
Mattot
Numbers 30:2[1]-32:42
Jeremiah 1:1-2:3
"Vows,
Unity, Brotherly Love"
POSTED 09 JULY, 2010
by Mark Huey
mhuey@outreachisrael.net
The Book of Numbers is coming to a close as the Israelites gather
on the plains of Moab, overlooking the Dead Sea
and the Jordan River valley. Through His servant
Moses, the Lord is continuing to prepare Israel
for their taking of the Promised Land. Mattot
or “Tribes” has three chapters that deal with
three topics. Typically for calendar purposes,
Mattot is coupled with the final reading
in Numbers, Masa’ei or “Journeys,” which
has four chapters, but for our purposes in this
commentary we will be considering each
parashah them separately.
The instructions delivered to Ancient Israel in Mattot first
concern the taking of vows made by men and women.[1]
Following this, a record of Israel’s conflict with the
Midianites is detailed, including a description of not only
a successful campaign, but how the spoils of war were
distributed.[2]
The third chapter of Mattot covers how the tribes of
Reuben and Gad request that they be allowed to settle in
land east of the Jordan River.[3]
In our Torah reading, the significance of honoring one’s
word, Israel seeking unity among itself, and the practice of
tribal respect—are all critical components to consider as
Israel prepares to enter the Promise Land and eject the
Canaanites.
After almost forty years of wandering in the wilderness, the
“Joshua generation” is being prepared for its journey across
the Jordan River to occupy Canaan and establish Israel as a
nation within its own territory. This is no easy task,
because the land that God has promised Israel is occupied by
six pagan nations who must be driven from it. We can
remember how Moses gave explicit instructions to the
Israelites soon after their departure from Egypt that these
peoples were going to be driven out:
“Be
sure to observe what I am commanding you this day: behold, I
am going to drive out the Amorite before you, and the
Canaanite, the Hittite, the Perizzite, the Hivite and the
Jebusite. Watch yourself that you make no covenant with the
inhabitants of the land into which you are going, or it will
become a snare in your midst. But rather, you are to
tear down their altars and smash their sacred pillars
and cut down their Asherim—for you shall not worship any
other god, for the
Lord, whose name is Jealous, is a jealous
God—otherwise you might make a covenant with the inhabitants
of the land and they would play the harlot with their gods
and sacrifice to their gods, and someone might invite you to
eat of his sacrifice, and you might take some of his
daughters for your sons, and his daughters might play the
harlot with their gods and cause your sons also to
play the harlot with their gods” (Exodus 34:11-16).
We know from our knowledge of Israel’s history witnessed in
previous Torah readings that the generation which received
this instruction was not a faithful group of people. After
over thirty-nine years, most of those of the “Exodus
generation”—except Joshua and Caleb—who were twenty years or
older at the time of the spies’ bad report had died in the
desert (Numbers 32:11). And yet on the plains of Moab, many
of those of the “Joshua generation,” as discussed previously
in Balak and Pinchas, had succumbed to the
temptations of Moabite prostitutes and their idolatry. Some
of the warnings from Israel’s early days of wanderings the
desert, had not been obeyed. The Israelites exhibited a
tendency to become involved with some of the cultures which
surrounded them. This could have devastating, long-term
consequences, because the Holy One of Israel does not want a
people who are going to be associated with other gods. He
wants a people who are totally sold out to Him and Him
alone. In Mattot, we see some of how the Lord
goes about preparing the “Joshua generation” for the task of
taking the Promised Land.
Many of the Israelites had just died from a plague, incurred as a
result of the entanglement with the Moabite women. Phinehas’
zealous act abruptly stopped the plague and the Lord ordered
Moses to conduct a census that would record the number of
Israelites by tribe, just prior to crossing the Jordan. As
our previous portion concluded, God once again had to
reiterate the importance of observing His appointed times
and the offerings involved in them:
“You
shall present these to the
Lord at your
appointed times, besides your votive offerings and your
freewill offerings, for your burnt offerings and for your
grain offerings and for your drink offerings and for your
peace offerings. Moses spoke to the sons of Israel in
accordance with all that the
Lord had
commanded Moses. Then Moses spoke to the heads of the tribes
of the sons of Israel, saying, ‘This is the word which the
Lord has
commanded’” (Numbers 29:39-30:1)
But while Pinchas ended with an understanding that God’s
people are to take His sacred seasons very seriously, the
instruction that follows it concerns order in the family.
