Abstract
This paper argues that the great majority of illegitimate defenses of authority depend upon a single move — the fusion of the honor due an office with immunity for the person who holds it — and that Scripture consistently keeps these two things apart, so that restoring the distinction simultaneously protects legitimate authority and exposes its abusers. Building on the typology of the preceding paper, in which “collapsing office into person” was identified as a self-serving tell, this study develops the distinction at length and demonstrates that it is the conceptual key to the whole problem of credible authority. The argument proceeds in five movements. First, it establishes the distinction itself: an office is a function instituted by God and carrying real authority, while the person who holds it is a fallible human being who may exercise the office well or badly, and the honor owed the office does not transfer to the person as immunity. Second, it examines the paradigm case of David and Saul, in which David honored Saul’s office while fleeing Saul’s murderous person and openly declaring Saul’s sin. Third, it examines the complementary case of Nathan and David, in which a prophet confronted the holder of the highest office without any suggestion that the confrontation was rebellion. Fourth, it observes that the priest stood under the same law he administered, so that the office never placed its holder above the standard the office served. Fifth, it argues that restoring the distinction is doubly protective: it shields legitimate authority from the corrosion that follows when an office is discredited by its holder’s abuses, and it strips abusers of the immunity they claim by hiding behind the office. The paper concludes that the office/person distinction is the indispensable conceptual instrument of credible authority, because it is the only framework that can honor real authority and correct real abuse at once.
1. Introduction: The Single Move
The preceding paper identified eight self-serving tells, among them the collapsing of office into person — the framing of critique of the man as rebellion against God. This paper takes up that tell as its sole subject, not because it is one tell among eight but because it is, in a sense, the master move on which most illegitimate defenses of authority depend. The conflict of interest, the selective citation, the fear lever, and the other tells are the instruments of self-serving authority; the collapse of office into person is the foundation that makes the instruments work, for it is the move that converts the honor legitimately owed to an office into immunity illegitimately claimed by a person. This paper argues that the distinction between office and person is the conceptual key to the whole problem of credible authority, and that its restoration is the single most important corrective available to a defender who wishes to honor real authority while exposing real abuse.[^1]
The move the paper opposes can be stated precisely. Scripture institutes offices — functions of teaching, oversight, judgment, and rule — and attaches to these offices real authority and a real claim to honor. A person who holds such an office holds genuine authority and is genuinely owed the honor proper to the office. The illegitimate move is the transfer of this honor from the office to the person, such that the person becomes, in his own claim, as untouchable as the office is honorable. The honor owed the function is converted into immunity for the man, so that criticism of the man’s conduct is treated as an assault on the function and thence on the God who instituted it. By this single move, a fallible human being places his own conduct beyond correction, borrowing for his person the inviolability that belongs, if anywhere, to the office alone.[^2]
The thesis of the paper is that Scripture consistently refuses this move, keeping office and person distinct, and that the refusal is not a marginal feature of a few texts but a settled pattern visible across the canon. The biblical figures who model right relation to authority honor offices while correcting persons; the biblical prophets confront officeholders without dishonoring offices; the biblical law places officeholders under the standard their offices serve. In every case, the office is honored and the person is held accountable, and the two are held apart. The restoration of this distinction is therefore not the importation of a modern principle into the text but the recovery of the text’s own consistent practice, and it is, this paper will argue, doubly protective: it protects legitimate authority from being discredited by its holders’ abuses, and it protects the people from abusers who hide behind their offices. The distinction is the only framework that can do both at once, and that is why it is the indispensable instrument of credible authority.[^3]
The paper proceeds by establishing the distinction conceptually, then by demonstrating it through the paradigm cases of David and Saul and of Nathan and David, then by observing its expression in the priest’s subjection to the law he administered, and finally by drawing out its double protective function.
