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Numbers 31

Numbers 31 is the 31st chapter of the Book of Numbers, the fourth book of the Pentateuch (Torah), the central part of the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament), a sacred text in Judaism and Christianity. Scholars such as Israel Knohl and Dennis T. Olson name this chapter the War against the Midianites.[1][2]

Numbers 31
Midianite women, children and livestock taken captive by Israelite soldiers after all Midianite men had been killed and their towns burnt. Watercolour by James Tissot (c. 1900).
BookBook of Numbers
Hebrew Bible partTorah
Order in the Hebrew part4
CategoryTorah
Christian Bible partOld Testament
Order in the Christian part4

Set in the southern Transjordnian regions of Moab and Midian, it narrates the Israelites waging war against the Midianites, commanded by Phinehas and Moses. They killed the men, including their five kings and Balaam, burnt their settlements and took captive the women, children and livestock. Moses commanded the Israelites to kill the boys and women who had sex with men and spare the virgin girls for themselves.The spoils of war were then divided between Eleazar, the Levitical priesthood, soldiers and Yahweh.[3][note 1]

Much scholarly and religious controversy exists surrounding the authorship, meaning and ethics of this chapter of Numbers.[3] It is closely connected to Numbers 25.[4]: 69 

Authorship edit

The majority of modern biblical scholars believe that the Torah (the books of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy, written in Classical Hebrew) reached its present form in the post-Exilic period (i.e., after c.520 BCE), based on pre-existing written and oral traditions, as well as contemporary geographical and political realities.[5][6][7] Numbers is a Priestly redaction (i.e., editing) of a non-Priestly original.[8]

Scholars generally recognise that mentions of the Midianites in chapters Numbers 22–24 are secondary Priestly (P) additions.[3] They also generally agree that Numbers 25:1–5 contains an earlier version of the story involving the women of Moab, for which the Israelite chiefs are punished by the judges. This earlier version was later augmented by the account in Numbers 25:6–18 with the Midianite women and Phinehas' priesthood as their new focus, perhaps using elements from Psalm 106:28–31 to work with.[2]: 155  These additions, as well as the mention of a Midianite in chapter 25 in a story about the Moabites, may have been an attempt by a later editor to create a connection between Moab and Midian.[3] Martin Noth argued that the author of chapter 31 was probably aware of the combined non-P/P(H) text (with the Moabite–Midianite connection) in chapter 25, and probably knew the entire composite Pentateuch, therefore Numbers 31 was written in whole or in part by an author writing later than regular P.[3] Israel Knohl (1995) argued Numbers 31 was in fact part of the Holiness code (H), which was later added to the Priestly source.[1][3] He pointed to similarities in content, such as the focus on purification in Numbers 5:1–4, chapter 19 and 31:19–24, as well as in linguistics in Numbers 10:9, 27:17, 31:6,19 and Exodus 40:15, all of which had been previously identified with the Holiness School (HS) by other scholars.[1] Some linguistic and theological features also distinguish Numbers 31 from the Priestly Torah (PT) text, such as the wrath of God, which is mentioned several times by HS but never by PT.[1] Some scholars think that the added text was written at a time when the priestly line of Phinehas' descendants was being challenged.[2]: 155 

Background edit

 
Phinehas slaying Zimri and Kozbi the Midianite (c.1590) by Joos van Winghe

Israelite–Moabite fraternisation at Peor (Numbers 25:1–9) edit

The Book of Numbers traces the origins of the Israelite–Midianite conflict in Chapters 22 through 25. The Israelites, travelling from Egypt and encamping on the eastern bank of the Jordan River across from Jericho, were on the brink of war with the Moabites (not Midianites). The Moabite king Balak hired the sorcerer Balaam to curse the Israelite soldiers from the peak of Mount Peor, but the Israelite god Yahweh forced him to instead bless the Israelites encamped at Shittim, which he did (Numbers 22–24). Due to his behavior with the Midianites, the Rabbis interpret Balaam as responsible for the behavior during the Heresy of Peor, which they consider to have been unchastity, and consequently the death of 24,000 victims of the plague which God sent as punishment. When Balaam saw that he could not curse the children of Israel, the Rabbis assert that he advised Balak, as a last resort, to tempt the Hebrew nation to immoral acts and, through these, to the worship of Baal-peor. The God of the Hebrews, adds Balaam, according to the Rabbis, hates lewdness, and idol worshipping; severe chastisement must follow [9] Thus the Israelite men began to fraternise with Moabite women by having sex with them and worshipping their gods, including Baal (Numbers 25:1–3). This angered Yahweh, and he instructed Moses to massacre all Israelite men who had done this; Moses passed on these instructions to the judges of Israel (Numbers 25:4–9).

Plague inside the Israelite camp (Numbers 25:6–18) edit

In verse 6, the narrative suddenly shifts[3] when the Israelite man Zimri brings the Midianite woman Kozbi (daughter of Midianite king Zur) to the Israelite camp, after which the Israelites are said to have been hit by a plague that left 24,000 dead. Phinehas killed Zimri[10] and Kozbi, ending the plague. Yahweh claimed that Kozbi brought this plague upon the Israelites and told them to "treat the Midianites as enemies and kill them".[11]

Interlude (Numbers 26–30) edit

The next four chapters say nothing about the Incident at Peor, except that the plague had passed (Numbers 26:1).[note 2] Yahweh instructed Moses and his priest Eleazar to take a census amongst the Israelites (Numbers 26), settled an inheritance dispute and the future succession of Moses by Joshua (Numbers 27), instructed the Israelites how to conduct certain sacrifices and festivals (Numbers 28–29), and regulated vows between men and women, and fathers and daughters (Numbers 30).[1][3]

Narrative edit

 
Five Kings of Midian Slain by Israel (1728) by Gerard Hoet

Preparations (verses 1–6) edit

In verses 1 and 2, Yahweh reminded Moses to take revenge on the Midianites as instructed in Numbers 25:16–18, as his last act before his death.[1][3] Accordingly, Moses instructed a thousand men of each of the Twelve Tribes of Israel – 12,000 in total, under Phinehas' leadership – to attack Midian.[2]

War (7–13) edit

The Israelite soldiers are narrated to have killed all Midianite men, including the five kings, as well as the sorcerer Balaam.[2] According to verse 49, the Israelites themselves suffered zero casualties.[2] All Midianite towns and camps were burnt;[11] all Midianite women, children and livestock were deported as captives[2] to the "camp on the plains of Moab, by the Jordan across from Jericho", where Moses and Eleazar received them.[2]

Killing of captive children and non-virgin women (14–18) edit

Moses was angry that the soldiers had left all women alive, saying: "They were the ones who followed Balaam's advice and enticed the Israelites to be unfaithful to Yahweh in the Peor incident, so a plague struck Yahweh's people. Now kill all the boys. And kill every woman who has slept with a man, but save for yourselves every girl who has never slept with a man."[15][11]

Ritual purification (19–24) edit

Next, Moses and Eleazar instructed the soldiers to ritually cleanse and purify themselves, the captives and all objects they had over a period of seven days. Objects mentioned are the clothes, all objects of leather, goat hair and wood, and all metal objects, specifying that all fireproof objects had to be cleansed by both fire and water, the rest only by water.[1][3]

Division of spoils of war (25–54) edit

The plunder from the Midianite campaign was "675,000 sheep, 72,000 cattle, 61,000 donkeys and 32,000 women who had never slept with a man."[2] Yahweh instructed Moses and Eleazar to divide these spoils according to a 1:1 ratio between the Israelite soldiers on the one hand, and the Israelite civilians on the other. Yahweh demanded a 0.2% share of the soldiers' half of the spoils for himself; this tribute would be given to him via the Levites, who were responsible for the care of Yahweh's tabernacle. Some of the Midianite golden jewellery plundered during the war (combined weight: about 418 pounds/190 kilograms[15]) was also offered as a gift to Yahweh "to make atonement for ourselves before Yahweh".[15][2]

Interpretation edit

Historicity and theology edit

 
The Ancient Near East around 1200 BCE during the 19th Dynasty of Egypt
 
Location of Midian in the ancient southern Transjordan region

The scholarly consensus is that this war did not take place, certainly not as narrated.[2][4]: 66  Within the wider context of the Exodus, there probably never was an invasion of Canaan (the "Promised Land") by all Israelites escaping from slavery in Egypt.[16] Scholars such as Mark S. Smith assert that Israelite culture emerged from the wider Canaanite culture surrounding it, with whom it had strong linguistic, religious and other cultural links.[17] There was no political unification of several Semitic Canaanite tribes into a single Israelite state until after 1100 BCE.[16] Although some Egyptologists such as Redford (1997), Na'aman (2011) and Bietak (2015) have argued that some Canaanites (referred to by Bietak as "Proto-Israelites") may have been deported to Egypt during the Nineteenth Dynasty's occupation and rule over Canaan under pharaoh Ramesses II (r. 1279–1213 BCE), they say there is no indication that this included all so-called "Proto-Israelites", most of whom would have experienced Egyptian rule inside Canaan itself in the late 13th century BCE.[18] Na'aman argued that the existing narrative in the collective Hebrew memory of Egyptian rule "was remodeled according to the realities of the late eighth and seventh centuries in Canaan, integrating the experience with the Assyrian oppression and deportations."[18]: 18  The modern scholarly consensus is that the biblical person of Moses is largely a mythical figure while also holding that "a Moses-like figure may have existed somewhere in the southern Transjordan in the mid-late 13th century B.C." and that archaeology is unable to confirm either way.[19][20]

The narrative of Numbers 31 specifically is one out of many in the Hebrew Bible seeking to establish the Israelites as the chosen people of the god Yahweh, who blessed them with victory in battle, health and prosperity, as long as they were faithful to his commands.[2] This second generation of Israelites suffered not a single casualty throughout Numbers 26–36, while the first generation suffered much death in the wilderness (chapters 13–14, 25).[2][note 3] The claims that 12,000 Israelite soldiers exterminated or captured the entire Midianite population and destroyed all their towns without suffering a single casualty are held to be historically impossible, and should be understood as symbolic.[2] Moreover, even other biblical books set in later times still refer to the Midianites as an independent people, such as Judges chapters 6–8, where Gideon fights them.[2] Some Biblical non-literalists hold that the author(s) wished to convey a theological message about who Yahweh, Moses, Eleazar and Phinehas were, and how powerful the Israelites would be if Yahweh was on their side.[2]

Olson (2012) noted that the name Kozbi comes from the three Hebrew consonants kzb, meaning "to lie, deceive"; the idea that Kozbi deceived the Israelites is emphasised in verse 25:18: "[The Midianites] deceived (or: 'harassed, assaulted, vexed'; נִכְּל֥וּnikkəlū) you with their tricks (בְּנִכְלֵיהֶ֛םbəniḵlêhem) in the matter of Peor and in the matter of Kozbi, the daughter of a Midianite leader, the woman who was killed when the plague came as a result of that incident."[2][22] This suggests she was not a historical character, but invented as a metaphor for danger to the Israelites.[2]

