Today, I am reading and commenting on Numbers 22-24.
I am starting a new job tomorrow which may make this more difficult to keep up to date. Fortunately, I am several days ahead, hopefully far enough to give me time to adjust to my new schedule without missing any days for this blog.
The story of Balaam and his donkey has always confused me. The reason I am confused is that I do not understand why God was angry with Balaam for accompanying Balak’s messengers. As we read here, when Balak’s first set of messengers arrived Balaam consulted God, and when God told him not to go with them, he sent them on their way. When the second set of messengers arrived Balaam told them he could do nothing beyond what God commanded him to do, but invited them to spend the night. This second time God told him to go with Balak’s messengers. Then, when Balaam set out, God sent an angel with a sword to oppose him. The standard interpretation is that God intended for the angel to slay Balaam, but the intervention of Balaam’s donkey changed His mind. Suppose instead that God planned for the donkey to avoid the angel waiting in Balaam’s path. Perhaps God sent the angel to remind Balaam to only say what God directed him to say. Interestingly enough, the lesson does not appear to have “stuck”, the way I read the account about the third time Balaam offered sacrifices provided by Balak, he intended to bypass requesting God’s inspiration and was just going to say something which would please Balak, except God intervened and did not give him that option.
I also find Balak’s actions curious. Despite Balaam telling Balak that he could only speak what God told him to speak, Balak took Balaam to two other locations to curse the Israelites after Balaam blessed them from the first location. I can think of two possible explanations. The first being that he thought that perhaps he could trick God into not realizing that it was the Israelites when seen from a different perspective. The other being that Balak thought that Balaam appealed to local gods in order to curse and that if he took Balaam to another place, Balaam could appeal to a different god in order to curse the Israelites. Actually, I can think of a third possibility, perhaps Balak thought that if he could take Balaam to the right place, he could curse the Israelites without God knowing what he was doing. Whatever Balak was thinking, he clearly thought that he could find a way around God’s will.
I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.