2. The Distinction Itself: Honor to the Office, Accountability for the Person
The distinction between office and person rests on a clear conceptual foundation that must be stated before the biblical cases are examined, for the cases illustrate the distinction but do not by themselves define it. An office, in the biblical conception, is a function instituted by God and carrying real authority — the function of the priest to mediate and teach, of the king to rule and judge, of the elder to oversee and feed the flock. The authority belongs to the function, conferred by the God who instituted it, and it is real authority, not a polite fiction; the office genuinely binds, genuinely commands, genuinely deserves honor. This is the truth that legitimate defenses of authority rightly insist upon, and that the first paper of this suite affirmed: Scripture does institute offices and does command honor toward them.[^4]
The person who holds an office is a distinct thing from the office itself. The person is a fallible human being, capable of exercising the office faithfully or corruptly, of honoring its function or abusing it. The person comes to the office and may depart from it; the office persists across the persons who hold it. And — this is the decisive point — the honor owed the office does not transfer to the person as immunity. The office is owed honor because of what it is, a function instituted by God; the person is owed the honor proper to his faithful exercise of the office, but not an immunity that would place his conduct beyond correction. The office is honorable always, because God instituted it; the person is honorable insofar as he exercises the office faithfully, and is subject to correction insofar as he does not. The honor and the accountability attach to different things — the honor to the office, the accountability to the person — and they do not cancel each other, for one may honor the office and correct the person in the same act, as the biblical cases will show.[^5]
The conceptual error of the collapse is now visible. The collapse treats the honor owed the office as though it were owed the person, and as though it amounted to immunity. It reasons: the office is honored by God; I hold the office; therefore I am honored by God; therefore to criticize me is to dishonor God. Each step smuggles in the confusion. The office is honored, but the person holds the office without becoming it; the honor owed the office is honor, not immunity; and criticism of the person’s conduct is not criticism of the office, still less of God, but precisely the holding of the person to the standard the office serves. The collapse works by eliding the distinction between the office and the person at every step, so that what is true of the office (it is honored by God) is asserted of the person (he is beyond criticism), and the elision is the whole mechanism of the illegitimate immunity.[^6]
The restoration of the distinction dissolves the collapse. Once office and person are kept apart, the honor owed the office can be fully affirmed without any immunity accruing to the person, and the person can be fully held accountable without any dishonor to the office. The defender who maintains the distinction can say, with complete consistency: this office is instituted by God and owed honor; and the conduct of the one who holds it is to be examined and, where it errs, corrected; and the correction of the conduct is no dishonor to the office but the very thing the office, rightly understood, requires, since the office exists to serve a standard to which its holder is himself subject. This is the framework that the biblical cases exhibit, and to those cases the paper now turns.
3. David and Saul: Honoring the Office, Fleeing the Person
The paradigm case of the office/person distinction is David’s treatment of Saul, and it is paradigmatic precisely because David maintained the distinction under the most extreme pressure — while Saul was actively seeking his life. The narrative gives David two occasions on which he could have killed Saul, and his conduct on both, together with his words, displays the distinction with unusual clarity.[^7]
The first occasion is in the cave at En-gedi, where Saul, pursuing David, enters alone the very cave in which David and his men are hidden (1 Samuel 24:3). David’s men urge him to seize the opportunity, but David refuses to harm Saul, cutting only the skirt of Saul’s robe, and even for this his heart smites him: “The LORD forbid that I should do this thing unto my master, the LORD’s anointed, to stretch forth mine hand against him, seeing he is the anointed of the LORD” (1 Samuel 24:6). The ground of David’s refusal is the office: Saul is “the LORD’s anointed,” the holder of the kingship God had conferred, and David will not stretch out his hand against the office by harming the person who holds it. This is the honor owed the office, affirmed under the strongest possible temptation to set it aside, for the person of Saul was at that moment David’s mortal enemy.[^8]
But David does not, in honoring the office, pretend that the person is righteous or decline to name the person’s sin. In the same episode, David emerges from the cave and addresses Saul directly, declaring his own innocence and Saul’s wrong: “Behold, this day thine eyes have seen how that the LORD had delivered thee to day into mine hand in the cave… Moreover, my father, see, yea, see the skirt of thy robe in my hand: for in that I cut off the skirt of thy robe, and killed thee not, know thou and see that there is neither evil nor transgression in mine hand… The LORD judge between me and thee, and the LORD avenge me of thee: but mine hand shall not be upon thee” (1 Samuel 24:11–12). David honors the office — “mine hand shall not be upon thee” — while openly declaring that Saul has wronged him and appealing to God to judge between them. He does not collapse the office into the person. He keeps them distinct: the office he will not touch, but the person’s sin he names plainly, and he calls upon God to judge the person even as he refuses to harm the office.[^9]