Brown (2015) described how the structure of Numbers 31 showed a pattern of 'command, obedience, extension, purification, command, obedience, extension.' Yahweh commands the Israelites through Moses to execute vengeance and divide the spoils, the Israelite soldiers obey, then do more than Yahweh commanded (extension); the purification is the only action that happens only once and functions as a bridge between the two series.[4] Both Olson and Brown noted that Moses is portrayed as remarkably passive in chapter 25 and, as he was failing to solve the problem, Phinehas had to intervene and take the initiative to slay Kozbi and Zimri, was granted the eternal priesthood and later allowed to lead the Israelites against Midian.[2]: 155 [4]: 70  Brown added that chapter 27 further undermined the political position of an increasingly disobedient Moses in favour of the priesthood, with Yahweh revealing Moses' time is up and he will soon die.[4]: 70–71  This supports the view that the added text was written at a time when the priestly line of Phinehas' descendants was being challenged, as it bolsters their legitimacy as the priestly successors of Moses.[2]: 155 

Motive edit

 
Idolatry with Baal-Peor (1970) by Phillip Medhurst
 
Zimri and Kozbi portrayed as having sex in a regular tent when Phinehas kills them (1700)[note 4]
 
Modern Tabernacle replica in the Timna Valley (2011)

Scholars disagree about the exact motive Yahweh is claimed to have had in ordering Moses to wage the War against the Midianites. Evidently, something that the Israelite man Zimri and especially the Midianite princess Kozbi did was at the root of the conflict, though what offence they allegedly committed is a source of scholarly confusion. It is not clear from chapter 25 alone whether Kozbi – as a Midianite – had anything to do with the Moabites, nor whether she had sex with Zimri, nor whether he had started worshipping other gods because of her, as other Israelite men had with Moabite women according to verse 25:1. Nor is it clear whether she spread an existing plague to the Israelites, or that Yahweh cursed them with a new plague as a punishment for Zimri fraternising with Kozbi, or violating the sanctity of the Tabernacle.[3]

Questions surrounding the Balaam/Moabite connection edit

After the Israelite victory over the Midianites six chapters later, Moses is said to have made the following connection: "[The Midianite women] were the ones who followed Balaam's advice and enticed the Israelites to be unfaithful to Yahweh in the Peor incident, so that a plague struck Yahweh's people."[15] This contradicts verses 25:1–3, which states the women were Moabites,[note 5] and verses 25:16–18, in which Yahweh himself claimed that the plague did not hit the Israelite camp until the Midianite princess Kozbi entered it (without reference to sex or foreign gods worship), leading Yahweh to instruct Moses to kill the Midianites, not the Moabites.[note 6] The fact that the Moabites and Midianites are equated as having committed the same offences, and Moses blames Balaam (a Moabite) for whatever the Midianite women (or rather, a single Midianite woman, who had already been slain) did, has puzzled scholars.[3]

Knohl (1995) argued that the original non-P text (preserved in 25:1–5) had Moabite women as the main characters, but the DH editor (seeking to legitimise Phinehas and his descendants' claims to the priesthood) replaced them with Midianite women in a sloppy manner so that the resulting new text (25:6–18 and all of chapter 31) confused the two tribes.[1] Olson (2012) agreed, writing: "Some of these disjunctions within the narrative may have resulted from the combining of earlier and later traditions into one story."[2]: 155  Ellicott (1897), however, proposed that Balaam entered into Midianite service after being dismissed by the Moabite king Balak. Nonetheless, he elaborates that the Midianites in Numbers 31 were wealthy tribes that lived in the plains east of Moab. He also observes that the Ammonites joined the Moabites in corrupting Israel, according to Deuteronomy 23:3-4. [24][25][26] Barnes likewise suggests that the Peor incident was only perpetrated by the Midianites.[27] Thus, the appearance of the Moabites in Numbers 25:1 is most likely due to the Moabites initiating the incident or being close courtiers of Balak, according to Benson.[28] Poole on the other hand affirms the connection between the Midianites and Moabites but argues that the Moabites were spared due to being descendants of Lot. Alternatively, he argues that the Midianites sinned more egregiously than the Moabites in the Peor incident, thus warranting their extermination.[29] Likewise, Coke describes the Midianites as 'cruel and odious' offenders who were willing to prostitute a daughter of an 'honorable family' to disgrace and destroy Israel. [30]

Foreign idolatry hypothesis edit

Hamilton (2005) concluded that Yahweh commanded holy war against Midian "in retaliation for the latter's seduction of Israel into acts of harlotry and idolatry".[31] Olson (2012) stated: "The inclusion of the women of Midian in enticing the Israelites into the worship of an alien god became the reason that justified the later assault against Midian in Numbers 31."[2]: 155  He also pointed to Psalm 106:28–31,[2]: 155  which claims that the plague broke out due to Yahweh being angry at the Israelites for "eating sacrifices offered to lifeless gods" at Peor.[32] Finally, Olson argued that Moses' apparent failure to punish the idolaters (25:4–5) is what motivated Phinehas to take matters into his own hands by killing Zimri and Kozbi.[2]: 155  Brown (2015) stated: "In Num 31:16, Moses justifies his command by appealing to the Midianites' role in the apostasy and plague recounted in Numbers 25, and commentators have generally accepted that explanation and concluded that the text portrays the utter destruction of Midian as the fulfillment of YHWH's call for 'vengeance'."[4]: 66 

Sexual transgression hypothesis edit

Some commentators concluded that motive for the War against the Midianites was that Zimri and Kozbi[33] had illicit sex, with Keil and Delitzsch (1870) writing: "[Zimri brought Kozbi] into the camp of the Israelites, before the eyes of Moses and all the congregation, to commit adultery with her in his tent".[34] Jamieson-Fausset-Brown (1871) as well as Keil and Delitzsch (1870) suggested that the Midianites had instigated the Moabite women to seduce the Israelite men (verses 1 and 2), and so only the Midianites were to atone for the 'wickedness' which 'violated the divinity and honour' of Yahweh, not the Moabites.[24] Jamieson-Fausset-Brown added that Yahweh wanted to spare the Moabites because they were the descendants of Lot[note 7] (Deuteronomy 2:9).[24] Victor P. Hamilton concluded in 2005 that Yahweh commanded holy war against Midian "in retaliation for the latter's seduction of Israel into acts of harlotry and idolatry".[31] Johann Peter Lange believed that young Midianite boys were also guilty of 'corrupting the Israelitish women', thus warranting their execution in Numbers 31:13-18.[35]

Tabernacle desecration hypothesis edit

Sarah Shectman argued in 2009 that Zimri and Kozbi were not guilty of sexual transgressions at all; sex with a foreigner is never even considered a capital offence by the Holiness code (H).[3] Rather, they had come too close to the holy Tabernacle, also called the 'Tent of the Congregation'.[3] She based this on the Hebrew verb מָסַרmasar and the Hebrew noun מָ֫עַלma-‘al used in verse 31:16 for 'encroachment', which has the connotation of 'close proximity' and 'violation of priestly authority'.[3] According to Shectman, the resulting combination of לִמְסָר־ מַ֥עַלlim-sār-ma-‘al means "to instigate sacrilege/trespass".[3]: 166  In several other places in the Book of Numbers (e.g. 18:5–7), the stated punishment for encroachment on certain parts of the Tabernacle by non-Israelites or non-Levite Israelites is death.[3] Shectman also noted that Numbers 8:19 claimed that a "plague will strike the Israelites when they go near the sanctuary",[36] and in Numbers 16:42–50[37] (or Numbers 17:7–15 in some Bible editions[38]), this actually happened and 14,700 Israelites died of a plague before Aaron stopped it by making an incense offering to Yahweh.[3] In an incident soon after (Numbers 17:10–13[39] or Numbers 17:25–28[38]), the Israelites panicked when Moses entered the Tabernacle, fearing they were all going to die.[3] She concluded that Numbers 25:6–18 served three purposes: illustrating the encroachment law, legitimising Phinehas' ascendancy to the high priesthood, and justifying the War against the Midianites in Numbers 31.[3] Unlike the non-P text in 25:1–5, there is no indication that there is anything particularly wrong with Kozbi as a woman or a foreigner, nor are she and Zimri accused of sexual transgression; they are both simply people from categories forbidden to encroach on the Tabernacle. Only the fact that she is a Midianite princess is used as a pretext for the war against the Midianites.[3]

No connection to Baal-peor incident edit

Based on his exegesis of Joshua 24:9, Ellicott (1905) argued that Balaam's curse against Israel and the war in Numbers 31 were two separate acts of hostility initiated by Balak. However, he admits that the Hebrew Bible does not sufficiently indicate whether this was the case. [40]Balak's motives for waging war against Israel range from pure hatred[41] to self-defense.[42]

Ethics edit

Scholarly discussions edit

Susan Niditch explained in 1995 that the 'priestly ideology of war in Numbers 31' regarded all enemies as unclean, and therefore 'deserving of God's vengeance', except those still in possession of feminine virginity: "Female children who have not lain with a man are clean slates in terms of their identity, unmarked by the enemy, and, after a period of purification, can be absorbed into the people Israel."[43]

Hamilton in 2005 called Numbers 31 a "gruesome chapter, where only young virgin girls may be spared ..., and not even young boys are exempted". He argued that the two major concerns of Number 31 are the idea that war is a defiling activity, but Israelite soldiers need to be ritually pure, so they may only fight wars for a holy cause, and are required to cleanse themselves afterwards to restore their ritual purity.[31] The Israelite campaign against Midian was blessed by Yahweh, and could therefore be considered a holy war.[31] Simultaneously, however, the Israelite soldiers are said to be defiled by the killing, and in need of a seven-day purification of their bodies, clothes and metal possessions, and to require "atonement for ourselves before Yahweh" (verse 50).[31] Thus, the use of military violence, even if divinely mandated, is cast as a negative act that, in order to be erased, requires ritual cleansing of the body and possessions, as well as sacrifice in the form of 0.2% share of the soldiers' spoils as a tribute to Yahweh.[31][1][3]

Dennis T. Olson wrote in 2012 that "the bulk of the chapter deals with the purification of soldiers and booty from the impurity of war and the allotment of the spoils", while "the actual battle is summarized in two verses".[2] The Israelite soldiers' actions closely followed the holy war regulations set out in Deuteronomy 20:14: "You may, however, take as your booty the women, the children, livestock, and everything else in the town, all its spoil", but in this case, Moses was angry because he also wanted the male children and non-virgin women to be killed, a marked departure from these regulations according to Olson.[2] He concluded: "Many aspects of this holy war text may be troublesome to a contemporary reader. But understood within the symbolic world of the ancient writers of Numbers, the story of the war against the Midianites is a kind of dress rehearsal that builds confidence and hope in anticipation of the actual conquest of Canaan that lay ahead."[2]

Ken Brown in 2015 stated: "This command to kill all but the virgin girls is without precedent in the Pentateuch. However, [Judges 21] precisely parallels Moses's command. ... Like Num 25, the story recounted in Judges 19–21 centers on the danger of apostasy, but its tale of civil war and escalating violence also emphasizes the tragedy that can result from the indiscriminate application of [vengeance]. The whole account is highly ironic: the Israelites set out to avenge the rape of one woman, only to authorize the rapes of six hundred more. They regret the results of one slaughter, so they commit another to repair it."[4]: 77–78 

