Numbers 22
Over the next four chapters we follow the story of a
very interesting spiritual war. A key figure in that conflict was a
man named Balaam, a sorcerer known to the king of Moab.
The king was a firm believer in the ways and words of
Balaam's sorcery, and he wanted to hire him to curse the Israelites.
This desire to curse God's people was born out of fear, since the
people of Israel had multiplied greatly, and had defeated those who
stood in their way as enemies.
Balak, the king of Moab was convinced that the curse of
Balaam would be a sure thing. In Genesis 12, God said to His servant
Abram, “I will bless those who bless you, and I will curse those
who curse you.” Balak thought that Balaam's words were as sure as
that!
God spoke to Balaam and warned him not to do what Balak
wanted, not even to go with those who came to call him to the king.
Balaam treated the Lord as yet another god who he was able to contact
as a sorcerer. He did not want to cross Yahweh on this matter, but
the sorcerer did not obey the Lord from a pure heart.
Balak sent messengers a second time with an even more
persuasive offer. He had money. He was a king who could make life
difficult for those who refused his entreaties. But Balaam at least
knew that Yahweh was more to be feared than the king of Moab.
Nonetheless, this time the Lord instructed Balaam to go.
He must have had a point in letting this sorcerer move into position
against Israel. God would surely vindicate His own Name and save His
people. He could turn the curses of enemies into blessings for
Israel, bringing low those who dared to lift a hand against His
nation.
Balaam set off according to the Lord's instruction, yet
he met an obstacle that only his donkey could see. In his mad raging
he was ready to kill the animal. Yet God gave the donkey a voice
which He used to correct the sorcerer.
Balaam was an expert in unauthorized access to spiritual
realms. He was a sorcerer who was sought after by a powerful king.
Yet he was unable to see the angel of the Lord standing before him.
Then the Lord Himself opened Balaam's eyes to see the
unseen one, and the magician fell on his face before the angel of the
Lord. Even though God had told Balaam to go meet with Balak, the
Lord's message through His angel revealed Balaam's inner corruption.
“I have come out to oppose you because your way is perverse before
me.”
This unusual encounter reinforced the Lord's earlier
instruction. Balaam would not be permitted to say anything on his
own. God would use this man to give a message from the Lord, and
would not permit that message to be tainted by the imaginations of
the sorcerer's own perverse heart.
Balaam got the point. He said to Balak, “The word that
God puts in my mouth, that must I speak.”
The Lord could bring a sorcerer to fall on his face
before Him. Balaam was no serious threat to Almighty God.
When Jesus came as the final prophet, He did not need to
be backed into a corner in order to say only what God gave Him to say
or to do only what God told Him to do. This was the continuous
impulse of His sinless being. Balaam knew how to play some spiritual
tricks, but Jesus was the only authorized way to eternal life.
God promised Abram in Genesis 12 that those who cursed
Abram would be cursed, and that those who blessed Abram would be
blessed. He also said that through Abram all the people groups of the
earth would be blessed. Jesus, the seed of Abraham, has become the
source of blessing for all who turn to Him for life. He did not come
here for money. He came as the perfect expression of divine love.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home