The distinction is sharpened at the second occasion, in the wilderness of Ziph, where David and Abishai come upon Saul sleeping in his camp (1 Samuel 26:7). Again Abishai urges the killing, and again David refuses on the same ground: “Destroy him not: for who can stretch forth his hand against the LORD’s anointed, and be guiltless?” (1 Samuel 26:9). And again David, having spared the person, openly rebukes — this time rebuking Abner for failing to guard the king, and addressing Saul with a renewed declaration of his own innocence and an implicit indictment of Saul’s pursuit (1 Samuel 26:15–20). The pattern is consistent across both episodes: David honors the office absolutely, refusing to harm the anointed even when the anointed seeks his life; and David names the person’s sin openly, declaring his own innocence, appealing to God’s judgment, and refusing to pretend that Saul’s conduct is anything but the wrong it is.[^10]
The theological precision of David’s conduct is the heart of the matter. David demonstrates that honoring an office and condemning the conduct of its holder are not in tension but entirely compatible, indeed that they belong together in right relation to authority. He will not harm the office, because the office is God’s; he will not excuse the person, because the person’s sin is real; and he holds these together without contradiction, because office and person are distinct. David’s example refutes the collapse decisively, for it shows a man honoring the office of a ruler who is actively trying to murder him, while simultaneously and openly declaring that ruler’s sin. If the collapse were valid — if honoring the office required immunizing the person — David’s conduct would be impossible, for he could not at once spare Saul as the LORD’s anointed and indict Saul as a man pursuing innocent blood. That David does precisely this, and is commended for it, establishes the distinction as the biblical pattern.[^11]
It is worth observing that David’s maintenance of the distinction protected David himself from a great evil. Had David collapsed office into person in the inverse direction — had he reasoned that Saul’s wicked conduct forfeited the honor of the office, and so killed him — David would have stretched out his hand against the LORD’s anointed and incurred the guilt he was so careful to avoid. The distinction thus cut both ways for David: it forbade him to harm the office on account of the person’s sin, even as it permitted him to name the person’s sin without dishonoring the office. The person’s corruption did not dissolve the office’s honor, and the office’s honor did not excuse the person’s corruption. David held both, and in holding both he neither became a murderer nor a flatterer, neither harming the anointed nor pretending the anointed righteous. This is the balance the distinction makes possible, and it is available only to one who keeps office and person apart.[^12]
4. Nathan and David: Confronting the Highest Office
If David’s treatment of Saul shows the distinction from the side of the one under authority, Nathan’s confrontation of David shows it from the side of the one who corrects authority, and it shows that even the highest office does not place its holder beyond the reach of correction. The episode is among the most important in Scripture for the theology of accountable authority, for it records a prophet, sent by God, confronting the king — the holder of the highest human office in Israel — and assigning him guilt to his face, without any suggestion that the confrontation dishonored the office or constituted rebellion against God.[^13]
The occasion was David’s sin in the matter of Bathsheba and Uriah — the adultery and the engineered killing by which David, at the height of his power, took another man’s wife and arranged the husband’s death (2 Samuel 11). The LORD sent Nathan to David (2 Samuel 12:1), and Nathan, by means of the parable of the poor man’s lamb, led David to pronounce judgment on himself before revealing the application: “And Nathan said to David, Thou art the man” (2 Samuel 12:7). The confrontation is direct and unsparing. Nathan declares the LORD’s indictment in full, recounting the gifts God had given David and the wrong David had done, and pronouncing the judgment that would follow (2 Samuel 12:7–12). The prophet does not soften the charge on account of David’s office; he presses it precisely because of David’s office, for the gifts God had given the king made the king’s sin the more grievous, exactly as the first suite argued that nearness to the holy raises the standard.[^14]
The significance of the episode for the office/person distinction is that Nathan confronts the person of the king without dishonoring the office of the king, and that this confrontation is presented as the will of God rather than as rebellion against it. Nathan was sent by the LORD; his confrontation was a divine commission, not a human insubordination. And the confrontation did not abolish or dishonor David’s kingship; David remained king, the office intact, even as the person was corrected and judged. The office persisted through the correction of the person, which is possible only if office and person are distinct. Had they been fused — had David’s office made his person beyond correction — Nathan’s commission would have been a commission to rebellion, and the text would present it as such. Instead the text presents it as the faithful delivery of God’s word to a king who needed it, an act of the highest fidelity rather than of insubordination.[^15]