Keith Allan in 2019 remarked: "God's work or not, this is military behaviour that would be tabooed today and might lead to a war crimes trial."[11]

According to the Book of Exodus, the Midianites had sheltered Moses during his 40-year voluntary exile after killing an Egyptian (Exodus 2:11–21), the Midianite priest Jethro/Reuel/Hobab[note 8] acted positively towards Yahweh in Exodus chapter 12, and his daughter Zipporah became Moses' wife (Exodus 2:21).[note 9] Scholars find it difficult to explain how Moses commanded the Israelites to exterminate and enslave the entire Midianite people while having a Midianite wife and father-in-law.[2]

Religious discussions edit

 
Preface of Llandaff's Apology for the Bible, which tried to refute Paine's claims in The Age of Reason that Numbers 31 proved Moses to be 'the most detestable villain' in history[44]

Numbers 31 and similar biblical episodes are sometimes referred to in religious morality debates between apologists and critics of religion. Rabbi and scholar Shaye J. D. Cohen (1999) argued that "the implications of Numbers 31:17–18 are unambiguous ... we may be sure that for yourselves means that the warriors may 'use' their virgin captives sexually", adding that Shimon bar Yochai understood the passage 'correctly'. On the other hand, he noted that other rabbinical commentaries such as B. and Y. Qiddushin and Yevamot claimed "that for yourselves meant 'as servants'. Later apologists, both Jewish and Christian, adopted the latter interpretation."[45] The following command to purify the Midianite girls and the Israelite soldiers in Numbers 31:19 is also used to argue that the Israelites recognized war as being "destructive".[46]

In The Age of Reason (1795), Thomas Paine wrote about the chapter: "Among the detestable villains that in any period of the world would have disgraced the name of man, it is impossible to find a greater than Moses, if this account be true. Here is an order to butcher the boys, to massacre the mothers, and debauch the daughters."[47][44] Richard Watson, the Bishop of Llandaff, sought to refute Paine's arguments:[44]

I see nothing in this proceeding, but good policy, combined with mercy. The young men might have become dangerous avengers of, what they would esteem, their country's wrongs; the mothers might have again allured the Israelites to the love of licentious pleasure and the practice of idolatry, and brought another plague upon the congregation; but the young maidens, not being polluted by the flagitious habits of their mothers, nor likely to create disturbance by rebellion, were kept alive. You [Paine] give a different turn to the matter; you say—"that thirty-two thousand women-children were consigned to debauchery by the order of Moses."—Prove this, and I will allow that Moses was the horrid monster you make him—prove this, and I will allow that the Bible is what you call it—a book of lies, wickedness, and blasphemy" ... The women-children were not reserved for the purposes of debauchery, but of slavery;—a custom abhorrent from our manners, but every where practiced in former times, and still practiced in countries where the benignity of the Christian religion has not softened the ferocity of human nature.

— Richard Watson, the Bishop of Llandaff, An Apology for the Bible, in a series of letters, addressed to Thomas Paine, author of a book entitled, The Age of Reason (1796)[48]

Debating Baptist minister Al Sharpton in 2007, atheist writer Christopher Hitchens argued that the Binding of Isaac and the extermination of the Amalekites were immoral divine commandments in the Old Testament, and recalled the previous debate: "The Bishop of Llandaff, in an argument with Thomas Paine, once said, 'Well, when it says keep the women,' as Paine had pointed out, he said, 'I'm sure God didn't mean just to keep them for immoral purposes.' But what does the Bishop of Llandaff know about that? It says, 'Kill all the men, kill all the children, and keep the virgins.' I think I know what they had in mind. I don't think it's moral teaching."[49]

In 2010, Hitchens mocked the Ten Commandments for banning adultery but not rape: "Then again, what about rape? It seems to be very strongly recommended, along with genocide, slavery, and infanticide, in Numbers 31:1–18, and surely constitutes a rather extreme version of sex outside marriage."[50]

In the 2006 documentary The Root of All Evil? Part 2: The Virus of Faith, Richard Dawkins condemned Moses' acts in Numbers 31, asking: "How is this story of Moses morally distinguishable from Hitler's rape of Poland, or Saddam Hussein's massacre of the Kurds and the Marsh Arabs?" He contrasted this behaviour with Moses' own Commandment of 'Thou shalt not kill'.[51][52]

Seth Andrews wrote in Deconverted (2012) that Numbers 31 was one of several parts of the Bible that made him seriously question the Christian God's ethics, claiming that his Christian friends and family did not have satisfactory answers, and ultimately did not really care to think about the moral implications of such texts.[53]

In 2012, M. A. Neeper called Numbers 31:17–18 'appalling': "Instead of trying to "save" the people of Midian, [Moses] orders many of their deaths. The "lucky" people, the virgin girls who are allowed to live, are made into sex slaves for disgusting, homicidal post hoc mercenaries that do all of their bidding from a man who says that a god that (no one can see) tells them to do. This is one of the most sickening things in the so-called 'Holy' Bible."[54]

Christian apologist John Berea speculated in 2017 that Balaam was 'dismissed without pay by king Balak of Moab', and then set up the Midianite women to seduce the Israelite men to sexual immorality and idolatry in the same manner as he had previously done with the Moabite women. The execution of Midianite women who had had sex with (Israelite) men was therefore a just punishment for 'compromising the men of Israel', while turning prisoners into sex slaves was supposedly 'inconsistent with the many other laws against sexual immorality'. Berea concluded that making the surviving virgin women and girls "as servants and integrating them into Israel may have been the best among lousy alternatives".[55]

Fate of the 32 virgins edit

It is not clear what happened to Yahweh's 0.1% share of the spoils of war, including 808 animals (verses 36–39) and 32 human virgin women/girls (verse 40), who are entrusted to the Levites, who are responsible for maintaining Yahweh's tabernacle (verses 30 and 47).[note 10] Two Hebrew terms are used to indicate they are a 'tribute' or 'levy' that is 'offered' or 'contributed' to Yahweh:

  • מֶ֙כֶס֙me·ḵes or ham·me·ḵes (verses 28, 37 and 41), generally translated as 'tribute', 'tax' or 'levy'.[57][58] Outside these three occurrences in Numbers 31, it appears nowhere else in the Hebrew Bible. It is also attested in Ugaritic as mekes and in Akkadian as miksu.[59] An inflection of mekes is וּמִכְסָ֥ם ū·miḵ·sām, occurring only in verses 38, 39 and 40.[60]
  • תְּרוּמַ֥תtə-rū-maṯ (verses 29 and 41); the term terumah (plural: terumat) is generally translated as '(heave) offering' or 'contribution' and is associated with heave offerings.[61]

Some scholars have concluded that these 32 human virgins were to be sacrificed to Yahweh as a burnt offering along with the animals. For example, in 1854, Carl Falck-Lebahn compared the incident with the near-sacrifice of Iphigenia in Greek mythology, claiming: "According to Levit. xxvii, 29, sacrifices of human victims were clearly established among the Jews." After recounting the story of Jephthah's daughter in Judges 11, he reasoned: "the Jews (according to Numbers, chap 31) took 61,000 asses, 72,000 oxen, 675,000 sheep, and 32,000 virgins (whose fathers, mothers, brothers &c., were butchered). There were 16,000 girls for the soldiers, 16,000 for the priests; and on the soldiers' share there was levied a tribute of 32 virgins for the Lord. What became of them? The Jews had no nuns. What was the Lord's share in all the wars of the Hebrews, if it was not blood?"[62]

Carl Plfuger in 1995 cited Exodus 17, Numbers 31, Deuteronomy 13 and 20 as examples of human sacrifice demanded by Yahweh, adding that according to 1 Samuel 15, Saul "lost his kingship of Israel because he had withheld the human sacrifice that Yahweh, the god of Israel, expected as his due after a war."[63] Susan Niditch remarked in 1995 that, at the time of her writing, "increasingly scholars suggest that Israelites engaged in state-sponsored rituals of child sacrifice".[43]: 404  Although "[s]uch ritual activity is condemned by Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and other biblical writers (e.g., Lev 18:21, Deut 12:31, 18:10; Jer 7:30–31, 19:5; Ezek 20:31), and the seventh-century reformer king Josiah sought to put an end to it, [the] notion of a god who desires human sacrifice may well have been an important thread in Israelite belief."[43]: 404–405  She cited the Mesha Stele as evidence that the neighbouring Moabites performed human sacrifices with prisoners of war to their god Chemosh after successfully attacking an Israelite city in the 9th century BCE.[43]: 405  Before the 7th-century BCE reformers of king Josiah of the southern Kingdom of Judah tried to end the practice of human/child sacrifice, it appears to have been commonplace in Israelite military culture.[43]: 406 

Other scholars have concluded that the virgins and animals were kept alive and used by the Levites as their share of the spoils. Some even posited that human sacrifice (especially child sacrifice) was foreign to the Israelites, thus making the possibility of sacrificing the Midianite virgins unfeasible.[43]: 404  Carl Freidrich Keil and Franz Delitzsch argued in 1870 that the 32 were enslaved:

