Bible Commentaries
Expositor's Dictionary of Texts
Numbers 22
Numbers 22:18
Let us point out two chief lessons that there are for ourselves in Balaam's history.
I. Beware of tampering with conscience. In all questions of doubt and difficulty use yourselves to consult the living oracle, the Tabernacle of witness which God has set within you, however enticing the bait may be by which Satan, or Satan's agents, the world, and the flesh would seduce you—seek to lead you astray. However great the promises that Balak may make of earthly honour and reward, put it back with a resolute hand and steadfast denial; "If Balak would give me his house full of silver and gold, I cannot go beyond the word of the Lord my God, to do less or more".
II. Row vain are good wishes when separated from good actions.
Balaam's famous wish, "Let me die the death of the righteous, and let my last end be like his," is a wish that finds an echo in every heart. It is but right that we should so pray and wish, but we must do more than wish and pray, or else the wish in itself will profit us nothing—profit us no more than it profited Balaam, for in spite of his good and pious wish, he died a miserable and untimely death. To have our wish fulfilled, we must first live (God helping us) the life of His servant, live as those who have been redeemed of the Lord; live soberly, live righteously, live godly; walk in all His statutes and ordinances, live in His faith and fear.
III. Trust not to mere good wishes, or to utterance of warm, excited feelings, to secure to yourselves a truly happy, a truly blessed death. "Awake to righteousness and sin not," "the sting of death is sin," sin never forsaken, never repented of, persisted in to the end. Till that sting be done away, there can be no peace, no good ground of hope for the dying man. You know how alone that sting can be removed, you say with me "thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory, through our Lord Jesus Christ".
—R. D. B. Rawnsley, Village Sermons (3Series), p109.
The Story of Balaam
Numbers 22:18-19
Balaam is one of those extraordinary characters that we meet with in Holy Writ, who flash across the page of Scriptural history and we know no more about them. He is referred to both in the Old and the New Testament, but nothing certain is stated regarding his past history, nor have we any of those details which we should be so glad to know regarding this most interesting person. He was a prophet of the Lord, and as we read his history, so graphic, so clear, we feel absolutely sure that it is a true account, a true history of a true person, because it reveals to us one of those mysteries of human life so hard to explain, and yet not so very remote from our own experience.
I. Balaam's Temptation.—We see, in spite of the privileged position which he held, that he had a very strong temptation. He was susceptible to one temptation above others—the temptation of covetousness, and, yielding to that temptation, he betrayed away all the privilege which he had enjoyed as the chosen servant of God, and ended his life fighting against the people of God. Balak sent to Balaam. What does Balaam do? He asks the will of God—Is it my duty to go with these men? And the answer comes clear: "Thou shalt not go with them". And Balaam told the messengers: "No, I cannot go". But the temptation came a second time, for Balak sent messengers more honourable. He repeated the invitation and offered larger rewards than those which had been offered by the first messengers. Balaam knows perfectly well what he has to do. He knows what the answer of God has been. He says, "If Balak would give me his house full of silver and gold, I cannot go beyond the word of the Lord". Whatever temptation Balak could hold out, nothing should tempt him to move to the right or to the left beyond the will of God.
II. Balaam's Fall.—But he does not stop there. He is very anxious to go and he begins to trifle with his conscience, to see whether, after all, he cannot reconcile what he wants to do with the will of God. He bids the messengers "tarry... this night". Yet he had received his answer, and was convinced of the will of God; but he said, I will have another try, it will bring me such a great advantage. Is there not another way by which I can do what I want to do without disobeying the command of God? The messengers stay another night, and God allows him to go, but, nevertheless, He says: "The word which I shall say unto thee, that thou shalt speak". He is delighted with the result of his second inquiry, in the face of what God had told him in the first instance; and what is the result? The angel of God appears to him to turn him back. He receives the awful warning. And the angel of the Lord said unto him in effect, "If thou hadst not turned back, I would have smitten thee to the earth". Now he sees his mistake, but he does not tear the desire from his heart. "If it displease thee, I turn"—but why not in the first instance? He had gone to God and got his answer. He is given permission to go and he goes, but he is only able to speak the words which God puts into his mouth. Having trifled with his conscience, in the end he does not hesitate to risk the souls of a whole nation in order that he may get what he wants. And so he falls, fighting on the side of God's enemies.
III. Balaam a Warning to Us.—What a sad history it is! Balaam's aspiration, "Let me die the death of the righteous," is that of every one of us; but, like him, we forget that if we are to die the death of the righteous we must live the life of the righteous.