Vows and
Oaths, Husbands and Wives
As Mattot begins, the Lord has Moses give some instruction
to the leaders of the various tribes, about the importance
of making vows and swearing oaths:
“Then
Moses spoke to the heads of the tribes of the sons of
Israel, saying, ‘This is the word which the
Lord has
commanded. If a man makes a vow to the
Lord, or takes
an oath to bind himself with a binding obligation, he shall
not violate his word; he shall do according to all that
proceeds out of his mouth’” (Numbers
30:1-2).
The admonition to honor one’s word is critical when it comes to
maintaining cohesiveness among a group of people. The spoken
word is something quite serious, as elaborated on throughout
the Scriptures. Proverbs 18:20-21 asserts, “With
the fruit of a man's mouth his stomach will be satisfied; he
will be satisfied with the product of his lips. Death
and life are in the power of the tongue, and those who love
it will eat its fruit.” James the Just similarly says, “So
also the tongue is a small part of the body, and yet
it boasts of great things. See how great a forest is set
aflame by such a small fire!” (James 3:5).
In many cases, what someone agrees to do involves either family
commitments or business agreements, things that sometimes
have to be thought through and analyzed very carefully. If
persons within the agricultural society of Israel agree to
trade crops for animals, or their produce for a certain
amount of gold or silver—such agreements should not be
easily broken, but neither should they be made on a whim.
The Lord did not want His chosen people entering into
Canaan, establishing themselves, and then be dishonest with
one another. In particular, should agreements or vows have
to be broken, they should be broken with some specific
guidelines in mind.
Numbers 30:3-15 includes some instruction which modern people
admittedly have some difficulty with. The difficulty is not
with the recognition that sometimes people speak without
thinking, and that an authoritative voice has to come on the
scene in protection, and be there to cancel a commitment
that might be harmful. 1 Thessalonians 5:14 says, after all,
“We
urge you, brethren, admonish the unruly, encourage the
fainthearted, help the weak, be patient with everyone.”
Some people make dumb decisions and they need help. What
some Believers, Christian and Messianic alike, have
difficulty with is that the power to annul vows in Numbers
30:3-15 is given to husbands and fathers. This is not to say
that husbands and fathers are unimportant or to be
disrespected—but it would appear here that men have some
power that women do not have. In a time when women work
alongside of men in the workplace, and wives often have to
provide for their families every bit as much as husbands,
these instructions are often viewed as being a bit archaic.
And being in Messianic ministry, and having interacted with
many Torah observant people over the years, I have
personally witnessed a great number of abuses with these
instructions.
The instructions in Numbers 30 themselves detail how vows and oaths
can be made by husbands, their wives, their daughters, and
even widows and divorcees. All readers agree that the Lord
places a substantial amount of emphasis for people to be
careful with the commitments that they make. The husband
or father of a wife or daughter, who makes a statement which
he believes is in error, has the authority to nullify and
cancel such a statement when hearing about it:
“Also
if a woman makes a vow to the
Lord, and binds
herself by an obligation in her father's house in her youth,
and her father hears her vow and her obligation by which she
has bound herself, and her father says nothing to her, then
all her vows shall stand and every obligation by which she
has bound herself shall stand. But if her father should
forbid her on the day he hears of it, none of her
vows or her obligations by which she has bound herself shall
stand; and the Lord
will forgive her because her father had forbidden her.
However, if she should marry while under her vows or the
rash statement of her lips by which she has bound herself,
and her husband hears of it and says nothing to her on the
day he hears it, then her vows shall stand and her
obligations by which she has bound herself shall stand. But
if on the day her husband hears of it, he forbids
her, then he shall annul her vow which she is under and the
rash statement of her lips by which she has bound herself;
and the Lord
will forgive her” (Numbers 30:3-8).
The way a great number of Messianic men have read this is that they
need to not only be careful about what their wives and
daughters commit themselves to, but that they are the final
authority regarding what happens within their families.
These commandments are viewed as being some kind of “reserve
powers” that women do not have, affirming in their minds,
albeit subconsciously, that men are ultimately superior to
women—or that women are inferior to men.
