Timothy M. Willis, «Blasphemy, Talion, and Chiasmus: The Marriage of Form and Content in Lev 24,13-23», Vol. 90 (2009) 68-74
The verbal divine response to a case of blasphemy/cursing of God is presented as a lengthy chiasmus in Lev 24,13-23. One aspect of this that has gone unnoticed is how the structure suggests that blasphemy is a more serious offense than murder. This observation shows how the pericope fits well thematically in Lev 18-26, where there are repeated examples of the divine self-declaration formulas (I am the Lord…) and references to holiness.
Blasphemy, Talion, and Chiasmus:
The Marriage of Form and Content in Lev 24,13-23
There is only one narrative in all of Lev 11–27. It is a brief narrative in Lev
24,10-12 that relates the story of a young man who “blasphemed the Name
and cursed†during a fight. Moses and the people ask the Lord to advise them
on how to deal with this offense, and the subsequent speech gives the divine
response (24,13-23). The writer presents the report of the response as an
extended chiasmus. “The inverted symmetry or reverse parallelism of this
passage is engaging, impressive, extensive, and pleasing†(1). Jacob Milgrom
remarks that while the chiastic structure of this passage has long been
recognized, the “ideological implications†of it have not been fully
fathomed (2). The present exposition intends to take us a little deeper than
before, but does not pretend to fathom all the depths in this significant
passage.
I will use Welch’s treatment of this passage as my starting-point,
delineating the chiastic structure and linking it to one or two other dominant
stylistic features; and then I will similarly develop some thoughts regarding
interpretation, noting those that Welch lays out and adding a couple more.
My initial goal is to affirm his conclusion that the use of chiasmus
contributes significantly to the ideological message of the passage. Not only
does the chiastic structure provide the literary means to develop and
reinforce the legal principle of talion that lies at the heart of the divine
decision, as Welch contends, but at the same time it illuminates the extreme
gravity of the sin of blasphemy. The result is aesthetically pleasing at the
literary level, but it also intends to facilitate the reader’s reception and
implementation of the Lord’s verdict by reinforcing the talionic principle that
the punishment fits the crime.
1. Chiastic Presentation of Lev 24,13-23 (MT)
I have laid out the (unpointed) Masoretic text of Lev 24,13-23 in the
adjoining chart, showing how I see the chiasmus in its various corresponding
layers. The layer designated ‘I’ does not have a parallel because it constitutes
the fulcrum of the chiasmus (24,20a). The translations in the discussion that
follows are my own.
(1) J.W. WELCH, “Chiasmus in Biblical Law: An Approach to the Structure of Legal
Texts in the Hebrew Bibleâ€, Jewish Law Association Studies IV: The Boston Conference
Volume (ed. B.S. JACKSON) (Atlanta, GA 1990) 8.
(2) J. MILGROM, Leviticus 23–27 (AB; New York 2000) 2130. For some recent
acknowledgements of the chiastic structure, see M. FISHBANE, Biblical Interpretation in
Ancient Israel (Oxford 1985) 101; G.J. WENHAM, Leviticus (NICOT; Grand Rapids, MI
1979) 312.