for
the sons of Yisrael and brought to an end the plague that stuck them. The word
used here for “made atonement” is none other than “(vay)cha’per,”
of the root k.f.r, which we know as “kippur,” or “covering.” Pinchas’ action, along with the penalty paid for
by the two sinners, had propitiated for Yisrael’s iniquity of “clinging to
Ba’al Pe’or” (ref. 25:3). T’hilim (Psalms) 106 also refers to this episode: “They also were joined to Baal-Peor, and ate the sacrifices of the
dead; and provoked Him with their deeds; and a plague broke out among them.
Then Phinehas stood and intervened, and the plague was stayed” (vs 28-30). In this latter reference Pinchas’ act is describes
as – (vay)fa’lel (p/f.l.l, pey/fey, lamed, lamed) – which is interposing,
intervening, mediating, as well as judging and pleading.
It is from this root that the word
“t’fila,” prayer, originates. In fact, as we will find out, Pinchas’ action was
multi-facetted. In the second half of
this article, his atoning act and its judicial aspects and parallelism to
Yeshua’s will be elaborated on.
The two persons involved in
the said episode were, Zimri the son of Salu, one of the leaders of the tribe
of Shim’on, and Cozbi a Midianite woman, who, likewise was a daughter of a “head of the people of a father's house in Midian” (25:15).
Leading Yisrael astray definitely ranked high on the list of priorities of the
Mo’av-Midian coalition. The protagonists’ names in this Parasha, are also of
interest. Thus, Pinchas appears to be an Egyptian name, having typical
characteristics such as the name of the town of Tach’pan ’ches
(Jeremiah 44:1) and that of Tach’peh’nis ,
the Egyptian wife of Hadad the Edomite (1 Kings 11:19, 20). But even more intriguing
is the name of the Midianite princess Cozbi, which is made up of the
letters kaf, zayin, bet, yod. The first three of these, that is c.z.b,
constitute the root for the word “cazav” (or, phonetically, “kazav”),
which means to “lie, deceive, lying, deception.” Last week we read in Bamidbar 23:19: “Elohim
is not a man that He should lie...” The
verb rendered there as “lie” is “(vay)cha’zev,” which refers particularly to
“being unfaithful or untrue to one’s commitment or promise.” In a land thirsty for water as Yisrael is,
riverbeds hold a promise of being filled during the winter. However, in the dry season such riverbeds become
waterless. Hence a stream of water which
dries up after the rainy season may be used as imagery for that which lets one
down: “You surely are to me like deceitful
– ach’zav - waters which cannot be trusted,” complains Yirmiyahu to his Creator
in a moment of dark despair (Jer. 15:18). Cozbi, too, was nothing but a bait of
deception and enticement to the people of Yisrael (cf. Prov. 5), and especially
to leaders like Zimri. Walking in the paths of temptation, away from He Who is
the Way the Truth and the Life, leads not only to disappointment, but far
worse… and in the case before us, to destruction and death, which was
experienced by 24,000 souls in Yisrael’s camp (ref. Num. 25:9).
As
noted above, Cozbi was a Midianite. Midian
was a son of Avraham by his wife K’turah (see Gen. 25:2). The name stems from
the verb “din” (dalet, yod, noon), meaning primarily to “judge or
mete justice,” referring to all aspects of government. It is the
root for the word “medina” – province. However,
this particular form – “Midian” – may also be related to “mah’don,”
which albeit of the same root (as “judgment”) means “strife or contention”
(e.g. Prov. 15:18; Jer. 15:10; Hab. 1:3 etc.). Thus, far from being a people of
judgment (that is of justice and righteousness), the Midianites’ affairs were
handled by resorting to magic and witchcraft and all forms of deception, as was
so evident in the character of Bil’am. The
fact that they were not wholly unaware of the Elohim of Yisrael and of His ways
(as illustrated by Yitro, Moshe’s father-in-law and even by Bil’am), only made
the “din” (‘judgment’) pronounced upon them by Yisrael’s Elohim more severe. Hence,
YHVH says to Moshe: "Harass the Midianites, and attack them; for they harassed you with their schemes by
which they seduced you in the matter of Peor and in the matter of Cozbi, the
daughter of a leader of Midian, their sister, who was killed in the day of the
plague because of Peor” ( Num. 25:17-18).