There is a serious problem with this line of reasoning, which few
Messianic people are usually are aware of: What did these
instructions mean for the Israelites against the social
background(s) of the Ancient Near East? Too many just
read Numbers 30, and totally forget that these instructions
regulated a social climate that was not at all the same as
the Twenty-First Century West. Many Messianic and Orthodox
Jewish men think that these commandments fully affirm the
dominance of men over women. Yet, as Ronald B. Allen points
out, the issue in Numbers 30 is actually how “In the
male-oriented culture of biblical times, there were numerous
complications that would arise when a woman would make a
religious vow...we should not miss the fact that women did
make vows, which shows that they really did participate in
the worship patterns of Israel.”[4]
Far from Numbers 30 establishing some kind of male
superiority over women, it actually extended some serious
rights to women—by the virtue of them even being allowed
to make vows or commitments—things which were largely
unseen in the law codes contemporary to the Torah.
With Israel’s Law allowing females the significant right to make
commitments on behalf of the family (most likely in trade),
it is understandable that within the largely patriarchal
Ancient Near East, that some guidelines would need to be in
place for husbands and fathers to protect their wives and
daughters. A husband or father can cancel a vow made by his
wife or daughter, especially if agreements they made would
cause some kind of harm to the family. Such a principle
should surely remain in place for today. Messianic
husbands and fathers need to be aware of what their wives or
daughters are saying. If they hear something that is going
to hurt the family, the effort should be expelled to see
that their poor decisions be promptly stopped.
Once in Messianic ministry, I really had an opportunity to see how
this instruction could work. When attending a gathering of
Believers, I recall how a woman got up and made a
declarative statement before a large audience of people,
essentially bringing a curse or negative action upon herself
and her husband. She said, in the presence of her husband
and the crowd gathered, “If such-and-such occurs,
then may God strike us dead!” There were some gasps in the
audience, but by-and-large nothing was said. The husband let
her statement stand and the meeting concluded.
Then the next day, a Messianic Jewish friend of mine, who grew up
in a Conservative Jewish home where the Torah was honored,
asked me if I had been at all disturbed by the comments made
the previous evening. I said I was disturbed, but I had no
control over the statements. At that point, he said that he
believed that the husband had the opportunity to annul the
statement his wife made and avoid any negative consequences.
I encouraged my friend to tell the husband what the Torah
said about his responsibility to annul a vow or oath.
Unfortunately, the husband was unwilling to annul the
remarks of his wife. Was he a bad husband in failing to
consider that what his wife said could result in something
bad occurring to both his wife and himself?
Everyone recognizes that a husband or father should be careful
about what his wife or daughter says. Husbands and
fathers need to look out for their families. Yet Numbers
30:3-8 says nothing about a father canceling a negative word
made by a son, although a father as parent clearly does have
the authority to nullify this. Likewise, does a mother have
the authority to cancel a negative word made by a daughter
or a son? I think that a mother as a parent surely
does have the right to cancel the harmful words of her
children, which can negatively affect the entire family.
The real challenge in applying Numbers 30:3-8 for Messianic
Believers today is not that a husband should be looking out
for the best interests of his wife should she speak without
thinking—but what happens when the husband errs by
speaking without thinking. Who is going to be there when
he makes a vow or commitment that will bring harm to the
family? Is his bad word just expected to stand because he is
a male—or is his wife as his helpmeet and partner going to
stand up for his defense, and see that his negative word be
canceled?
This is an area that I have admittedly had difficulty with, because
before marrying Margaret in 1994 I was married to a woman
who was very dominating, and who totally ran our family. I
had very little say in what we did, or in how my two natural
daughters were raised. Unlike my current marriage, I was
unequally yoked, and did not have the benefit of a spouse
who really loved me and cared for me, just like I was
supposed to love for her and care for her (cf. Ephesians
5:25). When I married Margaret, I admittedly found my second
marriage to be quite liberating, as I was able to have a
definite say in the affairs of our new family, and in what
John, Jane, and Maggie were doing. If Margaret or Jane or
Maggie ever make a commitment that was in error, I
have—according to the Torah—the right to cancel such a
commitment. But it does not seem appropriate at all that
female commitments which can be harmful can be nullified,
yet male commitments made by John or even myself that
can be harmful have to stand. I know that if Margaret too
were not a co-leader of our family, always counseling me and
letting me know about things, that I would have made some
serious mistakes during our time together. I know of
instances when Margaret has had to step in and nullify or
correct remarks I have made that would harm our household.
She has saved me from experiencing negative consequences
of some of my actions.
I know of Messianic husbands today who would prefer that their
words remain in force, even harmful words, just
because it might prove some kind of male superiority or
dominance over women. (Yes, a few might actually choose bad
things to happen to their families just so their position of
“authority” might stand.) Their wives frequently have no say
in what goes on in their families. I would submit that their
families are the worse because the wife does not have the
ability to counsel her husband, and be there to guard him
should he be in error.