Of the one half the priests received 675 head of small cattle, 72 oxen, 61 asses, and 32 maidens for Jehovah; and these Moses handed over to Eleazar, in all probability for the maintenance of the priests, in the same manner as the tithes (Numbers 18:26–28, and Leviticus 27:30–33), so that they might put the cattle into their own flocks (Numbers 35:3), and slay oxen or sheep as they required them, whilst they sold the asses, and made slaves of the gifts; and not in the character of a vow, in which case the clean animals would have had to be sacrificed, and the unclean animals, as well as the human beings, to be redeemed (Leviticus 27:2–13).[64]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Yahweh's name, written as 'YHWH' in the Hebrew Bible, is most typically printed as LORD in English-language bibles. See Names of God in Judaism and Names of God in Christianity.
  2. ^ In most English Bible translations, Numbers 25 only has 18 verses, and the words '(And it came to pass) after the plague,...' are included in verse 1 of chapter 26.[12] However, in Hebrew source texts such as the Leningrad Codex, these words (way-hî ’a-ḥă-rê ham-mag-gê-p̄āh p̄) are included in chapter 25 as verse 19,[13] therefore a limited amount of translations such as the Complete Jewish Bible (CJB) and the New American Bible Revised Edition (NABRE) have counted '(And it came to pass) after the plague,...' as 'Numbers 25:19',[14] and this sentence continues in Numbers 26:1 as '...the Lord said to Moses and Eleazar, son of Aaron the priest:...' (NABRE).[12]
  3. ^ The generations concept was first introduced by Jacob Milgrom (1990), who divided the Book of Numbers in three parts: the "generation of the Exodus" spanned the first two parts at Sinai (Num 1:1–10:10) and Kadesh (Num 10:11–22:1), and the "generation of the conquest" took up the third part in Moab/Transjordan (Num 22:2–36:13).[21]
  4. ^ In this interpretation of Numbers 25, Phinehas killed the Israelite man Zimri and the Midianite princess Kozbi (verse 7–8) as they were having sex in an ordinary tent in the Israelite military camp (verse 6) at Shittim near Mount Peor (verses 1–3). Outside the tents, people lay dead; apparently these are Israelites struck by the plague (verses 8–9). On the edge of the camp, soldiers stand on guard. Just outside the camp, a number of people are impaled (verse 4–5): the chiefs of the Israelite men, who engaged in sexual immorality with Moabite women and worshipped their gods (verse 1–3); this last act appears to be shown in the far background, with people on a mountain gathering around a pole, perhaps a Moabite godly idol. Engraving from Historie des Ouden en Nieuwen Testaments: verrykt met meer dan vierhonderd printverbeeldingen in koper gesneeden("History of the Old and New Testaments: enriched with more than four hundred printed illustrations cut in copper") (1700), published by David Martin in Amsterdam.
  5. ^ "While Israel was staying in Shittim, the men began to indulge in sexual immorality with Moabite women, who invited them to the sacrifices to their gods. The people ate the sacrificial meal and bowed down before these gods. So Israel yoked themselves to the Baal of Peor. And Yahweh's anger burned against them." (Numbers 25:1–3 New International Version)[23]
  6. ^ "Yahweh said to Moses: 'Treat the Midianites as enemies and kill them. They treated you as enemies when they deceived you in the Peor incident involving their sister Kozbi, the daughter of a Midianite leader, the woman who was killed when the plague came as a result of that incident.'" (Numbers 25:16–18 New International Version).[22]
  7. ^ 2 Peter 2:4–10 claims Lot was 'a righteous man', and that this is the reason why the god Yahweh had spared him and his family when he destroyed the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah in Genesis 19.
  8. ^ Moses' father-in-law is variously identified as Jethro (Exodus 3:1, 4:18, 18:1–12), Reuel (Exodus 2:18; Numbers 10:29) or Hobab (Judges 4:11); Hobab is also identified as Reuel's son (Numbers 10:29). All three are identified as Midianites.
  9. ^ Although Numbers 12:1 refers to Moses' wife as a Cushite (כֻשִׁ֖יתḵu-šîṯ), it is unclear if this refers to Zipporah or another unnamed second wife of Moses; some scholars think Cushite refers to her beauty rather than her ethnicity.
  10. ^ For example, Methodist theologian Joel L. Watts (2019) wrote: "Only 32 men [sic] were given to the priests for the deity, leaving us to wonder if this surrendering was to die or to work."[56]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Knohl, Israel (2007). The Sanctuary of Silence: The Priestly Torah and the Holiness School. Winona Lake, Indiana: Eisenbrauns. pp. 96–98. ISBN 9781575061313. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Olson, Dennis T. (2012). "Numbers 31. War against the Midianites: Judgment for Past Sin, Foretaste of a Future Conquest". Numbers. Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John Knox Press. pp. 176–180. ISBN 9780664238827. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Shectman, Sarah (2009). Women in the Pentateuch: A Feminist and Source-critical Analysis. Sheffield: Sheffield Phoenix Press. pp. 158–166. ISBN 9781906055721. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Brown, Ken (2015). "Vengeance and Vindication in Numbers 31". Journal of Biblical Literature. 134 (1). The Society of Biblical Literature: 65–84. doi:10.15699/jbl.1341.2015.2561. JSTOR 10.15699/jbl.1341.2015.2561. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  5. ^ Enns 2012, p. 5.
  6. ^ Finkelstein, I., Silberman, NA., The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts, p.68–69
  7. ^ McDermott, John J. (2002). Reading the Pentateuch: a historical introduction. Pauline Press. p. 21. ISBN 978-0-8091-4082-4. Retrieved 3 October 2010.
  8. ^ McDermott 2002, p. 21.
  9. ^ (San. 106a; Yer. ib. x. 28d; Num. R. l.c.).
  10. ^ "The Eleventh Plague footnote 12 "...'I am the Lord' implies: I am He who inflicted punishment upon Samson, Amnon, and Zimri, and who will inflict punishment upon any one who will act in accordance with their practices..."". 24 June 2009.
  11. ^ a b c d Allan, Keith (2019). The Oxford Handbook of Taboo Words and Language. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 15. ISBN 9780198808190. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  12. ^ a b "Numbers 26:1 in all translations". Bible Gateway. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  13. ^ "Numbers 25:18 Hebrew Text Analysis". Biblehub.com. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  14. ^ "Numbers 25:19 in all translations". Bible Gateway. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  15. ^ a b c d "Numbers 31 (New International Version)". Biblehub.com. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  16. ^ a b Brian Dunning (2 February 2010). "Did Jewish Slaves Build the Pyramids?". Skeptoid. Retrieved 20 March 2021. Israel itself did not exist until approximately 1100 BCE when various Semitic tribes joined in Canaan to form a single independent kingdom, at least 600 years after the completion of the last of Egypt's large pyramids. Thus it is not possible for any Israelites to have been in Egypt at the time, either slave or free; as there was not yet any such thing as an Israelite.
  17. ^ Smith, Mark S. (2002). The Early History of God: Yahweh and Other Deities in Ancient Israel. San Francisco/New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-0606-7416-8.
  18. ^ a b Bietak, Manfred (2015). "On the Historicity of the Exodus: What Egyptology Today Can Contribute to Assessing the Biblical Account of the Sojourn in Egypt". Israel's Exodus in Transdisciplinary Perspective. Quantitative Methods in the Humanities and Social Sciences. Springer. pp. 17–35. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-04768-3_2. ISBN 978-3-319-04767-6. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  19. ^ William G. Dever (2001). What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It?: What Archeology Can Tell Us About the Reality of Ancient Israel. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 99. ISBN 978-0-8028-2126-3.
  20. ^ Dever, William G. (1993). "What Remains of the House That Albright Built?". The Biblical Archaeologist. 56 (1). University of Chicago Press: 25–35. doi:10.2307/3210358. ISSN 0006-0895. JSTOR 3210358. S2CID 166003641. the overwhelming scholarly consensus today is that Moses is a mythical figure
  21. ^ Ehrlich, Carl S. (1995). "Review: NUMBERS. The JPS Torah Commentary: The Traditional Hebrew Text with the New JPS Translation by Jacob Milgrom". Hebrew Studies. 36. National Association of Professors of Hebrew: 171–174. doi:10.1353/hbr.1995.0030. JSTOR 27909476. S2CID 201795508. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  22. ^ a b "Numbers 25:18 Hebrew text analysis". Biblehub.com. 2011. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
    "Numbers 25:18 English translations". Biblehub.com. 2011. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  23. ^ "Numbers 25 (New International Version)". Biblehub.com. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  24. ^ a b c "Numbers 31 Commentaries". Biblehub.com. 2011. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  25. ^ . Biblehub.com. 2024. Archived from the original on 5 March 2024.
  26. ^ . Biblehub.com. 2024. Archived from the original on 5 March 2024.
  27. ^ "Numbers 31 Commentary". Biblehub.com. 2021.
  28. ^ "Numbers 25 Commentary". Biblehub.com. 2021.
  29. ^ "Numbers 31 Commentary". Biblehub.com. 2021.
  30. ^ . StudyLight.org. 2022. Archived from the original on 27 September 2023.
  31. ^ a b c d e f Hamilton, Victor P. (2005). Handbook on the Pentateuch: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Books. p. 371. ISBN 9781585583003. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  32. ^ "Psalm 106". Biblehub.com. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  33. ^ "The Eleventh Plague footnote 12 "...'I am the Lord' implies: I am He who inflicted punishment upon Samson, Amnon, and Zimri, and who will inflict punishment upon any one who will act in accordance with their practices..."". 24 June 2009.
  34. ^ "Numbers 25:6 Commentaries". Biblehub.com. 2011. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  35. ^ . StudyLight.org. 2022. Archived from the original on 11 February 2024.
  36. ^ "Numbers 8:19 English translations". Biblehub.com. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  37. ^ "Numbers 16 (New International Version)". Biblehub.com. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  38. ^ a b "Numeri 17 (Nieuwe Bijbelvertaling)". debijbel.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  39. ^ "Numbers 17 (New International Version)". Biblehub.com. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  40. ^ . Biblehub.com. 2024. Archived from the original on 11 February 2024.
  41. ^ . Biblehub.com. 2024. Archived from the original on 11 February 2024.
  42. ^ . Biblehub.com. 2024. Archived from the original on 11 February 2024.
  43. ^ a b c d e f Niditch, Susan (1995). (PDF). Word & World. 15 (4). Luther Seminary: 406. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 January 2022. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  44. ^ a b c Prickett, Stephen (March 2019). "Chapter 18 – The Bible". William Blake in Context. Cambridge University Press: 165–172. doi:10.1017/9781316534946.019. ISBN 9781316534946. S2CID 240910636. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  45. ^ Cohen, Shaye J. D. (1999). The Beginnings of Jewishness: Boundaries, Varieties, Uncertainties. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. pp. 255–256. ISBN 9780520926271. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  46. ^ "Numbers 31:19 Dr. Constable's Expository Notes". StudyLight.org.
  47. ^ Thomas Paine, The Age of Reason, Part II Chapter I
  48. ^ Watson, Richard (1797). An Apology for the Bible, in a series of letters, addressed to Thomas Paine, author of a book entitled, The Age of Reason. London: T. Evans. pp. 26–27. Retrieved 20 March 2021. (8th edition)
  49. ^ "Christopher Hitchens and Al Sharpton A Debate: God Is Not Great" (PDF). Celeste Bartos Forum. New York Public Library. 7 May 2007. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  50. ^ Christopher Hitchens (4 March 2010). "The New Commandments". Vanity Fair. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  51. ^ Dawkins, Richard (January 2006). "The Root of All Evil? - Part 2: The Virus of Faith". The Root of All Evil?. Episode 2. Giordano Bruno Foundation. Event occurs at 26:52. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  52. ^ Parsley, Rod (2009). Culturally Incorrect: How Clashing Worldviews Affect Your Future. Nashville, Tennessee: Thomas Nelson. p. 21. ISBN 9781418572075. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  53. ^ Andrews, Seth (2012). Deconverted. Outskirts Press. ISBN 978-1-4787-1656-3.
  54. ^ Neeper, M. A. (2012). The Eyes of an Atheist: A Collection of Responses to Common Theistic Arguments. Trafford Publishing. pp. 28–29. ISBN 9781466946903. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  55. ^ Berea, John (2017). "Ancient Israel: Morality of the Conquest of Canaan". Berean Archive. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  56. ^ Watts, Joel L. (2019). Jesus as Divine Suicide: The Death of the Messiah in Galatians. Eugene, Oregon: Wipf and Stock. p. 71. ISBN 9781532657184. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  57. ^ "me·ḵes – Englishman's Concordance". Biblehub.com. 2011. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  58. ^ "ham·me·ḵes – Englishman's Concordance". Biblehub.com. 2011. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  59. ^ Keener, Craig S.; Walton, John H. (2017). NKJV, Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible, eBook: Bringing to Life the Ancient World of Scripture. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan. p. 750. ISBN 9780310003618. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  60. ^ "ū·miḵ·sām – Englishman's Concordance". Biblehub.com. 2011. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  61. ^ "tə·rū·maṯ – Englishman's Concordance". Biblehub.com. 2011. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  62. ^ Carl, Falck-Lebahn (1854). Selections from the German poets, with interlinear tr., notes and complete vocabularies, and a dissertation on mythology, by Falck Lebahn. London: Clarke, Beeton, & Co. p. 291. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  63. ^ Pfluger, Carl (1995). "Progress, Irony and Human Sacrifice". The Hudson Review. 48 (1): 72. doi:10.2307/3852059. JSTOR 3852059. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  64. ^ "Numbers 31:40 Commentaries". Biblehub.com. 2011. Retrieved 17 March 2021.