Highlighted
in this passage is the cunning posture and frame of mind of the Midianites,
illustrated so typically by Cozbi. The order from on High here is “to harass
and attack” the Midianites, since they “harassed you.” “harassing” in
this case is “tza’ror” (tz.r.r - tzadi, resh, resh), meaning, “showing
hostility,” while “tzorer” is an “enemy or adversary.” In Parashat Balak, we heard Bil’am say of Yisrael:
“he shall eat up the nations that are his foes –
tza’rav” (Num. 24:8 italics added). In Bamidbar (Numbers) 33:55 a condition
will be placed before Yisrael: “But if you do not drive out the inhabitants of the
land from before you, then it shall be that those whom you let remain shall be irritants in your eyes and thorns in your sides, and they shall
harass– (ve)tza’ra’ru - you in the land where you dwell”. Haman, the Jews’ cruel adversary, was named in Esther 3:10; 8:1,
“tzorer ha-Yehudim,” the “foe of the Jews.” Haman the Agagite was a descendent
of the royal house of Amalek, about whom it was said, “Amalek threatened the
body of the people [of Yisrael], whilst Midian threatened its soul.” [1]
The opening section of the Parasha
presents two words that are used several times within a few verses. The first one
is repeated four times in 25:11-13, and it is “jealous,” “zealous,” or
“jealousy.” The root of “jealousy/zealousness”
is kano
(root k.n.a. kof, noon, alef), originating in the “color produced in the face
by deep emotion” [2]. It is especially used in situations pertaining to
marriage relationship, and as “God is depicted as Israel ’s husband; he is [therefore]
a jealous God… Phinehas [too] played the faithful lover by killing a man and
his foreign wife, and thus stayed the wrath of divine jealousy”. [3] The other
word that occurs five times in verses 14-18 is “smite or smitten”
and “strike” (in other translations “slay and slain”). In all
these instances the verb “nako” (n.k.h, noon, kaf, hey) is used in a
variety of conjugations. N.k.h (or its derivation “hakot”) is a very common root and may be used in many different ways,
describing fall and defeat, punishment, being beaten, smitten or hurt for a
variety of reasons. In our case, it relates to the punishment of death.
However,/because/of/the/emphatic/repetition/of/“jealousy/zeal-ousness” - kano - just before
the reiteration of “nako,” it would appear that our text is underscoring
a situation in which YHVH’s “jealousy” has been provoked, resulting in a “smiting
unto death.” Clearly, a cause-and-effect ‘word picture’ is being conveyed here
by a (subtle) play on words.
Chapter 26 is devoted to the
census of the leaders of the tribes and of all those who were twenty-year old
and above; that is, those eligible for army service. It is according to their relative number that
the land of Yisrael is to be apportioned to them:
“To the many you shall increase their inheritance; and to the few you
shall diminish their inheritance” (v. 54 emphases added). On the other
hand, in verse 62 we read that the census of the Levites applied to “all males
from a month old and upward,” but it goes on to say that “they were not
counted among the sons of Israel, because there was no inheritance given
them among the sons of Israel” (emphasis added). “Inheritance” here is “nachala,”
the root of n.ch.l (noon, chet, lamed) is also a stream (“nachal”), and
therefore connotes a downward flow, meaning “a permanent possession
inherited by succession” (the Levites were told by YHVH that He was
their portion – “nachala,” Num. 18:20). A different conjugation transforms
n.ch.l to “manchil,” which is “to cause to possess” such as is seen in Dvarim
(Deuteronomy) 32:8: “When the Most High gave – “hinchil” - each nation its
heritage, when he set apart the sons of Adam, he set the bounds of the people
according to the number of the people of Israel .” And just as the Land of Yisrael
was divvied out according to the size of each household, so was the rest of the
world divided up by YHVH, who knew that His people would be scattered among the
nations, according to the ‘quota’ of Israelites in their midst. In chapter 27
of our Parasha, we meet Tzlofchad’s daughters who demand their possession
saying: “Our father died in the wilderness… and had no son. Why is our father's
name taken away from the midst of his family because there is no son to him?
Give us an inheritance among our father's brothers” (vs. 3,
4 emphasis
added). Inheritance in this case is “achuza,” of the verb achoz (root
a.ch.z. alef, chet, zayin), meaning to “grasp or hold” and hence
to “possess and possession.” The stronger word for “possession,”
used here by these daughters certainly underscores their claim.
When
YHVH reminds Moshe that his day of departure is close at hand, the latter expresses
his concern regarding the future: “Let YHVH, the Elohim of the spirits of
all flesh, appoint a man over the congregation who may go out before
them, and who may go in before them, and who may lead them out, and who
may bring them in, so that the congregation of YHVH may not be as sheep to whom
there is no shepherd” (27:16, 17 italics added). Evidently, Moshe understands
the integrated composition of man, being both flesh and spirit while at the
same time also recognizing that YHVH knows his creatures through and through.