David’s response confirms the distinction from his side. He does not invoke his office to deflect the charge; he does not say to Nathan, “Who are you to confront the LORD’s anointed?” He acknowledges the sin: “I have sinned against the LORD” (2 Samuel 12:13). The king who held the highest office submitted his person to the correction, distinguishing, as David characteristically did, between the office he held and the person who had sinned. David’s penitence is itself a maintenance of the distinction: he did not hide his person behind his office, but allowed the person to be corrected while the office remained. The contrast with the collapse is total. The collapsing defender hides his person behind his office to escape correction; David, who understood the distinction, exposed his person to correction and let the office stand on its own foundation, which was not his righteousness but God’s institution.[^16]
The Nathan episode thus completes the demonstration begun with David and Saul. Together the two episodes show the distinction from both sides: David honoring an office while correcting its holder’s person, and Nathan correcting a holder’s person while leaving his office intact. The two cases establish that the correction of an officeholder’s conduct is compatible with the honor of his office — that one may, and sometimes must, hold the person accountable while honoring the office, and that doing so is fidelity rather than rebellion. This is the pattern the collapse denies and the distinction restores, and it is, the cases show, the consistent practice of Scripture’s most exemplary figures and the explicit commission of its prophets.[^17]
5. The Priest Under the Law He Administered
A further expression of the office/person distinction, less narratively dramatic but structurally fundamental, is the subjection of the officeholder to the very standard his office served. The priest administered the law; the priest was also subject to the law. The king ruled by God’s authority; the king was also bound by God’s authority. In no case did the office place its holder above the standard the office existed to serve, and this subjection is the institutional form of the distinction: the office serves a standard, and the person who holds the office stands under that standard like everyone else, so that the office never confers exemption from the very thing it administers.[^18]
The priestly case is instructive. The priest’s office included the administration of the sacrificial system by which sin was atoned; yet the priest himself sinned and required atonement, and the law made explicit provision for the sin of the priest. As the first suite noted, when the anointed priest sinned, the law required of him the costliest offering — a bull, the same required for the sin of the whole congregation (Leviticus 4:3). The priest was not exempted from the system he administered; he was subjected to it on the heaviest terms, his office increasing rather than diminishing his accountability. The man who pronounced others clean or unclean was himself subject to the standard of cleanness; the man who offered atonement for others’ sin required atonement for his own. The office of administering the law placed its holder more fully, not less fully, under the law, for the holder both kept the law as every Israelite did and bore the heightened accountability of one who handled the holy.[^19]
The royal case is parallel and equally explicit. The law of the king in Deuteronomy required that the king, upon taking the throne, write for himself a copy of the law and read in it all the days of his life, “that his heart be not lifted up above his brethren” (Deuteronomy 17:18–20). The highest human office in Israel was placed, by its own founding law, under the law of God, and the explicit purpose was to prevent the lifting up of the king’s heart above his brethren — to prevent, that is, exactly the collapse of office into person by which a ruler comes to regard himself as above the standard he administers. The king ruled by God’s authority precisely as one subject to God’s authority, and the founding law of the office enforced the subjection by requiring the king to keep the law continually before him. The office did not exempt the king from the law; it bound him to it more visibly than any subject, for the king alone was commanded to write out the law and read it all his days.[^20]
This structural subjection completes the office/person distinction by showing its institutional foundation. The distinction is not merely a matter of how exemplary individuals conducted themselves or how prophets were commissioned; it is built into the very constitution of the offices, which subjected their holders to the standards they served. The officeholder is under the standard, not above it, and the office is the administration of a standard to which its holder is himself answerable. This is why the correction of an officeholder’s conduct is no dishonor to his office: the office exists to serve a standard, and correcting the holder for departing from that standard is precisely the vindication of what the office serves. The collapse, by contrast, sets the officeholder above the standard, making his person the source of the standard rather than its servant, and so corrupts the office at its constitutional root. The distinction restores the constitutional truth that the officeholder serves a standard he does not own and stands under a law he administers but does not transcend.[^21]
