Big Idea: God’s people will receive their rightful inheritance.
Understanding the Text
The plague of Numbers 25 and the census of Numbers 26 mark the end of the first generation after leaving Egypt and the emergence of a new one. But how does the unit on the daughters of Zelophehad (Num. 27:1–11) fit into this sequence? One answer is that the purpose of the census of Numbers 26 is to determine allotments in the land, and this passage is related to the fair distribution of the land.1
But why does the narrator divide this story into two episodes, one in Numbers 27 and another in Numbers 36? Alan Kam-Yau Chan argues that the reason is structural: the first part of Numbers is bracketed by the two censuses (Num. 1–4; 26), whereas the second half (Num. 27–36) is bracketed by the two accounts …