Literature edit

  • Enns, Peter (2012). The Evolution of Adam. Baker Books. ISBN 9781587433153.
  • Knohl, Israel (1995). The Sanctuary of Silence: The Priestly Torah and the Holiness School. Augsburg Fortress. p. 97.
  • Niditch, Susan (1993). "War, Women, and Defilement in Numbers 31". War in the Hebrew Bible: A Study in the Ethics of Violence. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 39–57. ISBN 9780195076387.
  • Noth, Martin (1968). Numbers: a commentary. Westminster John Knox Press. p. 229. ISBN 978-0664223205.

External links edit

  • Jewish translations:
    • Bamidbar - Numbers - Chapter 31 (Judaica Press) translation [with Rashi's commentary] at Chabad.org
  • Christian translations:
    • Online Bible at GospelHall.org (ESV, KJV, Darby, American Standard Version, Bible in Basic English)
    • Numbers chapter 31. Bible Gateway

numbers, relevant, weekly, torah, portion, matot, 31st, chapter, book, numbers, fourth, book, pentateuch, torah, central, part, hebrew, bible, testament, sacred, text, judaism, christianity, scholars, such, israel, knohl, dennis, olson, name, this, chapter, ag. For the relevant weekly Torah portion see Matot Numbers 31 is the 31st chapter of the Book of Numbers the fourth book of the Pentateuch Torah the central part of the Hebrew Bible Old Testament a sacred text in Judaism and Christianity Scholars such as Israel Knohl and Dennis T Olson name this chapter the War against the Midianites 1 2 Numbers 31 chapter 30chapter 32 Midianite women children and livestock taken captive by Israelite soldiers after all Midianite men had been killed and their towns burnt Watercolour by James Tissot c 1900 BookBook of NumbersHebrew Bible partTorahOrder in the Hebrew part4CategoryTorahChristian Bible partOld TestamentOrder in the Christian part4 Set in the southern Transjordnian regions of Moab and Midian it narrates the Israelites waging war against the Midianites commanded by Phinehas and Moses They killed the men including their five kings and Balaam burnt their settlements and took captive the women children and livestock Moses commanded the Israelites to kill the boys and women who had sex with men and spare the virgin girls for themselves The spoils of war were then divided between Eleazar the Levitical priesthood soldiers and Yahweh 3 note 1 Much scholarly and religious controversy exists surrounding the authorship meaning and ethics of this chapter of Numbers 3 It is closely connected to Numbers 25 4 69 Contents 1 Authorship 2 Background 2 1 Israelite Moabite fraternisation at Peor Numbers 25 1 9 2 2 Plague inside the Israelite camp Numbers 25 6 18 2 3 Interlude Numbers 26 30 3 Narrative 3 1 Preparations verses 1 6 3 2 War 7 13 3 3 Killing of captive children and non virgin women 14 18 3 4 Ritual purification 19 24 3 5 Division of spoils of war 25 54 4 Interpretation 4 1 Historicity and theology 4 2 Motive 4 2 1 Questions surrounding the Balaam Moabite connection 4 2 2 Foreign idolatry hypothesis 4 2 3 Sexual transgression hypothesis 4 2 4 Tabernacle desecration hypothesis 4 2 5 No connection to Baal peor incident 4 3 Ethics 4 3 1 Scholarly discussions 4 3 2 Religious discussions 4 4 Fate of the 32 virgins 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Literature 9 External linksAuthorship editSee also Documentary hypothesis The majority of modern biblical scholars believe that the Torah the books of Genesis Exodus Leviticus Numbers and Deuteronomy written in Classical Hebrew reached its present form in the post Exilic period i e after c 520 BCE based on pre existing written and oral traditions as well as contemporary geographical and political realities 5 6 7 Numbers is a Priestly redaction i e editing of a non Priestly original 8 Scholars generally recognise that mentions of the Midianites in chapters Numbers 22 24 are secondary Priestly P additions 3 They also generally agree that Numbers 25 1 5 contains an earlier version of the story involving the women of Moab for which the Israelite chiefs are punished by the judges This earlier version was later augmented by the account in Numbers 25 6 18 with the Midianite women and Phinehas priesthood as their new focus perhaps using elements from Psalm 106 28 31 to work with 2 155 These additions as well as the mention of a Midianite in chapter 25 in a story about the Moabites may have been an attempt by a later editor to create a connection between Moab and Midian 3 Martin Noth argued that the author of chapter 31 was probably aware of the combined non P P H text with the Moabite Midianite connection in chapter 25 and probably knew the entire composite Pentateuch therefore Numbers 31 was written in whole or in part by an author writing later than regular P 3 Israel Knohl 1995 argued Numbers 31 was in fact part of the Holiness code H which was later added to the Priestly source 1 3 He pointed to similarities in content such as the focus on purification in Numbers 5 1 4 chapter 19 and 31 19 24 as well as in linguistics in Numbers 10 9 27 17 31 6 19 and Exodus 40 15 all of which had been previously identified with the Holiness School HS by other scholars 1 Some linguistic and theological features also distinguish Numbers 31 from the Priestly Torah PT text such as the wrath of God which is mentioned several times by HS but never by PT 1 Some scholars think that the added text was written at a time when the priestly line of Phinehas descendants was being challenged 2 155 Background edit nbsp Phinehas slaying Zimri and Kozbi the Midianite c 1590 by Joos van Winghe Israelite Moabite fraternisation at Peor Numbers 25 1 9 edit The Book of Numbers traces the origins of the Israelite Midianite conflict in Chapters 22 through 25 The Israelites travelling from Egypt and encamping on the eastern bank of the Jordan River across from Jericho were on the brink of war with the Moabites not Midianites The Moabite king Balak hired the sorcerer Balaam to curse the Israelite soldiers from the peak of Mount Peor but the Israelite god Yahweh forced him to instead bless the Israelites encamped at Shittim which he did Numbers 22 24 Due to his behavior with the Midianites the Rabbis interpret Balaam as responsible for the behavior during the Heresy of Peor which they consider to have been unchastity and consequently the death of 24 000 victims of the plague which God sent as punishment When Balaam saw that he could not curse the children of Israel the Rabbis assert that he advised Balak as a last resort to tempt the Hebrew nation to immoral acts and through these to the worship of Baal peor The God of the Hebrews adds Balaam according to the Rabbis hates lewdness and idol worshipping severe chastisement must follow 9 Thus the Israelite men began to fraternise with Moabite women by having sex with them and worshipping their gods including Baal Numbers 25 1 3 This angered Yahweh and he instructed Moses to massacre all Israelite men who had done this Moses passed on these instructions to the judges of Israel Numbers 25 4 9 Plague inside the Israelite camp Numbers 25 6 18 edit In verse 6 the narrative suddenly shifts 3 when the Israelite man Zimri brings the Midianite woman Kozbi daughter of Midianite king Zur to the Israelite camp after which the Israelites are said to have been hit by a plague that left 24 000 dead Phinehas killed Zimri 10 and Kozbi ending the plague Yahweh claimed that Kozbi brought this plague upon the Israelites and told them to treat the Midianites as enemies and kill them 11 Interlude Numbers 26 30 edit The next four chapters say nothing about the Incident at Peor except that the plague had passed Numbers 26 1 note 2 Yahweh instructed Moses and his priest Eleazar to take a census amongst the Israelites Numbers 26 settled an inheritance dispute and the future succession of Moses by Joshua Numbers 27 instructed the Israelites how to conduct certain sacrifices and festivals Numbers 28 29 and regulated vows between men and women and fathers and daughters Numbers 30 1 3 Narrative editFurther information Textual variants in the Book of Numbers Numbers 31 nbsp Five Kings of Midian Slain by Israel 1728 by Gerard Hoet Preparations verses 1 6 edit In verses 1 and 2 Yahweh reminded Moses to take revenge on the Midianites as instructed in Numbers 25 16 18 as his last act before his death 1 3 Accordingly Moses instructed a thousand men of each of the Twelve Tribes of Israel 12 000 in total under Phinehas leadership to attack Midian 2 War 7 13 edit The Israelite soldiers are narrated to have killed all Midianite men including the five kings as well as the sorcerer Balaam 2 According to verse 49 the Israelites themselves suffered zero casualties 2 All Midianite towns and camps were burnt 11 all Midianite women children and livestock were deported as captives 2 to the camp on the plains of Moab by the Jordan across from Jericho where Moses and Eleazar received them 2 Killing of captive children and non virgin women 14 18 edit Moses was angry that the soldiers had left all women alive saying They were the ones who followed Balaam s advice and enticed the Israelites to be unfaithful to Yahweh in the Peor incident so a plague struck Yahweh s people Now kill all the boys And kill every woman who has slept with a man but save for yourselves every girl who has never slept with a man 15 11 Ritual purification 19 24 edit Next Moses and Eleazar instructed the soldiers to ritually cleanse and purify themselves the captives and all objects they had over a period of seven days Objects mentioned are the clothes all objects of leather goat hair and wood and all metal objects specifying that all fireproof objects had to be cleansed by both fire and water the rest only by water 1 3 Division of spoils of war 25 54 edit The plunder from the Midianite campaign was 675 000 sheep 72 000 cattle 61 000 donkeys and 32 000 women who had never slept with a man 2 Yahweh instructed Moses and Eleazar to divide these spoils according to a 1 1 ratio between the Israelite soldiers on the one hand and the Israelite civilians on the other Yahweh demanded a 0 2 share of the soldiers half of the spoils for himself this tribute would be given to him via the Levites who were responsible for the care of Yahweh s tabernacle Some of the Midianite golden jewellery plundered during the war combined weight about 418 pounds 190 kilograms 15 was also offered as a gift to Yahweh to make atonement for ourselves before Yahweh 15 2 Interpretation editHistoricity and theology edit See also Sources and parallels of the Exodus and Historicity of the Bible nbsp The Ancient Near East around 1200 BCE during the 19th Dynasty of Egypt nbsp Location of Midian in the ancient southern Transjordan region The scholarly consensus is that this war did not take place certainly not as narrated 2 4 66 Within the wider context of the Exodus there probably never was an invasion of Canaan the Promised Land by all Israelites escaping from slavery in Egypt 16 Scholars such as Mark S Smith assert that Israelite culture emerged from the wider Canaanite culture surrounding it with whom it had strong linguistic religious and other cultural links 17 There was no political unification of several Semitic Canaanite tribes into a single Israelite state until after 1100 BCE 16 Although some Egyptologists such as Redford 1997 Na aman 2011 and Bietak 2015 have argued that some Canaanites referred to by Bietak as Proto Israelites may have been deported to Egypt during the Nineteenth Dynasty s occupation and rule over Canaan under pharaoh Ramesses II r 1279 1213 BCE they say there is no indication that this included all so called Proto Israelites most of whom would have experienced Egyptian rule inside Canaan itself in the late 13th century BCE 18 Na aman argued that the existing narrative in the collective Hebrew memory of Egyptian rule was remodeled according to the realities of the late eighth and seventh centuries in Canaan integrating the experience with the Assyrian oppression and deportations 18 18 The modern scholarly consensus is that the biblical person of Moses is largely a mythical figure while also holding that a Moses like figure may have existed somewhere in the southern Transjordan in the mid late 13th century B C and that