Friday, October 4, 2024

Michael Horton Commenting on Numbers 16/Psalm 106 and the Actions of Phinehas

  

[T]here are also noncultic references to making atonement. In these cases, Yahweh’s wrath against the whole congregation is withdrawn because someone has acted in their stead or acted in a way (viz., “jealous for my name”) that reestablished Yahweh’s righteous government. (Michael Horton, Justification, 2 vols. [New Studies in Dogmatics; Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan, 2018], 2:213)

 

After the people made the golden calf, Moses pleaded with God to “Make atonement” for their sins (Exod 32:3), which he does by fasting and prayer for forty days. God’s wrath is stayed (Deut 9:13-29; Ps 106:19-23). When later Israel sinned, Aaron offered up incense and “made atonement,” which turned back the plague (Num 16:41-50). When Israelites were marrying Moabites and bowing down to their gods, Yahweh sent a plague, but Phinehas drove a spear through Zimri and his Midianite wife as they flaunted their relationship. It stopped the plague through Zimri and Midianite wife as they flaunted their relationship. It stopped the plague and Yahwe pledged a “covenant of peace,” with Phinehas’s children serving before him as priests from generation to generation. “Phinehas . . . has turned back my wrath from the people of Israel,” Yahweh told Moses, and “was jealous for his God and made atonement for the people of Israel,” Yahweh told Moses, and “was jealous for his God and made atonement for the people of Israel” (Num 25:1-12). Reciting this event, Psalm 106:30-31 declares, “That was counted to him as righteousness [וַתֵּחָשֶׁב לוֹ לִצְדָקָה] from generation to generation forever.” (Ibid., 2:213 n. 77)

 

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