When is vigilantism justified?

It’s #BibleStudyCoffeeTime
Let's get situated,
just not too situated,
because the subject matter this week is rough.

Note to Twitter and all users that I am not advocating vigilantism.

This is a BIBLE STUDY THREAD.
However, we did not talk about the incident with Pinchas, who we (Jewish people) call "Pinchas the zealot."

Let's review what happened there, because it provides the starting point for this week's portion, which is named in his honor.
Recap, end of last week's portion:
> The Jews are trying to get to Israel, & the surrounding nations are massing against them
> The Moabite king Balak gets a prophet-for-hire to curse the Jews
> God reverses the plot & causes him to predict the redemption.
https://www.chabad.org/parshah/article_cdo/aid/2219/jewish/Chukat-Balak-in-a-Nutshell.htm
In a disturbing plot twist:

> The Moabites, who were unsuccessful with the hired gun, try another tactic and succeed.
> They send their women to seduce the Jews.
> The seductive women lead the Jews to worship Peor, aka Moloch.
Note: the Moabites and the Midianites are allies.

> God commands Moses to hang the idol worshipers and he in turn commands the Judges to do so, and so it happens.

> Even after this horrible scene, and as the Jews are mourning the dead, there is further rebellion.
> A notable from the tribe of Simeon (Zimri) takes a princess from the Midianites (Cozbi) into the Jewish camp adding oil to the burning flames of anger, rebellion, and outright treason by the people.
> (Numbers 25:6) Zimri takes Cozbi before the people, flaunting her sexually, making a display of the fact that they are going into a tent to have relations.
> The righteous Pinchas, grandson of Aaron the high priest, follows them into the tent and spears the both of them, the woman through her belly (this is emphasized), ending the disgrace.

Painting: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phinehas#/media/File:Joos_van_Winghe_-_Phinehas_slaying_Zimri_and_Kozbi_the_Midianite.jpg
It should be clear, if it is not already, that the entire goal of the Moabite and Midianite infiltration was to destroy the relationship between the Jews and God.
The only way to do that, they realized, is to tempt the Jews into Satanism.
Satanism here is defined as the attempt to use the properties of this created world for your own benefit, while rebelling against God.
Since a direct appeal to Satanism would not work, the nations used the women ("honeypots") to lure men into intimate relationships.

Nothing has changed.
https://www.slideshare.net/tclowers/espionage-11351442
But the focus was not on the women. The women were only a tool, albeit a powerful one.

We see this in the text itself, and I want to go back and read it, and then we'll begin with the next portion, and then this thread will end.

Hopefully we can do more deep commentary later.
Num. 25:1-3: "The people began to commit harlotry with the daughters of the Moabites. They invited the people to the sacrifices of their gods....Israel became attached to Baal Peor, & the anger of the Lord flared against Israel."

Anger about Baal Peor. https://bit.ly/38LDAvr 
The Bible is very clear that the Jewish forefathers married women at times who were not Israelites.

For example, Moses himself married Tziporah, who was a Midianite princess. Her father was the righteous Jethro, an adviser to Moses.
I would like to point out here that Tziporah was African.
Recall also that Joshua, who succeeded Moses, married Rahab, who had been a prostitute.

So repentance and changing your life to more wholesome ways is also part of our belief system.
No, the issue here is very clearly worshiping idols, meaning NOT worshiping God, and trying to get power from sources other than faith in Him, and hard work to enable blessing to flow through the faith channel.
Num. 25:4 Judgment is coming.
"The Lord said to Moses, "Take all the leaders of the people and hang them before the Lord, facing the sun, and then the flaring anger of the Lord will be removed from Israel."
Capital punishment for the people who turned away from God and cleaved to Baal Peor (they were "attached") was not vigilantism.

It was necessary.
But God did not it Himself.

It was important for the people to do it.

And so, though God commanded Moses,

Moses delegated the task to the judges.

Numbers 25:5 "Moses said to the judges of Israel, 'Each of you shall kill the men who became attached to Baal Peor.'"
The judges must do it.

And if they cannot do their jobs, they cannot be judges.
Note also that Moses changed the command.

What God said: "Take all the leaders of the people and hang them before the Lord."

"All the leaders" - because the leaders, Baal worshipers or not, are responsible for the people straying.
What Moses did:

"Moses said to the judges of Israel, 'Each of you shall kill the men who became attached to Baal Peor.'"

Moses had mercy on the leaders, and gave them the opportunity to kill ONLY the idol worshipers themselves.
Num. 25:6 - AFTER all this, after the executions:

"*Then* an Israelite man came and brought the Midianite woman to his brethren, before the eyes of Moses and before the eyes of the entire congregation of the children of Israel."

It was DELIBERATE.
Also, the JUDGEMENT had ALREADY been rendered.

This man was guilty, but somehow had not been killed.
"before the eyes of the entire congregation of the children of Israel" - a PUBLIC act of treason.

"while they were weeping at the entrance of the Tent of Meeting" - while they were GRIEVING at the HOLIEST place they had.

https://www.gotquestions.org/tent-of-meeting.html
In this context, Pinchas' behavior ("kanai," in Hebrew, "zealotry" in English") is considered "praiseworthy."
24,000 people were punished with death as a result of their attachment to idol worship, due to their seduction by the Moabite (and I infer Midianite) women.
Parshas Pinchas begins (and we can ask why the story breaks over two Torah portions - or continues one into the other - perhaps something to be addressed later) with Pinchas being praised for his actions.
And obviously the portion is named for him, which is an eternal honor.
Pinchas the vigilante did not make up the law, but he did take the law into his own hands, when the judicial system and the leaders and the people were in a weakened state and could not do so themselves.

Again, note: I am not endorsing vigilantism.
Okay, I have to go now.

The discussion ends here.

I hope to pick it up later.

Thanks for reading.
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