archaeology is unable to confirm either way 19 20 The narrative of Numbers 31 specifically is one out of many in the Hebrew Bible seeking to establish the Israelites as the chosen people of the god Yahweh who blessed them with victory in battle health and prosperity as long as they were faithful to his commands 2 This second generation of Israelites suffered not a single casualty throughout Numbers 26 36 while the first generation suffered much death in the wilderness chapters 13 14 25 2 note 3 The claims that 12 000 Israelite soldiers exterminated or captured the entire Midianite population and destroyed all their towns without suffering a single casualty are held to be historically impossible and should be understood as symbolic 2 Moreover even other biblical books set in later times still refer to the Midianites as an independent people such as Judges chapters 6 8 where Gideon fights them 2 Some Biblical non literalists hold that the author s wished to convey a theological message about who Yahweh Moses Eleazar and Phinehas were and how powerful the Israelites would be if Yahweh was on their side 2 Olson 2012 noted that the name Kozbi comes from the three Hebrew consonants kzb meaning to lie deceive the idea that Kozbi deceived the Israelites is emphasised in verse 25 18 The Midianites deceived or harassed assaulted vexed נ כ ל ו nikkelu you with their tricks ב נ כ ל יה ם beniḵlehem in the matter of Peor and in the matter of Kozbi the daughter of a Midianite leader the woman who was killed when the plague came as a result of that incident 2 22 This suggests she was not a historical character but invented as a metaphor for danger to the Israelites 2 Brown 2015 described how the structure of Numbers 31 showed a pattern of command obedience extension purification command obedience extension Yahweh commands the Israelites through Moses to execute vengeance and divide the spoils the Israelite soldiers obey then do more than Yahweh commanded extension the purification is the only action that happens only once and functions as a bridge between the two series 4 Both Olson and Brown noted that Moses is portrayed as remarkably passive in chapter 25 and as he was failing to solve the problem Phinehas had to intervene and take the initiative to slay Kozbi and Zimri was granted the eternal priesthood and later allowed to lead the Israelites against Midian 2 155 4 70 Brown added that chapter 27 further undermined the political position of an increasingly disobedient Moses in favour of the priesthood with Yahweh revealing Moses time is up and he will soon die 4 70 71 This supports the view that the added text was written at a time when the priestly line of Phinehas descendants was being challenged as it bolsters their legitimacy as the priestly successors of Moses 2 155 Motive edit nbsp Idolatry with Baal Peor 1970 by Phillip Medhurst nbsp Zimri and Kozbi portrayed as having sex in a regular tent when Phinehas kills them 1700 note 4 nbsp Modern Tabernacle replica in the Timna Valley 2011 Scholars disagree about the exact motive Yahweh is claimed to have had in ordering Moses to wage the War against the Midianites Evidently something that the Israelite man Zimri and especially the Midianite princess Kozbi did was at the root of the conflict though what offence they allegedly committed is a source of scholarly confusion It is not clear from chapter 25 alone whether Kozbi as a Midianite had anything to do with the Moabites nor whether she had sex with Zimri nor whether he had started worshipping other gods because of her as other Israelite men had with Moabite women according to verse 25 1 Nor is it clear whether she spread an existing plague to the Israelites or that Yahweh cursed them with a new plague as a punishment for Zimri fraternising with Kozbi or violating the sanctity of the Tabernacle 3 Questions surrounding the Balaam Moabite connection edit After the Israelite victory over the Midianites six chapters later Moses is said to have made the following connection The Midianite women were the ones who followed Balaam s advice and enticed the Israelites to be unfaithful to Yahweh in the Peor incident so that a plague struck Yahweh s people 15 This contradicts verses 25 1 3 which states the women were Moabites note 5 and verses 25 16 18 in which Yahweh himself claimed that the plague did not hit the Israelite camp until the Midianite princess Kozbi entered it without reference to sex or foreign gods worship leading Yahweh to instruct Moses to kill the Midianites not the Moabites note 6 The fact that the Moabites and Midianites are equated as having committed the same offences and Moses blames Balaam a Moabite for whatever the Midianite women or rather a single Midianite woman who had already been slain did has puzzled scholars 3 Knohl 1995 argued that the original non P text preserved in 25 1 5 had Moabite women as the main characters but the DH editor seeking to legitimise Phinehas and his descendants claims to the priesthood replaced them with Midianite women in a sloppy manner so that the resulting new text 25 6 18 and all of chapter 31 confused the two tribes 1 Olson 2012 agreed writing Some of these disjunctions within the narrative may have resulted from the combining of earlier and later traditions into one story 2 155 Ellicott 1897 however proposed that Balaam entered into Midianite service after being dismissed by the Moabite king Balak Nonetheless he elaborates that the Midianites in Numbers 31 were wealthy tribes that lived in the plains east of Moab He also observes that the Ammonites joined the Moabites in corrupting Israel according to Deuteronomy 23 3 4 24 25 26 Barnes likewise suggests that the Peor incident was only perpetrated by the Midianites 27 Thus the appearance of the Moabites in Numbers 25 1 is most likely due to the Moabites initiating the incident or being close courtiers of Balak according to Benson 28 Poole on the other hand affirms the connection between the Midianites and Moabites but argues that the Moabites were spared due to being descendants of Lot Alternatively he argues that the Midianites sinned more egregiously than the Moabites in the Peor incident thus warranting their extermination 29 Likewise Coke describes the Midianites as cruel and odious offenders who were willing to prostitute a daughter of an honorable family to disgrace and destroy Israel 30 Foreign idolatry hypothesis edit Hamilton 2005 concluded that Yahweh commanded holy war against Midian in retaliation for the latter s seduction of Israel into acts of harlotry and idolatry 31 Olson 2012 stated The inclusion of the women of Midian in enticing the Israelites into the worship of an alien god became the reason that justified the later assault against Midian in Numbers 31 2 155 He also pointed to Psalm 106 28 31 2 155 which claims that the plague broke out due to Yahweh being angry at the Israelites for eating sacrifices offered to lifeless gods at Peor 32 Finally Olson argued that Moses apparent failure to punish the idolaters 25 4 5 is what motivated Phinehas to take matters into his own hands by killing Zimri and Kozbi 2 155 Brown 2015 stated In Num 31 16 Moses justifies his command by appealing to the Midianites role in the apostasy and plague recounted in Numbers 25 and commentators have generally accepted that explanation and concluded that the text portrays the utter destruction of Midian as the fulfillment of YHWH s call for vengeance 4 66 Sexual transgression hypothesis edit Some commentators concluded that motive for the War against the Midianites was that Zimri and Kozbi 33 had illicit sex with Keil and Delitzsch 1870 writing Zimri brought Kozbi into the camp of the Israelites before the eyes of Moses and all the congregation to commit adultery with her in his tent 34 Jamieson Fausset Brown 1871 as well as Keil and Delitzsch 1870 suggested that the Midianites had instigated the Moabite women to seduce the Israelite men verses 1 and 2 and so only the Midianites were to atone for the wickedness which violated the divinity and honour of Yahweh not the Moabites 24 Jamieson Fausset Brown added that Yahweh wanted to spare the Moabites because they were the descendants of Lot note 7 Deuteronomy 2 9 24 Victor P Hamilton concluded in 2005 that Yahweh commanded holy war against Midian in retaliation for the latter s seduction of Israel into acts of harlotry and idolatry 31 Johann Peter Lange believed that young Midianite boys were also guilty of corrupting the Israelitish women thus warranting their execution in Numbers 31 13 18 35 Tabernacle desecration hypothesis edit Sarah Shectman argued in 2009 that Zimri and Kozbi were not guilty of sexual transgressions at all sex with a foreigner is never even considered a capital offence by the Holiness code H 3 Rather they had come too close to the holy Tabernacle also called the Tent of the Congregation 3 She based this on the Hebrew verb מ ס ר masar and the Hebrew noun מ ע ל ma al used in verse 31 16 for encroachment which has the connotation of close proximity and violation of priestly authority 3 According to Shectman the resulting combination of ל מ ס ר מ ע ל lim sar ma al means to instigate sacrilege trespass 3 166 In several other places in the Book of Numbers e g 18 5 7 the stated punishment for encroachment on certain parts of the Tabernacle by non Israelites or non Levite Israelites is death 3 Shectman also noted that Numbers 8 19 claimed that a plague will strike the Israelites when they go near the sanctuary 36 and in Numbers 16 42 50 37 or Numbers 17 7 15 in some Bible editions 38 this actually happened and 14 700 Israelites died of a plague before Aaron stopped it by making an incense offering to Yahweh 3 In an incident soon after Numbers 17 10 13 39 or Numbers 17 25 28 38 the Israelites panicked when Moses entered the Tabernacle fearing they were all going to die 3 She concluded that Numbers 25 6 18 served three purposes illustrating the encroachment law legitimising Phinehas ascendancy to the high priesthood and justifying the War against the Midianites in Numbers 31 3 Unlike the non P text in 25 1 5 there is no indication that there is anything particularly wrong with Kozbi as a woman or a foreigner nor are she and Zimri accused of sexual transgression they are both simply people from categories forbidden to encroach on the Tabernacle Only the fact that she is a Midianite princess is used as a pretext for the war against the Midianites 3 No connection to Baal peor incident edit Based on his exegesis of Joshua 24 9 Ellicott 1905 argued that Balaam s curse against Israel and the war in Numbers 31 were two separate acts of hostility initiated by Balak However he admits that the Hebrew Bible does not sufficiently indicate whether this was the case 40 Balak s motives for waging war against Israel range from pure hatred 41 to self defense 42 Ethics edit See also Rape in the Hebrew Bible Numbers 31 The Bible and slavery Female captives Herem war or property Genocidal rape and Wartime sexual violence Antiquity Scholarly discussions edit Susan Niditch explained in 1995 that the priestly ideology of war in Numbers 31 regarded all enemies as unclean and therefore deserving of God s vengeance except those still in possession of feminine virginity Female children who have not lain with a man are clean slates in terms of their identity unmarked by the enemy and after a period of purification can be absorbed into the people Israel 43 Hamilton in 2005 called Numbers 31 a gruesome chapter where only young virgin girls may be spared and not even young boys are exempted He argued that the two major concerns of Number 31 are the idea that war is a defiling activity but Israelite soldiers need to be ritually pure so they may only fight wars for a holy cause and are required to cleanse themselves afterwards to restore their ritual purity 31 The Israelite campaign against Midian was blessed by Yahweh and could therefore be considered a holy war 31 Simultaneously however the Israelite soldiers are said to be defiled by the killing and in need of a seven day purification of their bodies clothes and metal possessions and to require atonement for ourselves before Yahweh verse 50 31 Thus the use