Verse 1
Numbers 24:1. He went not as at
other times — At former times;
to seek for enchantments — The
word נחשׁ, from which נחשׁים,
necashim, here rendered
enchantments, is derived,
signifies to augur, conjecture,
search, make trial, find out: 1
Kings 20:33, it is translated,
to observe diligently; Genesis
30:27, to learn by experience,
and, in the margin of Genesis
44:5, to make trial, although in
the text there it is rendered to
divine. It certainly is not
necessary to understand the word
of enchantments. Nor is there
any proof that Balaam had had
recourse to any on either of the
two former occasions. On the
contrary, the sacred historian
informs us, that he retired both
times, not to meet evil spirits,
and receive communications from
them, but to meet JEHOVAH, and
receive intimations of his will,
saying to Balak on the first
occasion, Whatsoever he showeth
me I will tell thee. And both
times we read that Jehovah put a
word in Balaam’s mouth. All,
therefore, that we can
reasonably conclude from the
passage before us is, that
Balaam omitted to do now what he
had done before. He went not —
Retired not, as he had done the
former times, for the meeting,
or obtaining of divinations,
that is, for the purpose of
obtaining information from the
Lord concerning future things,
or to make inquiries about them.
M. Saurin seems to be clearly of
this opinion, and to consider
the expression as signifying no
more here than “the revelations
which Balsam desired of God
concerning the destiny of the
Israelites.” Houbigant is of the
same mind, observing that the
word נחשׁיםnechashim, auguries,
is here to be understood in a
good sense, because Balaam
interpreted the will of the true
God, and not the will of the god
of Moab, from these auguries.
Thus also Le Clerc, paraphrasing
the passage, says, “He judged it
superfluous to inquire further
into the mind of God, as God had
sufficiently declared his
purpose to bless Israel.”
Indeed, as Christ is known to
have no communion with Belial,
it seems strange that any
Christian should ever have
imagined that God would thus
have made known his will, and
thus lay open the secrets of
futurity, to a man that had or
attempted to have intercourse
with evil spirits. See Isaiah
8:19; and Isaiah 44:25; and
Isaiah 47:12. He set his face
toward the wilderness — Where
Israel lay encamped, expecting
what God, of his own accord,
would suggest to him concerning
this matter.
Verse 2-3
Numbers 24:2-3. The Spirit of
God came upon him — And is it
likely that the Spirit of God
would have come upon a sorcerer
or enchanter? A prophetic
influence from God came upon
him, whereby he was enabled to
foresee future events, and
inspired to utter the following
words: The man whose eyes are
open — Some, confounding
שׁתםshetum, with סתם, or
שׂתםsetum, would translate the
words, Whose eyes are or were
shut, for which there does not
seem to be sufficient authority.
The Seventy render them, ο
αληθινως ορων, seeing truly. His
eyes indeed had been shut, and
he had been blind and stupid,
having eyes but not seeing, nor
understanding; but God had
opened them in a peculiar and
prophetical manner. Hence the
prophets were called seers, from
God’s having opened their eyes.
Verse 4
Numbers 24:4. The vision of the
Almighty — So called properly,
because he was awake when the
following things were revealed
to him. Falling into a trance —
In the Hebrew it is only
falling, namely, fainting and
falling to the ground, as the
prophets sometimes used to do.
Our translators supply the
words, into a trance, supposing
him to have been in an ecstasy
or rapture when he had the
vision, as it is probable he
was; because it follows, having
his eyes open — Which implies,
that when all his outward senses
were locked up, his mind had a
clear apprehension of the things
which God revealed to him.
Verse 5-6
Numbers 24:5-6. How goodly are
thy tents, &c. — Having seen
them pitched in the plains of
Moab, (Numbers 24:2,) he thus
breaks forth into admiration of
their beautiful order, as they
lay ranged under their several
standards. As the valleys —
Which often from a small
beginning are spread forth far
and wide. As gardens — Pleasant
and fruitful, and secured by a
fence. As lign- aloes — An
Arabian and Indian tree of a
sweet smell, yielding shade and
shelter both to man and beast;
such is Israel, not only safe
themselves, but yielding shelter
to all that join themselves to
them. Which the Lord hath
planted — Nature, not art.