6. The Double Protection: Shielding Authority and Exposing Abuse
Having established the distinction and its biblical foundation, the paper now draws out its practical significance, which is that the distinction is doubly protective: it shields legitimate authority from the corrosion that follows when an office is discredited by its holder’s abuses, and it strips abusers of the immunity they claim by hiding behind the office. These two protections are the reasons the distinction is the indispensable instrument of credible authority, for they show that it serves both the honor of real authority and the correction of real abuse, which no other framework can do at once.[^22]
The first protection shields legitimate authority. When office and person are collapsed, the abuses of the person discredit the office, for if the person is the office, then the person’s corruption is the office’s corruption, and the office falls with the person. This is precisely the dynamic by which the abuses cataloged in the first suite corrode the credibility of legitimate authority: when a corrupt officeholder is identified with his office, his corruption stains the office itself, and fair-minded hearers, observing the corruption, come to distrust the office. The distinction breaks this dynamic. If office and person are distinct, then the person’s corruption is the person’s, not the office’s, and the office survives the exposure and correction of the corrupt holder. The office of teaching is not discredited by the false teacher; it is vindicated by his correction, for the correction shows that the office has a standard the false teacher failed to meet. The distinction thus protects the office from being dragged down by its holders, allowing the corrupt holder to be exposed and removed without the office being discredited along with him. Legitimate authority is shielded precisely by the distinction that permits the correction of its abusers.[^23]
The second protection exposes abusers. When office and person are collapsed, the abuser is shielded, for his identification with the office immunizes his conduct: to criticize him is to attack the office, and so the criticism is silenced and the abuse continues. This is the mechanism by which the collapse serves self-serving authority, examined in the preceding paper. The distinction breaks this mechanism. If office and person are distinct, then the abuser cannot hide his person behind the office; his conduct can be examined and corrected without any attack on the office, and the immunity he claimed dissolves. The abuser is exposed precisely because the office, kept distinct from his person, no longer shields him — indeed, the office, understood as a standard to which he is subject, becomes the very measure by which his abuse is judged. The distinction turns the office from the abuser’s shield into the abuser’s standard, and so strips him of the protection the collapse afforded.[^24]
These two protections are a single thing seen from two sides, and their unity is the deepest reason the distinction is indispensable. The same move — keeping office and person apart — both shields the office from its corrupt holders and exposes the corrupt holders to the office’s standard. It does both because it locates the honor in the office and the accountability in the person, so that the office can be honored while the person is corrected, and the correction of the person vindicates rather than dishonors the office. No framework that collapses the two can achieve this. The collapse in one direction — fusing person into office to immunize the person — shields the abuser and discredits the office. The collapse in the other direction — fusing office into person to discredit the office along with the abuser — destroys legitimate authority along with its abusers. Only the distinction honors the office and corrects the person, shields legitimate authority and exposes its abusers, at once. This is why it is the conceptual key to credible authority: it is the only framework that can do both of the things a credible account of authority must do, and the failure to maintain it is the root of both the illegitimate immunizing of abusers and the illegitimate discrediting of offices.[^25]
7. Conclusion: The Indispensable Instrument
This paper has argued that the distinction between office and person is the conceptual key to the problem of credible authority, and that its restoration is the single most important corrective available to a defender who would honor real authority while exposing real abuse. The distinction itself is clear: an office is a function instituted by God and carrying real authority and a real claim to honor, while the person who holds it is a fallible human being whose faithful exercise of the office is honorable and whose corruption is subject to correction, and the honor owed the office does not transfer to the person as immunity. The illegitimate collapse fuses the two, converting the honor owed the office into immunity for the person, and Scripture consistently refuses this collapse. David honored Saul’s office while fleeing Saul’s murderous person and openly declaring Saul’s sin; Nathan confronted the person of David, holder of the highest office, without dishonoring the office or rebelling against God, and David submitted his person to the correction while his office stood; and the offices themselves were constitutionally subjected to the standards they served, the priest bound by the law he administered and the king commanded to keep the law continually before him lest his heart be lifted up above his brethren.