of military violence even if divinely mandated is cast as a negative act that in order to be erased requires ritual cleansing of the body and possessions as well as sacrifice in the form of 0 2 share of the soldiers spoils as a tribute to Yahweh 31 1 3 Dennis T Olson wrote in 2012 that the bulk of the chapter deals with the purification of soldiers and booty from the impurity of war and the allotment of the spoils while the actual battle is summarized in two verses 2 The Israelite soldiers actions closely followed the holy war regulations set out in Deuteronomy 20 14 You may however take as your booty the women the children livestock and everything else in the town all its spoil but in this case Moses was angry because he also wanted the male children and non virgin women to be killed a marked departure from these regulations according to Olson 2 He concluded Many aspects of this holy war text may be troublesome to a contemporary reader But understood within the symbolic world of the ancient writers of Numbers the story of the war against the Midianites is a kind of dress rehearsal that builds confidence and hope in anticipation of the actual conquest of Canaan that lay ahead 2 Ken Brown in 2015 stated This command to kill all but the virgin girls is without precedent in the Pentateuch However Judges 21 precisely parallels Moses s command Like Num 25 the story recounted in Judges 19 21 centers on the danger of apostasy but its tale of civil war and escalating violence also emphasizes the tragedy that can result from the indiscriminate application of vengeance The whole account is highly ironic the Israelites set out to avenge the rape of one woman only to authorize the rapes of six hundred more They regret the results of one slaughter so they commit another to repair it 4 77 78 Keith Allan in 2019 remarked God s work or not this is military behaviour that would be tabooed today and might lead to a war crimes trial 11 According to the Book of Exodus the Midianites had sheltered Moses during his 40 year voluntary exile after killing an Egyptian Exodus 2 11 21 the Midianite priest Jethro Reuel Hobab note 8 acted positively towards Yahweh in Exodus chapter 12 and his daughter Zipporah became Moses wife Exodus 2 21 note 9 Scholars find it difficult to explain how Moses commanded the Israelites to exterminate and enslave the entire Midianite people while having a Midianite wife and father in law 2 Religious discussions edit nbsp Preface of Llandaff s Apology for the Bible which tried to refute Paine s claims in The Age of Reason that Numbers 31 proved Moses to be the most detestable villain in history 44 Numbers 31 and similar biblical episodes are sometimes referred to in religious morality debates between apologists and critics of religion Rabbi and scholar Shaye J D Cohen 1999 argued that the implications of Numbers 31 17 18 are unambiguous we may be sure that for yourselves means that the warriors may use their virgin captives sexually adding that Shimon bar Yochai understood the passage correctly On the other hand he noted that other rabbinical commentaries such as B and Y Qiddushin and Yevamot claimed that for yourselves meant as servants Later apologists both Jewish and Christian adopted the latter interpretation 45 The following command to purify the Midianite girls and the Israelite soldiers in Numbers 31 19 is also used to argue that the Israelites recognized war as being destructive 46 In The Age of Reason 1795 Thomas Paine wrote about the chapter Among the detestable villains that in any period of the world would have disgraced the name of man it is impossible to find a greater than Moses if this account be true Here is an order to butcher the boys to massacre the mothers and debauch the daughters 47 44 Richard Watson the Bishop of Llandaff sought to refute Paine s arguments 44 I see nothing in this proceeding but good policy combined with mercy The young men might have become dangerous avengers of what they would esteem their country s wrongs the mothers might have again allured the Israelites to the love of licentious pleasure and the practice of idolatry and brought another plague upon the congregation but the young maidens not being polluted by the flagitious habits of their mothers nor likely to create disturbance by rebellion were kept alive You Paine give a different turn to the matter you say that thirty two thousand women children were consigned to debauchery by the order of Moses Prove this and I will allow that Moses was the horrid monster you make him prove this and I will allow that the Bible is what you call it a book of lies wickedness and blasphemy The women children were not reserved for the purposes of debauchery but of slavery a custom abhorrent from our manners but every where practiced in former times and still practiced in countries where the benignity of the Christian religion has not softened the ferocity of human nature Richard Watson the Bishop of Llandaff An Apology for the Bible in a series of letters addressed to Thomas Paine author of a book entitled The Age of Reason 1796 48 Debating Baptist minister Al Sharpton in 2007 atheist writer Christopher Hitchens argued that the Binding of Isaac and the extermination of the Amalekites were immoral divine commandments in the Old Testament and recalled the previous debate The Bishop of Llandaff in an argument with Thomas Paine once said Well when it says keep the women as Paine had pointed out he said I m sure God didn t mean just to keep them for immoral purposes But what does the Bishop of Llandaff know about that It says Kill all the men kill all the children and keep the virgins I think I know what they had in mind I don t think it s moral teaching 49 In 2010 Hitchens mocked the Ten Commandments for banning adultery but not rape Then again what about rape It seems to be very strongly recommended along with genocide slavery and infanticide in Numbers 31 1 18 and surely constitutes a rather extreme version of sex outside marriage 50 In the 2006 documentary The Root of All Evil Part 2 The Virus of Faith Richard Dawkins condemned Moses acts in Numbers 31 asking How is this story of Moses morally distinguishable from Hitler s rape of Poland or Saddam Hussein s massacre of the Kurds and the Marsh Arabs He contrasted this behaviour with Moses own Commandment of Thou shalt not kill 51 52 Seth Andrews wrote in Deconverted 2012 that Numbers 31 was one of several parts of the Bible that made him seriously question the Christian God s ethics claiming that his Christian friends and family did not have satisfactory answers and ultimately did not really care to think about the moral implications of such texts 53 In 2012 M A Neeper called Numbers 31 17 18 appalling Instead of trying to save the people of Midian Moses orders many of their deaths The lucky people the virgin girls who are allowed to live are made into sex slaves for disgusting homicidal post hoc mercenaries that do all of their bidding from a man who says that a god that no one can see tells them to do This is one of the most sickening things in the so called Holy Bible 54 Christian apologist John Berea speculated in 2017 that Balaam was dismissed without pay by king Balak of Moab and then set up the Midianite women to seduce the Israelite men to sexual immorality and idolatry in the same manner as he had previously done with the Moabite women The execution of Midianite women who had had sex with Israelite men was therefore a just punishment for compromising the men of Israel while turning prisoners into sex slaves was supposedly inconsistent with the many other laws against sexual immorality Berea concluded that making the surviving virgin women and girls as servants and integrating them into Israel may have been the best among lousy alternatives 55 Fate of the 32 virgins edit See also Binding of Isaac Heave offering and Human sacrifice It is not clear what happened to Yahweh s 0 1 share of the spoils of war including 808 animals verses 36 39 and 32 human virgin women girls verse 40 who are entrusted to the Levites who are responsible for maintaining Yahweh s tabernacle verses 30 and 47 note 10 Two Hebrew terms are used to indicate they are a tribute or levy that is offered or contributed to Yahweh מ כ ס me ḵes or ham me ḵes verses 28 37 and 41 generally translated as tribute tax or levy 57 58 Outside these three occurrences in Numbers 31 it appears nowhere else in the Hebrew Bible It is also attested in Ugaritic as mekes and in Akkadian as miksu 59 An inflection of mekes is ו מ כ ס ם u miḵ sam occurring only in verses 38 39 and 40 60 ת רו מ ת te ru maṯ verses 29 and 41 the term terumah plural terumat is generally translated as heave offering or contribution and is associated with heave offerings 61 Some scholars have concluded that these 32 human virgins were to be sacrificed to Yahweh as a burnt offering along with the animals For example in 1854 Carl Falck Lebahn compared the incident with the near sacrifice of Iphigenia in Greek mythology claiming According to Levit xxvii 29 sacrifices of human victims were clearly established among the Jews After recounting the story of Jephthah s daughter in Judges 11 he reasoned the Jews according to Numbers chap 31 took 61 000 asses 72 000 oxen 675 000 sheep and 32 000 virgins whose fathers mothers brothers amp c were butchered There were 16 000 girls for the soldiers 16 000 for the priests and on the soldiers share there was levied a tribute of 32 virgins for the Lord What became of them The Jews had no nuns What was the Lord s share in all the wars of the Hebrews if it was not blood 62 Carl Plfuger in 1995 cited Exodus 17 Numbers 31 Deuteronomy 13 and 20 as examples of human sacrifice demanded by Yahweh adding that according to 1 Samuel 15 Saul lost his kingship of Israel because he had withheld the human sacrifice that Yahweh the god of Israel expected as his due after a war 63 Susan Niditch remarked in 1995 that at the time of her writing increasingly scholars suggest that Israelites engaged in state sponsored rituals of child sacrifice 43 404 Although s uch ritual activity is condemned by Jeremiah Ezekiel and other biblical writers e g Lev 18 21 Deut 12 31 18 10 Jer 7 30 31 19 5 Ezek 20 31 and the seventh century reformer king Josiah sought to put an end to it the notion of a god who desires human sacrifice may well have been an important thread in Israelite belief 43 404 405 She cited the Mesha Stele as evidence that the neighbouring Moabites performed human sacrifices with prisoners of war to their god Chemosh after successfully attacking an Israelite city in the 9th century BCE 43 405 Before the 7th century BCE reformers of king Josiah of the southern Kingdom of Judah tried to end the practice of human child sacrifice it appears to have been commonplace in Israelite military culture 43 406 Other scholars have concluded that the virgins and animals were kept alive and used by the Levites as their share of the spoils Some even posited that human sacrifice especially child sacrifice was foreign to the Israelites thus making the possibility of sacrificing the Midianite virgins unfeasible 43 404 Carl Freidrich Keil and Franz Delitzsch argued in 1870 that the 32 were enslaved Of the one half the priests received 675 head of small cattle 72 oxen 61 asses and 32 maidens for Jehovah and these Moses handed over to Eleazar in all probability for the maintenance of the priests in the same manner as the tithes Numbers 18 26 28 and Leviticus 27 30 33 so that they might put the cattle into their own flocks Numbers 35 3 and slay oxen or sheep as they required them whilst they sold the asses and made slaves of the gifts and not in the character of a vow in which case the clean animals would have had to be sacrificed and the unclean animals as well as the human beings to be redeemed Leviticus 27 2 13 64 See also editEthics in the Bible Judaism and warfare Levite s concubine Benjamite War Judges 19 21 Moses in rabbinic literature The Bible and violence Women in the BibleNotes edit Yahweh s name written as YHWH in the Hebrew Bible is most typically printed as LORD in English language bibles See Names of God in Judaism and Names of God in Christianity In most