Jean Louis Ska, «Old and New in the Book of Numbers», Vol. 95 (2014) 102-116
Among the numerous questions raised by the Book of Numbers, this article treats three of them: (1) The unique complexity of the Book of Numbers; (2) The four main types of solutions proposed by scholars, namely different versions of the documentary hypothesis; two main and three secondary redactional layers (R. Achenbach); a series of Fortschreibungen; a mere synchronic reading of Numbers; (3) The presence or absence of the Priestly Writer in Numbers.
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114 JEAN LOUIS SKA
it seems to me realistic to look for sections of the Priestly Writer in the
Book of Numbers, especially in Numbers 13–14.
As for the other objections, let me summarize what I have developed
elsewhere at length 47. (1) The vocabulary is not always a decisive element
in the attribution of a text to a given source. Style is decisive, vocabulary
is not, because the vocabulary depends on the topic developed. On the
basis of vocabulary only, it would be possible to demonstrate that War
and Peace and Anna Karenina, or Middlemarch and Scenes of Clerical
Life, were not written by the same authors 48. By the way, the same T. Pola
recognizes that his post-priestly redactor in Numbers “grundsätzlich in
der Stilistik von Pg [bleibt].†In other words, Pola’s objections against the
presence of P in Numbers are all in all more ideological that literary.
(2) The atmosphere in Numbers is negative, whereas it is more positive
in the Priestly texts in Genesis – Leviticus. This is a tricky argument since
“atmosphere†is a very vague concept. Nonetheless, it seems to me some-
what daring to affirm that P cannot be negative. For what reason? This looks
likes a petitio principii: it cannot be, and therefore it is not present. On the
other hand, there are negative elements in the Priestly Writer, such as the
violence that fills the universe (Gen 6,11.13: smx) and the Egyptians’ bru-
tality (Exod 1,13.14: $rp). There are negative elements in the wilderness
narratives as well, in Numbers 13–14 (“calumny of the landâ€, #ra-tbd;
Num 13,32; cf. 14,37), and in Numbers 20 (20,12, lack of faith) 49.
(3) Israel becomes an ecclesia militans in Numbers. This means dis-
regarding one of the main features of the Priestly Writer, namely its con-
ciliatory and pacifist tendency 50. In Numbers 13–14, the exploration of
the land has nothing to do with the sending of spies to prepare for the con-
quest. The twelve representatives of Israel go through the whole land and
take possession of it in a juridical procedure similar to the ambulatio. The
latter word is a technical term borrowed from Roman Law that describes
the way a piece of land becomes somebody’s property de iure, and not
yet de facto, when he or she goes walking through this whole piece of
land. The rest of Numbers 13–14 explains the reason why Israel does not
take possession of the land de facto.
47
SKA, “Une histoire sans finâ€, 636-653.
48
For the style of the Priestly Writer, the basic work is still the one by S.E.
MCEVENUE, The Narrative Style of the Priestly Writer (AnBib 50; Rome 1971).
49
See N. LOHFINKâ€, Die Ursünden in der priesterlichen Geschichtserzählungâ€,
Die Zeit Jesu. Festschrift Heinrich Schlier (Hrsg. G. BORNKAMM – K. RAHNER)
(Freiburg 1970) 38-57 = Studien zum Pentateuch (SBAAT 4; Stuttgart 1988) 169-
189.
50
See N. LOHFINK, “Die Schichten des Pentateuch und der Kriegâ€, Gewalt
und Gewaltlosigkeit im Alten Testament (Hrsg. N. LOHFINK) (QD 96; Freiburg i.
Br. 1983) 51-110 = Studien zum Pentateuch (SBAB 4; Stuttgart 1988) 255-315.