The distinction is doubly protective, and in this lies its indispensability. It shields legitimate authority from being discredited by its holders’ abuses, for the person’s corruption, kept distinct from the office, does not stain the office, which survives and is even vindicated by the correction of its corrupt holder. And it strips abusers of the immunity they claim by hiding behind the office, for the person, kept distinct from the office, can be examined and corrected without any attack on the office, and the office becomes the standard by which his abuse is judged rather than the shield behind which it hides. These two protections are one move seen from two sides, and no framework that collapses office and person can achieve either without sacrificing the other. The distinction alone honors the office and corrects the person, shields legitimate authority and exposes its abusers, at once.
For the defender of biblical authority who would be credible before fair-minded hearers, the lesson is direct and demanding. He must learn to do what David and Nathan did: to honor the office fully while holding its holders, including himself, fully accountable to the standard the office serves. He must refuse, in his own defense, the collapse that would immunize his person behind his office, allowing instead that his conduct be examined and corrected while the office he holds stands on its own foundation, which is not his righteousness but God’s institution. The defender who maintains the distinction can affirm the highest view of his office while submitting his person to the fullest accountability, and in doing so he removes at a stroke the suspicion that his defense of authority is a defense of himself. For he has shown, by maintaining the distinction, that he does not confuse the two — that the authority he defends is the office God instituted, not the person who happens to hold it, and that he holds his own person, like every other, under the standard the office serves. This is the conduct that the fair-minded hearer can trust, because it is the conduct of one who honors authority without hiding behind it, and corrects abuse without destroying the office abuse has corrupted. The distinction is the indispensable instrument because it is the only one that can be trusted to do both.
Notes
[^1]: On the office/person distinction as the master move underlying most illegitimate defenses of authority, developed here from the identification of the collapsing tell in the second paper of this suite.
[^2]: On the precise statement of the illegitimate transfer of honor from office to person as immunity, developed here as the paper’s central definition; compare the theological treatment of office and its holder in O’Donovan (2005, pp. 46–62).
[^3]: On the thesis that Scripture consistently refuses the collapse and that the refusal is a settled canonical pattern, developed throughout the paper; compare the discussion of accountable authority in biblical theology in Block (2014, pp. 226–250).
[^4]: On the biblical conception of an office as a God-instituted function carrying real authority, see O’Donovan (2005, pp. 46–62) and the first paper of this suite on the institution of offices in Scripture.
[^5]: On the person as distinct from the office, the non-transfer of honor as immunity, and the different attachment of honor (to the office) and accountability (to the person), developed here as the paper’s conceptual foundation.
[^6]: On the conceptual error of the collapse, traced step by step, developed here; compare the analysis of the conflation of personal and institutional authority in the second paper of this suite.
[^7]: On David’s treatment of Saul as the paradigm of the distinction maintained under extreme pressure, see Tsumura (2007, pp. 553–575), Firth (2009, pp. 258–280), and Gordon (1986, pp. 178–195).
[^8]: On the En-gedi episode and David’s refusal grounded in Saul’s status as “the LORD’s anointed” (1 Samuel 24:6), see Tsumura (2007, pp. 556–562) and Firth (2009, pp. 260–266).
[^9]: On David’s open declaration of Saul’s wrong and his appeal to God’s judgment (1 Samuel 24:11–12) alongside his refusal to harm the office, see Tsumura (2007, pp. 562–568) and Gordon (1986, pp. 180–186).
[^10]: On the Ziph episode (1 Samuel 26:7–20) and the consistency of the pattern across both occasions, see Tsumura (2007, pp. 588–602), Firth (2009, pp. 275–283), and Gordon (1986, pp. 188–195).