The instructions of Numbers 30:3-8, far from asserting some kind of
male superiority over women, originally extended rights to
women that societies contemporary to Ancient Israel did not
often have. Allen further describes how we see “a gradual
shifting from the patriarchy to a more egalitarian
relationship between women and men. The change is very
gradual in biblical times, but the change is underway.”[5]
Now in the post-resurrection era, where males and females
are definitely equal (Galatians 3:28), should wives and
mothers have the authority of Numbers 30:3-8 as originally
given to Israelite husbands and fathers, halachically
extended to them? Many of today’s Messianic Torah teachers
would exclaim a resounding “No!” But much of the Jewish
theological tradition itself has already answered this for
us, recognizing how time has taken its course changing the
applicability of these commandments originally delivered
into a social setting that is largely gone. Jacob Milgrom
points out, “by the time of the Talmud, the Sages limited
the applicability of this law by restricting its time (the
year between ages 11 and 12) and circumstances.”[6]
In Messianic homes today, the issue is not so much whether the
commandments remain relevant—because they surely do—the
issue is whether a wife can look out for her husband to the
same degree as a husband can look out for his wife. Do
spouses share authority within the home? While I know many
Messianic families will continue in thinking that husbands
possess some kind of “reserve powers” in Numbers 30:3-8, I
also know that if Margaret had not canceled some of my words
in the past, I might not be writing this today, having
chosen a different path for my pursuits. I know that not
only is she stronger with me as her husband, but I am
stronger with her as my wife! My position as a husband
or father is not nullified or abolished if my wife is a
co-leader of the family and an equal partner along with me.
On the contrary, we both look out for each other. I
pray that all husbands and fathers in today’s Messianic
community learn to value their wives, just as I have, and
that some of the misapplication of Numbers 30:3-8 we have
seen will come to an end.
Unity Over
the Midianites
After the instruction about making vows is delivered, the
Israelites are commanded to take up war with the Midianites.
The war plans are very explicit, and Israel complies
accordingly:
“Then
the Lord spoke
to Moses, saying, ‘Take full vengeance for the sons of
Israel on the Midianites; afterward you will be gathered to
your people.’ Moses spoke to the people, saying, ‘Arm men
from among you for the war, that they may go against Midian
to execute the Lord's
vengeance on Midian. A thousand from each tribe of all the
tribes of Israel you shall send to the war.’ So there were
furnished from the thousands of Israel, a thousand from each
tribe, twelve thousand armed for war. Moses sent them, a
thousand from each tribe, to the war, and Phinehas the son
of Eleazar the priest, to the war with them, and the holy
vessels and the trumpets for the alarm in his hand. So they
made war against Midian, just as the
Lord had
commanded Moses, and they killed every male’” (Numbers
31:1-7).
Equal squads are taken from each of the twelve tribes, excluding
Levi, for this military excursion. With tremendous unity of
purpose and accompanied by Phinehas, the son of the high
priest, and the holy vessels and the silver trumpets, the
soldiers of Israel take on the Midianites and defeat them
(Numbers 31:8-12). When the fighting is over, a census is
taken of Israel’s military force, and no one is found to
have been killed in action:
“Then
the officers who were over the thousands of the army, the
captains of thousands and the captains of hundreds,
approached Moses, and they said to Moses, ‘Your servants
have taken a census of men of war who are in our charge, and
no man of us is missing’” (Numbers
31:48-49).
This was exceptionally wonderful news, especially in light of the
invasion of Canaan that is seen later in the Book of Joshua.
Unity of purpose and resolve is rewarded with an outstanding
victory. The confidence level of Israel must have been sky
high as the people pondered the humiliation of the
Midianites, without loosing a single combatant. The Holy
One was definitely preparing Israel for more battles to
come.