In describing the need for a leader, Moshe highlights “going out before (the
people)… going in before (them)… leading out… and bringing in…” Is Moshe subtly
making reference to the possible fate of the next leader, lest it be similar to
his own (that is, staying behind and not entering the land with the rest of the
people)? Whether that is the case or
not, Moshe displays no bitterness when told to “take Joshua, a man in whom is
the spirit” (v. 18), echoing the “Elohim of the spirits” mentioned in verse 16
above. YHVH instructs Moshe how to ordain his successor, which Moshe follows
implicitly; “as YHVH commanded” (v. 23), in spite of what was no doubt a grave
disappointment to him. However, since Moshe had not been deceived or embittered,
his disappointment is not like the description found in Ee’yov (Job) 41:9:
“Behold, your expectation is false [nich’zeva, of the root k.z.v
examined above].” Neither/was Moshe’s experience
like that of the faithless ones from among the people of Yisrael who typically sought
gratification in the wrong places and from sources which were not able to
satisfy.
In Parashat
Balak (and Pinchas) we encounter the Israelites’ harlotry and idolatry
instigated by the daughters of Moab
and Midian (ref. 25:1-6). This act included sacrifices with the worshippers prostrating
in front?of?idols,?as?well?as?sexual?immorality./It/is/no/wonder,therefore/that/scripture/terms/it clinging/adhering/sticking
to Baal Pe’or” (v. 3), who was the local deity. YHVH’s anger burned against Yisrael,
and so a little later a plague broke out among them (25:8-9). YHVH addressed
Moshe in no uncertain terms, commanding him to “take all the leaders of the
people and hang them before YHVH, out in the sun, that the fierce anger
of YHVH may turn away from Israel” (25:4 literal translation, emphasis added).
YHVH held all the leaders responsible for these abominable acts, and His
response was to have them hung in broad daylight and in view of all Israel in order
to appease His righteous indignation.
Moshe, however, did not
obey this very specific order accurately. Instead, He spoke to the nation’s
judges, telling them to kill (not specifying how): “each man his men who
were joined to Baal of Peor" (25:5).
This time Moshe’s delegation of power to his subordinates was not
according to YHVH’s judicial order. That being the case, the plague continued
and additionally a leader from the tribe of Shim’on, as we noted, dared to defy
and blatantly rebel against YHVH by fornicating in the sight of all the
congregation of Israel
with a Midianite princess in front of the Mishkan. It was only after the two
offenders were pierced to death that the plague (which took a substantial toll
on the people – 24,000) came to a halt.
As we noted above, it was
said about Pinchas that, in his jealousness and zeal for YHVH he atoned
for the Sons of YIsrael, resulting in a covenant of peace, as well as in a
covenant of an everlasting priesthood for him and for his seed (25:12, 13). As
we have already seen, Psalm 106:30-31 adds a few more terms regarding the scene
at hand: “Then Phinehas stood up and intervened/ mediated/interjected,
and the plague was stopped. And that was
accounted to him for righteousness to all generations forevermore”
(italics added).
Thus, in order to appease
YHVH, according to His specifications, in the case of this most horrendous act
of sin and transgression there were several requirements and legalities. First,
the leaders had to be held accountable with the consequential act of being hung
in broad daylight. When that order was not followed implicitly, and another
brazen act of defilement was performed in public, it took the piercing to death
of the offenders to restore righteousness, interpose, atone, and propitiate for
all YIsrael, who without that would have all perished (by the plague).
Moreover, in the act of the
fornication of the masses, as well as the single act of the Simeonite leader
Zimri, there was not only a clinging/joining/adhering to the idol of Baal Peor,
but also a joining and becoming one with the enticing harlots. Thus, Yisrael as
YHVH’s bride was joined to another, becoming one with Baal and its priestesses.
Hence the Jealous Husband (see Numbers 5:11-31) had every right to activate the
“law of jealousy” against His bride. Pinchas, however, appeased that too, and
so we read in Bamidbar 25:11 that he “has turned back My wrath from the
children of Israel , because
he was zealous with My zeal among them, so that I did not consume the children
of Israel
in My zeal.”
The above facts and
especially the responses to the sin so flagrantly displayed, help shed light on
the judicial aspects of Yeshua’s atoning act on His execution stake.
YHVH, as the jealous husband, had to see to it that His bride’s inherent sinful
condition by which she had been enticed to betray Him would be propitiated and
atoned for. In the Baal Peor incident, it was also YHVH’s household that was defiled.
