to the Priestly Code. How immediate is the connection
with the last-named document, how in a certain sense
that code is even carried further by Chronicles, can
be seen for example from this circumstance, that in
the former Moses in a novel reduces the period of
beginning public service in the case of a Levite from
thirty years of age to twenty-five (Numbers iv. 3 seq.,
viii. 23 seq.), while in the latter David (1Chronicles
xxiii. 3, 24 seq.) brings it down still further to
the age of twenty; matters are still to some extent
in a state of flux, and the ordering of the temple
worship is a continuation of the beginning made with
the tabernacle service by Moses. Now, in so
far as the statistics of the clergy have a real basis
at all, that basis is post-exilian. It has long
ago been remarked how many of the individuals figuring
under David and his successors (e.g., Asaph, Heman,
Jeduthun) bear names identical with families or guilds
of a later time, how the two indeed are constantly
becoming confluent, and difficulty is felt in determining
whether by the expression “head” a person
or a family ought to be understood. But, inasmuch
as the Chronicler nevertheless desires to depict the
older time and not his own, he by no means adheres
closely to contemporary statistics, but gives free
play at the same time to his idealising imagination;
whence it comes that in spite of the numerous and
apparently precise data afforded, the reader still
finds himself unable to form any clear picture of the
organisation of the clergy,—the ordering
of the families and tribes, the distribution of the
offices,—nay, rather, is involved in a
maze of contradictions. Obededom, Jeduthun, Shelomith,
Korah, occur in the most different connections, belong
now to one, now to another section of the Levites,
and discharge at one time this function, at another,
that. Naturally the commentators are prompt
with their help by distinguishing names that are alike,
and identifying names that are different.
Some characteristic details may still be mentioned
here. The names of the six Levitical classes
according to 1Chronicles xxv. 4, Giddalti, V’romamti-Ezer,
Joshbekashah, Mallothi, Hothir, Mahazioth, are simply
the fragments of a consecutive sentence which runs:
I have magnified | and exalted the help | of him who
sat in need: | I have spoken | abundance of |
prophecies. The watchman or singer Obededom
who is alleged to have discharged his functions in
the days of David and Amaziah, is no other than the
captain to whom David intrusted for three months the
custody of the ark, a Philistine of Gath. The
composition of the singers’ pedigrees is very
transparent, especially in the case of Heman (1Chronicles
vi. 7-l2 [22-27] = ver 18-23, [33-37]). Apart
from Exodus vi. 16-l9, use is chiefly made of what
is said about the family of Samuel (1Samuel i. 1,
viii. 2), who must of course have been of Levitical
descent, because his mother consecrated him to the
service of the sanctuary. Heman is the son of