Verse 7
Numbers 24:7. He shall pour the
water — That is, God will
abundantly water the valleys,
gardens, and tress, which
represent the Israelites; he
will wonderfully bless his
people, not only with outward
blessings, of which a chief one
in those parts was plenty of
water, but also with higher
gifts and graces, with his word
and Spirit, which are often
signified by water, and at last
with eternal life, the
contemplation whereof made
Balaam desire to die the death
of the righteous. His seed shall
be in — Rather, by; many waters
— This may mean, His seed shall
be sown in a ground well
watered, and consequently shall
bring forth a plentiful crop.
Or, as many waters are
frequently put figuratively for
many people, (see Jeremiah 47:2;
Revelation 17:15; Isaiah 32:20,)
and the flowing out of waters
signifies an increase of
posterity, the words may here be
intended to express, by a
metaphor, the great increase of
Israel. His king shall be higher
than Agag — It has been
supposed, with great
probability, by most
commentators, that Agag was the
common name of the kings of
Amalek, as Pharaoh was of the
Egyptian kings, and Abimelech of
those of the Philistines.
“Amalek was a neighbouring
country, and therefore is fitly
introduced upon the present
occasion, and it was likewise at
that time a great and
flourishing kingdom, being
styled (Numbers 24:20) the first
of the nations; and therefore
for the king of Israel to be
exalted above the king of Amalek
was really a wonderful
exaltation. But, wonderful as it
was, it was accomplished by
Saul, who smote the Amalekites
from Havilah, &c., and took Agag,
the king of the Amalekites,
alive, and utterly destroyed all
the people with the edge of the
sword, 1 Samuel 15:7-8. The
first king of Israel subdued
Agag, the king of the
Amalekites. So that it might
truly and properly be said, His
king shall be higher than Agag,
and his kingdom shall be
exalted, as it was afterward
greatly by David and Solomon.” —
Newton.
Verse 8-9
Numbers 24:8-9. He shall eat up
the nations, &c. — The
expressions in these verses are
intended to signify the
victories which the Israelites
should gain over their enemies,
and particularly the Canaanites,
and the secure and quiet
possession they should have of
the land afterward, all which
was fulfilled especially in the
days of David and Solomon. He
couched, he lay down as a lion —
It is remarkable that God here
put into the mouth of Balaam
nearly the same expressions
which Jacob had used concerning
Judah, (Genesis 49:9,) and Isaac
concerning Jacob, Genesis 27:29.
And what wonder, considering
that all these prophecies
proceeded from one and the same
spirit?
Verse 15
Numbers 24:15. He took up his
parable — A weighty and solemn
speech, delivered in figurative
and majestic language, is often
termed a parable in Scripture.
Such are these prophecies of
Balaam; we cannot peruse them
without being struck, not only
with their beauty, but with
their uncommon force and energy.
Verse 17
Numbers 24:17. I shall see him,
&c. — “Rather,” says Bishop
Newton, from whose exposition of
the prophecies of Balaam many of
the following explanatory
observations are extracted, “I
see him, but not now; I behold
him, but not nigh; the future
tense in Hebrew being often used
for the present. He saw with the
eyes of prophecy, and prophets
are emphatically styled seers.
There shall come a star out of
Jacob, and a sceptre shall rise
out of Israel — The star and the
sceptre are probably metaphors
borrowed from the ancient
hieroglyphics, which much
influenced the language of the
East; and they evidently denote
some eminent and illustrious
king or ruler, whom he
particularizes in the following
words: And shall smite the
corners of Moab — Or the princes
of Moab, according to other
versions. This was executed by
David; for he smote Moab, and
measured them with a line,
casting them down to the ground;
even with two lines measured he
to put to death, and with one
full line to keep alive; that
is, he destroyed two- thirds,
and saved one-third alive. And
the Moabites became David’s
servants, and brought gifts.”
See 2 Samuel 8:2.