Similarly, Yeshua responded to the peddling that took place in the Temple compound (see John
2:17), while the disciples associated His action with T’hilim (Psalms) 69:9,
which says: “…zeal for Your house has eaten me up…”
Above we referred to the reoccurrence
of the verb n.k.h (smite, smitten, strike, stricken) at the beginning of the
Parasha, which in Yisha’ya’hu (Isaiah) 53:4 in adverb form, is used to portray
the One who was “smitten by Elohim” (mu’keh Elohim). Both Matthew (27:30) and
Mark (15:19) give an account of how Yeshua was stuck/beaten/smitten on His head
before being hung on the tree.
YHVH’s desired form of reckoning with the
leaders of Yisrael, who had failed miserably, was to have them executed by
hanging, so that the curse could be removed from the rest of the people, as it
is written: “He who is hanged is accursed of Elohim” (Deuteronomy 21:23). This was fulfilled in
Yeshua, who redeemed us from the curse of sin and of betraying Elohim, by hanging
on a tree (ref. Gal. 3:13). 1Peter 2:24 says: “Who Himself bore our sins
in His own body on the tree…” When the
hanging did not take place in the Numbers 25 episode, and when further offense
was committed, as we saw, Pinchas resorted to piercing the offenders with a
javelin. Yeshua too was pierced, in that case during His crucifixion (ref. John
19:34). In regards to the piercing, John adds, quoting Zechariah 12:10:
"They shall look on Him whom they pierced" (John 19:37).
“…Elohim set forth as
propitiation by His [Yeshua’s] blood, through faith, to demonstrate His
righteousness, because in His forbearance Elohim had passed over the sins that
were previously committed…” (Romans 3:25). With the requirement of blood in order to
propitiate for the sins committed by the Israelites, for “without shedding of
blood there is no remission” (Hebrews 9:22), Pinchas’ action fulfilled YHVH’s
righteousness, or at least foreshadowed the ultimate act of righteousness that
was to come.
Pinchas’ reward was a
covenant of peace, and of everlasting priesthood (ref. Number 25:12,13). Later
on, Yisrael too would be receiving the promise of a “covenant of peace” (Is.
54:10, Ez. 34:25, 37:26). Moreover, this covenant of peace was to be an
everlasting one. It is no wonder, therefore, that the agent of propitiation,
interposing, and atoning (namely Pinchas) was also the recipient of this
covenant. The greater covenant of peace comes into effect by the Prince of
Peace (ref. Is. 9:6) who promised, over
and again, peace to His followers, has brought the Gospel of peace (ref. Eph.
2:17), and made peace through His blood (ref. Col. 1:20). And as to the
everlasting priesthood… that same “agent” of righteousness (Yeshua) was
eligible for this kind of priesthood, as it says about Him: “…where the
forerunner has entered for us, even
Yeshua, having become High Priest forever according to the order of
Melchizedek… But He, because He continues forever, has an unchangeable
priesthood” (Hebrews 6:20 7:24).
Bamidbar (Numbers) 25,
therefore, presents YHVH’s legal requirements for atonement in a most detailed
and graphic way, both in what preceded Pinchas’ interposing act, and
afterwards. Hence, when we gaze, from this vantage point in Bamidbar, further
into the historical account it is clear that Yeshua’s action and position met
every requirement to the full and complete satisfaction of His Father.
[1] New Studies in Bamidbar, Nechama Leibowitz, trans.
Aryeh Newman. Eliner
Library, Department for Torah Education and
Culture in the Diaspora. Hemed
Books Inc., Brooklyn , N.Y.
2 The New Brown,
Driver, Briggs, Gesenius Lexicon, Francis Brown Hendrickson.
Publishers, Peabody ,
Mass. 1979.
3 Theological Wordbook
of the Old Testament, Vol. 2, ed. R. Laird Harris, Moody
Press, Chicago ,
1980
Hebrew
Tools for Everyday Use
This
week Bamidbar chapter 26 will provide us with words that are common in Modern
Hebrew and are used frequently in the military. This chapter deals with a
census for the purpose of enlisting all those over twenty years of age into the
army. As then so now, “tzava” is the word we use for “army” or “military”. The
census, of course, required “numbering”, which in this chapter employs the root
p.k.d – pey, kof, dalet. In modern
speech “lefaked” is “to command” and “pkuda” is “a command”, while “commander”
is “me’fa’ked”. Remember that in Hebrew the sound “p” (pey) and “f” (fey) are
designated by the same letter.
Tz’vah
Hagana Le’Yisrael (literally, the army of defense for Israel ) –
commonly called by the acronym - Tzahal).
There
are commanders in the army
Ba’tza’va
yesh me’fakdim (literally, in the army there commanders – Hebrew has no “is” or
“are”)
In
the army there are also female commanders
Ba’tza’va
yesh gam me’fakdot (literally, in the army there also female commanders)
The
commander gave a command
Ha’me’faked
na’tan pkudah
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