[^11]: On the theological precision of David’s conduct as refuting the collapse, developed here as the paper’s central argument from the David/Saul case.
[^12]: On the double-cutting function of the distinction for David — forbidding harm to the office while permitting naming of the person’s sin — developed here; compare the discussion of David’s restraint in Gordon (1986, pp. 180–195).
[^13]: On Nathan’s confrontation of David as showing the distinction from the side of the one who corrects authority, see Anderson (1989, pp. 159–170), Firth (2009, pp. 421–432), and McCarter (1984, pp. 290–305).
[^14]: On the Bathsheba-Uriah affair and Nathan’s parable and indictment (2 Samuel 11–12:12), see Anderson (1989, pp. 150–168), McCarter (1984, pp. 275–300), and the discussion of heightened royal accountability in Firth (2009, pp. 415–428).
[^15]: On Nathan’s confrontation as a divine commission rather than rebellion, and the persistence of David’s office through the correction of his person, see Anderson (1989, pp. 159–165) and McCarter (1984, pp. 290–298).
[^16]: On David’s acknowledgment “I have sinned against the LORD” (2 Samuel 12:13) as his maintenance of the distinction from his own side, see Anderson (1989, pp. 163–167) and Firth (2009, pp. 425–430).
[^17]: On the two episodes together establishing the distinction from both sides, developed here as the synthesis of sections 3 and 4.
[^18]: On the subjection of the officeholder to the standard his office served as the institutional form of the distinction, developed here; compare O’Donovan (2005, pp. 46–62) on office as service to a standard.
[^19]: On the priest’s subjection to the law he administered and the costly offering required for his sin (Leviticus 4:3), see Milgrom (1991, pp. 226–264) and the first paper of the first suite.
[^20]: On the law of the king (Deuteronomy 17:18–20) and the requirement that the king keep the law before him lest his heart be lifted up, see Block (2014, pp. 226–250), McConville (2002, pp. 292–300), and Tigay (1996, pp. 168–172).
[^21]: On the constitutional subjection of the offices as the foundation of the distinction, and the collapse as setting the officeholder above the standard, developed here as the paper’s argument from the law.
[^22]: On the double protection — shielding authority and exposing abuse — developed here as the paper’s practical conclusion; compare the discussion of accountability structures in O’Neill (2002, pp. 43–59).
[^23]: On the first protection, shielding legitimate authority from being discredited by its holders’ abuses, developed here; the connection to the corrosion of authority is drawn from the hinge paper.
[^24]: On the second protection, stripping abusers of the immunity they claim by hiding behind the office, developed here; the connection to the collapsing tell is drawn from the second paper of this suite.
[^25]: On the unity of the two protections as a single move seen from two sides, and the inability of any collapsing framework to achieve both, developed here as the paper’s culminating argument.
References
Anderson, A. A. (1989). 2 Samuel (Word Biblical Commentary, Vol. 11). Word Books.
Block, D. I. (2014). The triumph of grace: Literary and theological studies in Deuteronomy and Deuteronomic themes. Cascade Books.
Firth, D. G. (2009). 1 & 2 Samuel (Apollos Old Testament Commentary). InterVarsity Press.
Gordon, R. P. (1986). I & II Samuel: A commentary. Zondervan.
McCarter, P. K. (1984). II Samuel: A new translation with introduction, notes, and commentary (Anchor Bible 9). Doubleday.
McConville, J. G. (2002). Deuteronomy (Apollos Old Testament Commentary). InterVarsity Press.
Milgrom, J. (1991). Leviticus 1–16: A new translation with introduction and commentary (Anchor Bible 3). Doubleday.
O’Donovan, O. (2005). The ways of judgment. Eerdmans.
O’Neill, O. (2002). A question of trust: The BBC Reith Lectures 2002. Cambridge University Press.
Tigay, J. H. (1996). Deuteronomy (JPS Torah Commentary). Jewish Publication Society.
Tsumura, D. T. (2007). The first book of Samuel (New International Commentary on the Old Testament). Eerdmans.