Concern
for Tribal Brethren
In Numbers 32, a challenge is presented to Moses. The Reubenites
and Gadites have decided that they would like to settle on
the east side of the Jordan, because the land there appears
to be good for grazing their plentiful livestock. This
request generates a lengthy tirade from Moses, who likens it
to the judgment that came upon Israel as a consequence of
the bad report from the ten spies:
“But
Moses said to the sons of Gad and to the sons of Reuben,
‘Shall your brothers go to war while you yourselves sit
here? Now why are you discouraging the sons of Israel from
crossing over into the land which the
Lord has given
them? This is what your fathers did when I sent them from
Kadesh-barnea to see the land. For when they went up to the
valley of Eshcol and saw the land, they discouraged the sons
of Israel so that they did not go into the land which the
Lord had given
them. So the Lord's
anger burned in that day, and He swore, saying, ‘None of the
men who came up from Egypt, from twenty years old and
upward, shall see the land which I swore to Abraham, to
Isaac and to Jacob; for they did not follow Me fully, except
Caleb the son of Jephunneh the Kenizzite and Joshua the son
of Nun, for they have followed the
Lord fully.’ So
the Lord's
anger burned against Israel, and He made them wander in the
wilderness forty years, until the entire generation of those
who had done evil in the sight of the
Lord was
destroyed. Now behold, you have risen up in your fathers'
place, a brood of sinful men, to add still more to the
burning anger of the
Lord against Israel. For if you turn away from
following Him, He will once more abandon them in the
wilderness, and you will destroy all these people” (Numbers 32:6-15).
This was a horrible rebuke.
Moses tears into the leaders of the tribes of Reuben and
Gad. Yet at the end of his chastisement, the Reubenites and
Gadites decide that they will indeed be among the Israelites
who help secure the Promised Land with the other tribes,
fighting alongside them:
“Then
they came near to him and said, ‘We will build here
sheepfolds for our livestock and cities for our little ones;
but we ourselves will be armed ready to go before the
sons of Israel, until we have brought them to their place,
while our little ones live in the fortified cities because
of the inhabitants of the land. We will not return to our
homes until every one of the sons of Israel has possessed
his inheritance. For we will not have an inheritance with
them on the other side of the Jordan and beyond, because our
inheritance has fallen to us on this side of the Jordan
toward the east’” (Numbers 32:16-19).
As it turns out, Moses not only places the Reubenites and Gadites
on the eastern side of the Jordan, but he also discerns that
it is the right place for part of the tribe of Manasseh.[7]
In a great gesture of unity and camaraderie as a part of the
polity of Israel, these two-and-a-half tribes commit to
securing Canaan with the other tribes, before they return to
establish lives for themselves in Gilead and Bashan. Their
request for land east of the Jordan is granted, and they
have made the decision to stand with the other tribes of
Israel to take the land west of the Jordan.
Being
Ready for God’s Purpose?
After nearly forty years in the wilderness, you would think that
Israel is now ready to enter into God’s purpose, and expel
the pagan nations of Canaan, taking its inheritance in the
Promised Land. But in reality, the final instructions that
come in this Torah portion (and also those seen next week in
Mas’ei), still indicate that the Israelites need some
fine tuning. They are learning the valuable lessons of
keeping their vows and oaths to one another. They are
learning what it means to fight together. And, they are
learning what it means to stand by one another.
Today’s Messianic Believers often have a great amount of zeal for
studying the Torah, and for following events in Israel.
Sometimes this zeal is unbalanced and unbridled, and people
think that the restoration of God’s Kingdom is going to
occur at a much faster pace than it actually will.
Certainly, to one degree or another, I think Messianic
Believers will always be in a mode where we are constantly
being trained up in new instructions that are designed to
help us become better, obedient servants of the Most High.
We will always be challenged to accurately apply Scripture
in new circumstances, requiring us to appeal to the Holy
Spirit for guidance and discernment.
Whether we are learning to take on new responsibilities and
approaches as husbands or parents—or we are learning how to
watch out for fellow Believers—the benchmark should be that
we are maturing in our walk with the Messiah Yeshua.
Hopefully, in His time we will be able to attain the unity
that will make our victory as God’s people sure and
complete. Such a unity begins in the home, and works
outwardly into the local congregation, and then the greater
Body of Messiah.
Mark Huey (B.A., Vanderbilt
University in History and Graduate Studies at
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University) is the
Director of Outreach Israel Ministries (www.outreachisrael.net).
He is the author of several books, including:
TorahScope, Volumes I & II, and Counting
the Omer: A Daily Devotional Toward Shavuot.
He is also co-author of
Hebraic Roots: An Introductory
Study.
NOTES
[1]
Numbers 30:1-16.
[2]
Numbers 31:1-54.
[3]
Numbers 32:1-42.
[4]
Ronald B. Allen, “Numbers,” in Frank
E. Gaebelein, ed. et. al., Expositor’s Bible
Commentary (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1990),
2:958.
[5]
Ibid.
[6]
Milgrom, in Etz Hayim, 942.
[7]
Numbers 32:33.
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