English Bible translations Numbers 25 only has 18 verses and the words And it came to pass after the plague are included in verse 1 of chapter 26 12 However in Hebrew source texts such as the Leningrad Codex these words way hi a ḥă re ham mag ge p ah p are included in chapter 25 as verse 19 13 therefore a limited amount of translations such as the Complete Jewish Bible CJB and the New American Bible Revised Edition NABRE have counted And it came to pass after the plague as Numbers 25 19 14 and this sentence continues in Numbers 26 1 as the Lord said to Moses and Eleazar son of Aaron the priest NABRE 12 The generations concept was first introduced by Jacob Milgrom 1990 who divided the Book of Numbers in three parts the generation of the Exodus spanned the first two parts at Sinai Num 1 1 10 10 and Kadesh Num 10 11 22 1 and the generation of the conquest took up the third part in Moab Transjordan Num 22 2 36 13 21 In this interpretation of Numbers 25 Phinehas killed the Israelite man Zimri and the Midianite princess Kozbi verse 7 8 as they were having sex in an ordinary tent in the Israelite military camp verse 6 at Shittim near Mount Peor verses 1 3 Outside the tents people lay dead apparently these are Israelites struck by the plague verses 8 9 On the edge of the camp soldiers stand on guard Just outside the camp a number of people are impaled verse 4 5 the chiefs of the Israelite men who engaged in sexual immorality with Moabite women and worshipped their gods verse 1 3 this last act appears to be shown in the far background with people on a mountain gathering around a pole perhaps a Moabite godly idol Engraving from Historie des Ouden en Nieuwen Testaments verrykt met meer dan vierhonderd printverbeeldingen in koper gesneeden History of the Old and New Testaments enriched with more than four hundred printed illustrations cut in copper 1700 published by David Martin in Amsterdam While Israel was staying in Shittim the men began to indulge in sexual immorality with Moabite women who invited them to the sacrifices to their gods The people ate the sacrificial meal and bowed down before these gods So Israel yoked themselves to the Baal of Peor And Yahweh s anger burned against them Numbers 25 1 3 New International Version 23 Yahweh said to Moses Treat the Midianites as enemies and kill them They treated you as enemies when they deceived you in the Peor incident involving their sister Kozbi the daughter of a Midianite leader the woman who was killed when the plague came as a result of that incident Numbers 25 16 18 New International Version 22 2 Peter 2 4 10 claims Lot was a righteous man and that this is the reason why the god Yahweh had spared him and his family when he destroyed the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah in Genesis 19 Moses father in law is variously identified as Jethro Exodus 3 1 4 18 18 1 12 Reuel Exodus 2 18 Numbers 10 29 or Hobab Judges 4 11 Hobab is also identified as Reuel s son Numbers 10 29 All three are identified as Midianites Although Numbers 12 1 refers to Moses wife as a Cushite כ ש ית ḵu siṯ it is unclear if this refers to Zipporah or another unnamed second wife of Moses some scholars think Cushite refers to her beauty rather than her ethnicity For example Methodist theologian Joel L Watts 2019 wrote Only 32 men sic were given to the priests for the deity leaving us to wonder if this surrendering was to die or to work 56 References edit a b c d e f g h i Knohl Israel 2007 The Sanctuary of Silence The Priestly Torah and the Holiness School Winona Lake Indiana Eisenbrauns pp 96 98 ISBN 9781575061313 Retrieved 14 March 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Olson Dennis T 2012 Numbers 31 War against the Midianites Judgment for Past Sin Foretaste of a Future Conquest Numbers Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press pp 176 180 ISBN 9780664238827 Retrieved 14 March 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Shectman Sarah 2009 Women in the Pentateuch A Feminist and Source critical Analysis Sheffield Sheffield Phoenix Press pp 158 166 ISBN 9781906055721 Retrieved 14 March 2021 a b c d e f g Brown Ken 2015 Vengeance and Vindication in Numbers 31 Journal of Biblical Literature 134 1 The Society of Biblical Literature 65 84 doi 10 15699 jbl 1341 2015 2561 JSTOR 10 15699 jbl 1341 2015 2561 Retrieved 17 March 2021 Enns 2012 p 5 Finkelstein I Silberman NA The Bible Unearthed Archaeology s New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts p 68 69 McDermott John J 2002 Reading the Pentateuch a historical introduction Pauline Press p 21 ISBN 978 0 8091 4082 4 Retrieved 3 October 2010 McDermott 2002 p 21 San 106a Yer ib x 28d Num R l c The Eleventh Plague footnote 12 I am the Lord implies I am He who inflicted punishment upon Samson Amnon and Zimri and who will inflict punishment upon any one who will act in accordance with their practices 24 June 2009 a b c d Allan Keith 2019 The Oxford Handbook of Taboo Words and Language Oxford Oxford University Press p 15 ISBN 9780198808190 Retrieved 14 March 2021 a b Numbers 26 1 in all translations Bible Gateway Retrieved 4 January 2022 Numbers 25 18 Hebrew Text Analysis Biblehub com Retrieved 4 January 2022 Numbers 25 19 in all translations Bible Gateway Retrieved 4 January 2022 a b c d Numbers 31 New International Version Biblehub com Retrieved 17 March 2021 a b Brian Dunning 2 February 2010 Did Jewish Slaves Build the Pyramids Skeptoid Retrieved 20 March 2021 Israel itself did not exist until approximately 1100 BCE when various Semitic tribes joined in Canaan to form a single independent kingdom at least 600 years after the completion of the last of Egypt s large pyramids Thus it is not possible for any Israelites to have been in Egypt at the time either slave or free as there was not yet any such thing as an Israelite Smith Mark S 2002 The Early History of God Yahweh and Other Deities in Ancient Israel San Francisco New York Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 0606 7416 8 a b Bietak Manfred 2015 On the Historicity of the Exodus What Egyptology Today Can Contribute to Assessing the Biblical Account of the Sojourn in Egypt Israel s Exodus in Transdisciplinary Perspective Quantitative Methods in the Humanities and Social Sciences Springer pp 17 35 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 04768 3 2 ISBN 978 3 319 04767 6 Retrieved 20 March 2021 William G Dever 2001 What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It What Archeology Can Tell Us About the Reality of Ancient Israel Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 99 ISBN 978 0 8028 2126 3 Dever William G 1993 What Remains of the House That Albright Built The Biblical Archaeologist 56 1 University of Chicago Press 25 35 doi 10 2307 3210358 ISSN 0006 0895 JSTOR 3210358 S2CID 166003641 the overwhelming scholarly consensus today is that Moses is a mythical figure Ehrlich Carl S 1995 Review NUMBERS The JPS Torah Commentary The Traditional Hebrew Text with the New JPS Translation by Jacob Milgrom Hebrew Studies 36 National Association of Professors of Hebrew 171 174 doi 10 1353 hbr 1995 0030 JSTOR 27909476 S2CID 201795508 Retrieved 20 March 2021 a b Numbers 25 18 Hebrew text analysis Biblehub com 2011 Retrieved 14 March 2021 Numbers 25 18 English translations Biblehub com 2011 Retrieved 14 March 2021 Numbers 25 New International Version Biblehub com Retrieved 20 March 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Numbers 25 6 Commentaries Biblehub com 2011 Retrieved 14 March 2021 Numbers 31 Lange s Commentary on the Holy Scriptures Critical Doctrinal and Homiletical StudyLight org 2022 Archived from the original on 11 February 2024 Numbers 8 19 English translations Biblehub com Retrieved 17 March 2021 Numbers 16 New International Version Biblehub com Retrieved 17 March 2021 a b Numeri 17 Nieuwe Bijbelvertaling debijbel nl in Dutch Retrieved 17 March 2021 Numbers 17 New International Version Biblehub com Retrieved 17 March 2021 Joshua 24 Ellicott s Commentary for English Readers Biblehub com 2024 Archived from the original on 11 February 2024 Judges 11 Ellicott s Commentary for English Readers Biblehub com 2024 Archived from the original on 11 February 2024 Judges 11 Benson Commentary Biblehub com 2024 Archived from the original on 11 February 2024 a b c d e f Niditch Susan 1995 War in the Hebrew Bible and Contemporary Parallels PDF Word amp World 15 4 Luther Seminary 406 Archived from the original PDF on 1 January 2022 Retrieved 20 March 2021 a b c Prickett Stephen March 2019 Chapter 18 The Bible William Blake in Context Cambridge University Press 165 172 doi 10 1017 9781316534946 019 ISBN 9781316534946 S2CID 240910636 Retrieved 20 March 2021 Cohen Shaye J D 1999 The Beginnings of Jewishness Boundaries Varieties Uncertainties Berkeley California University of California Press pp 255 256 ISBN 9780520926271 Retrieved 20 March 2021 Numbers 31 19 Dr Constable s Expository Notes StudyLight org Thomas Paine The Age of Reason Part II Chapter I Watson Richard 1797 An Apology for the Bible in a series of letters addressed to Thomas Paine author of a book entitled The Age of Reason London T Evans pp 26 27 Retrieved 20 March 2021 8th edition Christopher Hitchens and Al Sharpton A Debate God Is Not Great PDF Celeste Bartos Forum New York Public Library 7 May 2007 Retrieved 20 March 2021 Christopher Hitchens 4 March 2010 The New Commandments Vanity Fair Retrieved 20 March 2021 Dawkins Richard January 2006 The Root of All Evil Part 2 The Virus of Faith The Root of All Evil Episode 2 Giordano Bruno Foundation Event occurs at 26 52 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Parsley Rod 2009 Culturally Incorrect How Clashing Worldviews Affect Your Future Nashville Tennessee Thomas Nelson p 21 ISBN 9781418572075 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Andrews Seth 2012 Deconverted Outskirts Press ISBN 978 1 4787 1656 3 Neeper M A 2012 The Eyes of an Atheist A Collection of Responses to Common Theistic Arguments Trafford Publishing pp 28 29 ISBN 9781466946903 Retrieved 20 March 2021 Berea John 2017 Ancient Israel Morality of the Conquest of Canaan Berean Archive Retrieved 20 March 2021 Watts Joel L 2019 Jesus as Divine Suicide The Death of the Messiah in Galatians Eugene Oregon Wipf and Stock p 71 ISBN 9781532657184 Retrieved 20 March 2021 me ḵes Englishman s Concordance Biblehub com 2011 Retrieved 20 March 2021 ham me ḵes Englishman s Concordance Biblehub com 2011 Retrieved 20 March 2021 Keener Craig S Walton John H 2017 NKJV Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible eBook Bringing to Life the Ancient World of Scripture Grand Rapids Michigan Zondervan p 750 ISBN 9780310003618 Retrieved 20 March 2021 u miḵ sam Englishman s Concordance Biblehub com 2011 Retrieved 20 March 2021 te ru maṯ Englishman s Concordance Biblehub com 2011 Retrieved 20 March 2021 Carl Falck Lebahn 1854 Selections from the German poets with interlinear tr notes and complete vocabularies and a dissertation on mythology by Falck Lebahn London Clarke Beeton amp Co p 291 Retrieved 17 March 2021 Pfluger Carl 1995 Progress Irony and Human Sacrifice The Hudson Review 48 1 72 doi 10 2307 3852059 JSTOR 3852059 Retrieved 20 March 2021 Numbers 31 40 Commentaries Biblehub com 2011 Retrieved 17 March 2021 Literature editEnns Peter 2012 The Evolution of Adam Baker Books ISBN 9781587433153 Knohl Israel 1995 The Sanctuary of Silence The Priestly Torah and the Holiness School Augsburg Fortress p 97 Niditch Susan 1993 War Women and Defilement in Numbers 31 War in the Hebrew Bible A Study in the Ethics of Violence New York Oxford University Press pp 39 57 ISBN 9780195076387 Noth Martin 1968 Numbers a commentary Westminster John Knox Press p 229 ISBN 978 0664223205 External links editJewish translations Bamidbar Numbers Chapter 31 Judaica Press translation with Rashi s commentary at Chabad org Christian translations Online Bible at GospelHall org ESV KJV Darby American Standard Version Bible in Basic English Numbers chapter 31 Bible Gateway Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Numbers 31 amp oldid 1222819975, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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