I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.
Today, I am reading and commenting on Numbers 22-24.
When Balak’s messengers first came to Balaam, he consulted God and was told that he could not curse the Israelites because God had blessed them. When Balak’s second set of messengers arrived, Balaam went to God again and God told him to go with them. Yet, the account tells us that God was angry with Balaam for going. God’s answer the first time was definitive. The people whom Balak wanted cursed had been blessed by God. Balak was not seeking a way to live in peace with the people of Israel, he was seeking a way to destroy them. When God has made it clear that something is outside of His will we should not seek to find a way around that.
I want to circle back to the idea I wrote about earlier in the year that Abraham was part of a tradition which passed on the stories which came from Noah. There are several theories about where Balaam came from, but the sources which make the most sense to me put it not far from Haran, the city where Abraham’s father died. This suggests to me that Balaam was part of a tradition which passed down some of the same stories which we find in Genesis. Balaam is yet more evidence that the Israelites were not the only people worshiping God. Throughout the Old Testament we see hints and signs of those who followed similar teachings to the Israelites. Hints and signs which suggest that the practices and stories of the Bible may have influenced the cultures and religions around the Israelites rather than the other way around as many secular scholars suggest.