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In Num 12:1, Miriam and Aaron
confront Moses because of his marriage to a Cushite woman, and in so
doing, they attempt to claim equal prophetic status with Moses ( Num 12:2a). Apparently, on this
occasion, Moses’ meekness constrains him from responding ( Num 12:3; cf. Rom 12:19; 1
Clem. 17 [ANF 9:234]; Socrates, Hist.
eccl., 7.42 [NPNF2 2:176]), but יהוה hears the conversation and
summons all three siblings to the tent of meeting ( Num 12:2b, 4). יהוה then summons Aaron and Miriam
for a special rebuke ( Num 12:5):
however high may be their claim to apparently equal prophetic status
with Moses, Moses own status still surpasses that of prophet ( Num 12:6–9). The status that Aaron and
Miriam claim for themselves gets them only so far—only to dreams and
visions ( Num 12:6). By contrast,
Moses is not limited to dreams and visions, but פה אל־פה אדבר־בו ומראה
ולא בחידת ותמנת יהוה יביט ( Num
12:8a; with him, I [יהוה] speak mouth to mouth, plainly, and not in
riddles, and he looks upon the form of יהוה). More than a prophet, Moses
is a faithful servant in all יהוה’s house ( Num 12:7; Heb 3:5).
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