References.—XXII:18 ,19.—A. G. Mortimer, The Church's Lessons for the Christian Year, part ii. p372. XXII:20.—M. G. Glazebrook, Prospice, p48. XXII:20-22.—A. Jessopp, Norwich School Sermons, p149.
Balaam's "I Have Sinned"
Numbers 22:34
Balaam's "I have sinned" was of a very different character from Pharaoh"s. Pharaoh's was the confession, under terror, of a very hard heart: Balaam's heart—at least at this point—was anything but a hard one. See the exact position of Balaam. On his lips, "I have sinned"; probably in his heart a condemning sense that he was wrong; a conviction that he had made a great mistake; but his passions high-wrought; a resolute will and purpose in direct antagonism to the known will of God; one sin, all the while, tightly grasped; and a worldly, covetous affection in the ascendant! This was Balaam, as he went out at Pethor that early morning, through the vineyards of the city. Reduce the picture to the scale of ordinary life, and it is the life of many.
I. An Emotional Repentance. —There is an acknowledgment of sin, under sorrow, which often clothes itself in very strong expressions, even to tears, and which is little else than a passion. It is not altogether an hypocrisy. At the moment, it is sincere, very earnest. But it is an emotion—only an emotion. It goes with many other emotions, some good and some bad. It is one of the developments of an ecstatic temperament. The person who has it is very affectionate; capable of great and loving deeds. And the repentance, in the moment of compunction, takes the shape of the mould of the man's natural disposition. It is rapid—inflated—short!
II. But Without Love.—Need I say, there is no real love to God in it? There is no true sense of sin. There is no relation to Christ. It does not go on to action. It ranges, with other feelings, in the mind, which are just as strongly wrong. It is only the necessary vent of the heat of an ardent spirit, when anything happens to awaken it to a brief solemnity, or to send the toss of its thoughts to death, to eternity, to God; a natural sentiment, clothing itself in a religious dress.
III. One Sin held Back.—I have known a person, whose wonder and regret was that his penitence never seemed to deepen or increase; yet he said, and said often, and said truly, "I have sinned". The reason was, he never put the "I have sinned," upon the right thing. He said it about his sins generally, or he said it about some particular sin; but, all the while, there was another sin behind, about which he did not say it. That sin he willingly forgot—he connived at it—he allowed it! All the rest he was willing to give up, but not that And that was his sin. And that sin, reserved and in the background, poisoned and deadened the repentance of all other sins! The "I have sinned" fell to the ground impotent—like a withered blossom. That was Balaam—and that may be you!
References.—XXII:34.—J. Vaughan, Sermons Preached in Christ Church, Brighton (7th Series), p78. F. W. Farrar, Christian World Pulpit, vol. xlvii1895 , pp312 , 321. Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. iii. No113.
The Preacher and His Message
Numbers 22:38
Whether the extraordinary and scarcely explicable character who thus expressed himself used this language with intelligence, sincerity, and resolution, or vaguely and insincerely, may be questioned; but it cannot be questioned that in themselves these words utter a high, sacred, and noble purpose. It was a prophet's profession, and the proof of Balaam's prophetical office is this, that his solemn utterances corresponded with the profession he herein made.
I. It is God's to Give the Word.
(a) This is obviously true with reference to inspiration, to the "living oracles" of God. The great lawgiver Moses, the inspired chroniclers, the majestic prophets of the Hebrews—all received the word from heaven. Their formula was this, "Thus saith the Lord".
(b) It is true of every reverent and faithful teacher of religion. Such a teacher does not ask, "Is this doctrine acceptable to human nature?" but, "Is it of the Lord?" To put human fancies and speculations in the place of teaching divinely authorized is not the part of the Lord's servant and prophet Such a one looks up; asks for a communication, a message; honours the God of truth and wisdom by seeking light and the vision from Heaven.
II. It is Man's to Speak the Word.—High is the honour, precious the privilege, the Creator bestows upon human nature in making man the vehicle to convey Divine truth to his fellow-man. The prophet, the teacher sent from God, echoes the voice which has reached him from above, reflects the sacred light which has shone upon his soul. This vocation he is bound to fulfil with scrupulous care and unremitting diligence. No consideration of his own selfish interests, no regard for the prejudices, no desire for the favour of those who receive his message, should induce him to deviate from his path, to betray his trust. The word "put into his mouth" he is bound to utter fearlessly and yet with sympathy and affection, with authority and yet with persuasiveness.
III. Application.
(a) The preacher learns from his language the dignity and responsibility of his vocation.
(b) The hearer of the Divine Word learns that he is not at liberty to neglect or to refuse a message which is not from man, but from God Himself.
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