Numbers 25
Baal Peor represents the nadir of Israel's wilderness faithlessness: the people engage in sexual immorality with Moabite women who invite them to sacrifices for Baal, a worship practice that the LORD identifies as idolatry and violation of the covenant, triggering a plague that kills 24,000 before Phinehas' intervention stops it. Phinehas' response—driving a spear through an Israelite man (Zimri) and a Midianite woman (Cozbi) engaged in the act—is presented not as vigilante violence but as 'zeal for my God' (qin'ah), a passionate defense of covenant exclusivity that the LORD rewards with 'a covenant of a perpetual priesthood' for Phinehas and his descendants. The transformation of Phinehas from a secondary priestly figure into the covenant's guardian through his zealous act establishes violence in defense of covenant faithfulness as a form of priestly service and atonement; the spear-thrust simultaneously punishes the transgressors and protects the community from the plague's continued ravaging. The theological significance of Baal Peor is enormous: it represents the historical moment when Israel nearly embraced the fertility religions of Canaan, accepting sexual and sacrificial practices that would have dissolved the covenant's distinctiveness, and only Phinehas' violent intervention prevents cultural assimilation and religious apostasy. The Moabites' role in seducing Israel into idolatry establishes a pattern of external threat (Balaam's attempted curse transformed into blessing, now the seduction into Baal worship) that will reappear in Israel's later history, making Moab a perpetual antagonist of covenant faithfulness. Numbers 25's resolution—the plague is stopped, the priesthood is permanently secured through Phinehas, and the narrative pivots toward the second census—establishes that zealous covenant defense produces blessing and priestly authority, modeling a theology in which passionate faithfulness becomes the priesthood's distinguishing characteristic.