Numbers 15
The post-crisis laws presupposing Israel's future entry into Canaan (grain and drink offerings accompanying sacrifices, the law of the alien and native born treated equally before the LORD) assert that the people will eventually enter the land despite their rebellion, a theological affirmation that divine promise supersedes human faithlessness. The distinction between intentional sin (committed 'with a high hand,' beyad ramah—acting in defiance of the covenant) and unintentional sin (committed through inadvertence) introduces a foundational principle: the high-handed sinner is 'cut off from the people' (karat), a judicial death that severs him from covenant community, while the unintentional sinner can make atonement through sacrifice. The Sabbath-breaker who gathers wood is executed by stoning without any opportunity for atonement, establishing the Sabbath as inviolable and suggesting that some transgressions (those implying deliberate covenant rejection) admit no remedy short of death. The fringes (tzitzit, 'tassels') to be worn on the garment's corners are commanded 'so that you will remember all the commands of the LORD and obey them,' transforming the visible mark into a mnemonic device that makes the covenant literally wearable and the commandments perpetually visible. The tzitzit become one of Judaism's most iconic marks, and their symbolic function—to keep the covenant always before the eyes—encodes Numbers 15's essential insight: the people's faithlessness stems from forgetfulness, from the failure to remember what the LORD has done and promised. Numbers 15's placement after the wilderness judgment is theologically crucial; while the faithless generation will die in the wilderness, the laws presupposing Canaan's conquest assert that the covenant's future is secure, and the emphasis on remembrance through the tzitzit addresses the root cause of Israel's rebellion.