As we reflect on the events recorded in Numbers (Bemidbar) 25, one question confronts every generation of believers: What do we do when sin is no longer hidden, but openly celebrated?
Phinehas was confronted with that very question. While Israel stood weeping before the Tabernacle under Yehovah’s judgment, an Israelite man openly brought a Midianite woman into the camp in defiance of both Elohim and the entire congregation. In that moment, Phinehas acted with zeal for the holiness of Yehovah. Scripture tells us that because Israel had committed sexual immorality with the daughters of Moab and joined themselves to Baal Peor, Yehovah’s anger burned against His people and 24,000 died in the plague (Numbers 25:9). It was Phinehas’ decisive action that brought the plague to an end and turned away Elohim’s wrath. His deed was not an act of uncontrolled violence but of covenant justice in the midst of open rebellion that threatened the identity of Yehovah’s people.
We are not called to carry out physical judgment today. That responsibility does not belong to us. But we are called to uphold the same standard of holiness. So the question remains: Have we become indifferent to the normalization of sexual immorality? Have we chosen silence because speaking the truth has become unpopular? Have we slowly accepted what the Torah clearly rejects?
We live in a culture where biblical morality is increasingly portrayed as hateful while moral rebellion is celebrated as progress. LGBT+ “Pride” events, frequently sponsored by governments and major corporations, have become more than public demonstrations. Many seek to advance a worldview that rejects the Creator’s design established from the beginning, when Yehovah made humanity “male and female” (Genesis 1:27) and established marriage as the covenant union of one man and one woman (Genesis 2:24). In many cities these events include public nudity, simulated sexual acts, and open ridicule of biblical faith. Children are often exposed to these displays under the banner of inclusion and diversity. Every generation must decide whether it will allow the world to define morality or whether it will submit to the authority of Yehovah’s Word.
The Torah calls us to be a people set apart (Leviticus 20:26). Paul echoes that same call when he writes,
Do not be conformed to this world
Romans 12:2
Holiness is never preserved by compromise. It is preserved through faithful obedience. Our responsibility extends beyond protecting ourselves; we are called to prepare the next generation. Our children must learn to distinguish between what is holy and what is common, between what is clean and what is unclean (Leviticus 10:10). If we do not teach them according to the Torah, the world will gladly disciple them according to its own values.
This is why the Shema remains as relevant today as when Moses first proclaimed it:
These words, which I command you this day, shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall speak of them when you sit in your house, when you walk by the way, when you lie down, and when you rise up.
Deuteronomy 6:6–7
Our homes must become places where the Torah is lived before it is taught, where truth is practiced before it is proclaimed. There is no greater safeguard for our children than parents who faithfully obey Yehovah and model that obedience every day.
The challenge before us is not merely to condemn the darkness around us. It is to remain faithful while living in the midst of it. Every generation must decide whether it will compromise with the culture or stand with Yehovah. Phinehas made his choice. What will yours be?