The past two days I have been in Baltimore, using the Johns Hopkins library for the last bit of my research. I have much more that I could do, but it is time for me to head on. Wednesday I am driving to Holy Cross Monastery for a retreat, and after that I will be hooking up with my family again in Albany, NY, for a wedding. We will then drive up to Maine for three weeks of vacation, where I hope I can do some more research and writing.

These two days at JHU were mostly spent writing articles for the New Interpreters Dictionary of the Bible. I only have five more articles to go, and those can be written with the resources I have in Lithuania.

I have also been able to synthesize some of my research from VTS and my chats with Steve Cook. Here is what I am thinking at this point:

  • The P layer is the first stage in the priestly tradition. In Numbers 16-17, it presents a story of 250 people who rebel against the idea that the priests are holy while the people are not. God consumes with fire the non-priests who offer incense at the tabernacle. This is followed by the contest of Aaron’s rod, which confirms the election of the tribe of Levi to be priests. Knohl assigns this to H, but this layer actually seems to argue against H’s main point that everyone is holy. As Moses says, offer your incense and we will find out who is holy. As it turns out, people not from the tribe of Levi are not holy and are killed. This contrasts with H’s point that all the people are holy (Lev.19 et passim).
  • Ezekiel 44:6-16 represents the next stage, when the Levites are demoted for their role in idolatry, while the Zadokites are reaffirmed in their position because they were faithful. Cook is right that Ezekiel is reflecting on Numbers 16-17 here, but it is the P layer of that story that Ezekiel reads. There, the concern is on inappropriate people approaching the tabernacle. Most of the languages parallels that Cook rightly points out are between Ezekiel and the P layer.
  • The final stage is H, which edits the P and J layers of Numbers 16-17 and adds Numbers 18. H also adds Korah the Levite as leader of the 250, thereby making them complicit in the wilderness rebellion. In other words, what Ezekiel has done in oracle, H does in narrative. Here, the Levites are made to be a buffer between the people and the tabernacle / temple, so that the people do not incur guilt by encroaching on the sacred. Without this division, it makes no sense for the Levite to be excluded from the tabernacle in Numbers 16-17, only to have their tribal election reaffirmed by the budding of Aaron’s rod. H is aware of Ezekiel’s oracle and incorporates some of the languages into this story, although he does disagree with Ezekiel on some points.

That, then, is the theory I want to explore in my next paper. I hope to be able to get some of that done in Maine, although my research resources will be limited to what I already have and what I can find on the Internet.