And destroy all the children of
Sheth — “If by Sheth was meant
the son of Adam, then all the
children of Sheth are all
mankind; the posterity of Cain
and Adam’s other sons having all
perished in the deluge. But it
is very harsh to say that any
king of Israel would destroy all
mankind; and therefore the
Syriac and Chaldee soften it,
that he shall subdue all the
sons of Sheth, and rule over all
the sons of men. But the
Jerusalem Targum translates it,
the sons of the east, namely,
the Moabites, lying east of
Judea. Rabbi Nathan says that
Sheth is the name of a city in
the border of Moab. Grotius
imagines Sheth to be the name of
some famous king among the
Moabites. Our Poole says, Sheth
seems to be the name of some
then eminent, though now
unknown, place or prince in
Moab, there being innumerable
instances of such places or
persons, some time famous, but
now utterly lost, as to all
monuments and remembrances of
them.”
Verse 18
Numbers 24:18. Edom shall be a
possession — “This was also
fulfilled by David; for
throughout all Edom put he
garrisons, and all they of Edom
became David’s servants, 2
Samuel 8:14. David himself, in
two of his Psalms, (Psalms 60:8;
and Psalms 108:9;) hath
mentioned together his conquest
of Moab and Edom, as they are
also joined together in this
prophecy.” Seir is the name of
the mountains of Edom, which
were also possessed by David.
Israel shall do valiantly — As
they did, particularly under the
command of David.
Verse 19
Numbers 24:19. Out of Jacob —
Out of his loins. He that shall
have dominion — David, and
especially Christ. Shall destroy
him that remaineth of the city —
Not only defeat them in the
field, but destroy them even in
their strongest cities. “We
see,” Bishop Newton further
observes, “how exactly this
prophecy hath been fulfilled in
the person and actions of David;
but most Jewish as well as
Christian writers apply it,
primarily, perhaps, to David,
but ultimately to the Messiah,
as the person chiefly intended,
in whom it was to receive its
full and entire completion.
Onkelos interprets it of the
Messiah. Maimonides understands
it partly of David, and partly
of the Messiah, and with him
agree other rabbis. It appears
to have been generally
understood by the Jews as a
prophecy of the Messiah, because
the false Christ, who appeared
in the reign of the Roman
emperor Adrian, assumed the
title of Barchochebas, or Son of
the Star, in allusion to this
prophecy, and in order to have
it believed that he was the star
that Balaam had seen afar off.
The Christian fathers, I think,
are unanimous in applying this
prophecy to our Saviour, and to
the star which appeared at his
nativity. Origen, in particular,
produces it as one of the
plainest and clearest prophecies
of the Messiah; and both he and
Eusebius affirm, that it was in
consequence of Balaam’s
prophecies, which were known and
believed in the East, that the
magi, upon the appearance of a
new star, came to Jerusalem to
worship him who was born king of
the Jews. The stream of modern
divines and commentators apply
the prophecy principally to our
Saviour; and by Moab and Edom
they understand the enemies and
persecutors of the church.”
Verse 20
Numbers 24:20. He looked upon
Amalek — From the top of Pisgah,
which was exceeding high, and
gave him the prospect of part of
all these kingdoms, he turned
his eyes from the Moabites more
to the south and west, and
looked on their neighbours the
Amalekites. Amalek was the first
of the nations — Hebrew, the
beginning, or first-fruits, so
called, either because they were
the first of all the
neighbouring nations which were
imbodied together in one
government, or because they were
the first who fought against
Israel and were vanquished by
them. That victory was an
earnest and first-fruit of the
large harvest of victories which
the Israelites should, in due
time, get over all their
enemies. “The Amalekites appear
to have been a very ancient
nation. They are mentioned as
early as the wars of
Chedorlaomer, (Genesis 14:7,)
and therefore must have been a
nation before the times of
Abraham and Lot, and
consequently much older than the
Moabites or Edomites, or any of
the nations descended from those
patriarchs. But though they were
the most ancient and powerful of
the neighbouring nations, yet,
says Balaam, their latter end
shall be that they perish for
ever — Here he confirms what God
had before denounced by Moses:
see Exodus 17:14. Balaam had
before declared that the king of
Israel should prevail over the
king of Amalek; but here the
menace is carried further, and
Amalek is consigned to utter
destruction. And this sentence
was in a great measure executed
by Saul, 1 Samuel 15:7;
afterward more fully by David, 1
Samuel 27:8-9; and 1 Samuel
30:1. And at last, in the days
of Hezekiah, the sons of Simeon
smote the rest of the Amalekites
that were escaped, and dwelt in
their habitations, 1 Chronicles
4:41-43. And where is the name
or nation of Amalek subsisting
at this day? What history, what
tradition of them is remaining
anywhere? They are but just
enough known and remembered to
show that what God hath
threatened he hath punctually
fulfilled.” How incontrovertible
is the argument arising from
hence in favour not only of the
truth of Balaam’s prophecy, but
of the assurance which Moses had
of its truth, and of the
certainty of its accomplishment,
inasmuch as he recorded it while
Amalek was yet a very powerful
nation, and thereby risked on
its truth and fulfilment all his
credit as an historian and his
authority as a lawgiver and
messenger of God!
