III.III.2. The metamorphosis was due to the centralisation of worship, and may he traced down through Deuteronomy and Ezekiel to RQ,
III.III.3. To the three festivals RQ adds the great day of atonement, which arose out of the fast-days of the exile
III.IV.1. The Sabbath, which is connected with the new moon, was originally a lunar festival Exaggeration of the Sabbath rest in the Priestly Code
III.IV.2. Sabbatical year, and year of Jubilee
CHAP. IV. THE PRIESTS AND THE LEVITES—
IV.I.1. According to Ezek. xliv., only the Levites of Jerusalem, the sons of Zadok, are to continue priests in the new Jerusalem; the other Levites are to be degraded to their servants and denuded of their priestly rights. According to RQ the Levites never possessed the priestly right, but only the sons of Aaron
IV.I.2. These answer to the sons of Zadok
IV.Ii.1. In the earliest period of the history of Israel there is no distinction between clergy and laity. Every one may slaughter and sacrifice; there are professional priests only at the great sanctuaries. Priestly families at Sihiloh and Dan.
No setting apart of what is holy
IV.Ii.2. Royal temples of the kings; priests at them as royal officials
IV.Ii.3. Importance of the North-Israelite priesthood in the time of the kings
IV.Ii.4. The family of Zadok at Jerusalem
IV.III.1. In the oldest part of je there are no priests; no Aaron by the side of Moses
IV.III.2. In D the Levites are priests. They occur in that character, not to speak of Judges xviii. seq., only in the literature of the exile. Their descent from Moses or Aaron. The spiritual and the secular tribe of Levi. Difficulty of bringing them together
IV.III.3. Consolidation of the spiritual tribe in RQ; separation of priests and Levites. Further development of the clergy after the exile. The high priest as head of the theocracy
CHAPTER V. THE ENDOWMENT OF THE CLERGY—
V.I.1. The sacrificial dues raised in RQ
V.I.2. The firstlings were turned into contributions to the priests, and doubled in amount
V.Ii.1. Levitical towns
V.Ii.2. The historical situation underlying the priestly pretensions in RQ
B. HISTORY OF TRADITION.
CHAPTER VI. CHRONICLES—
VI.I.1. David becomes Saul’s successor without any exertion, all Israel being already on his side, namely, the priests and Levites
Distortion of the original story of the bringing of the ark to Jerusalem. Omission of unedifying incidents in David’s life