Verse 21-22
Numbers 24:21-22. He looked on
the Kenites — Commentators are
much at a loss to say, with any
certainty, who these Kenites
were. The most probable account
of them, Bishop Newton thinks,
is as follows: “Jethro, the
father- in-law of Moses, is
called the priest of Midian,
Exodus 3:1; and 1:16, the Kenite.
We may infer, therefore, that
the Midianites and Kenites were
the same, or at least that the
Kenites were some of the tribes
of Midian. Now of the Kenites,
part followed Israel, 1:6; but
the greater part, we may
presume, remained among the
Midianites and Amalekites, 1
Samuel 15:6. Their situation is
said to be strong and secure
among the mountains: Strong is
thy dwelling-place, and thou
puttest thy nest in a rock —
Wherein is an allusion to the
name, the same word in the
Hebrew signifying a nest and a
Kenite. Nevertheless the Kenite
shall be wasted, until Asshur
shall carry thee away captive —
The Amalekites were to be
utterly destroyed, but the
Kenites were to be carried
captive. Accordingly, when Saul
was sent by divine commission to
destroy the Amalekites, he
ordered the Kenites to depart
from among them; for the
kindness which some of them
showed to Israel, their
posterity was saved, 1 Samuel
15:6. This passage shows that
they were wasted, and reduced to
a low and weak condition; and as
the kings of Assyria carried
captive not only the Jews, but
also the Syrians and several
other nations, (2 Kings 16:9; 2
Kings 19:12-13,) it is most
highly probable that the Kenites
shared the same fate with their
neighbours, and were carried
away by the same torrent; and
especially as we find some
Kenites mentioned among the Jews
after their return from
captivity,” 1 Chronicles 2:55.
Verse 23
Numbers 24:23. Alas, who shall
live — How calamitous and
miserable will the state of the
world be, when the Assyrian, and
after him the Chaldean, shall
overrun and overturn all these
parts of the world! Who will be
able to keep his heart from
fainting under such grievous
pressures? Nay, how few will
escape the destroying sword!
Verse 24
Numbers 24:24. From the coast of
Chittim — A place or people, so
called from Chittim, the son of
Javan, (Genesis 10:4,) whose
posterity were very numerous,
and were first seated in the
lesser Asia, and from thence
sent forth colonies into the
islands of the Ægean sea, and
into Cyprus; afterward into
Macedonia and other parts of
Greece, and then into Italy.
Whence it comes to pass that by
this name is understood
sometimes Macedonia, as 1
Maccabees 1:1, and 1 Maccabees
8:5; sometimes Italy, as Daniel
11:29-30; and sometimes both, as
in this place: for he speaks
here of the scourge that God had
appointed for the Assyrian after
he had done God’s work in
punishing of his people and the
bordering nations. Shall afflict
Asshur — “Asshur signifies the
descendants of Asshur, the
Assyrians; but their name was of
as large extent as their empire,
and the Syrians and Assyrians
are often confounded together,
and mentioned as one people.”
Now although the Assyrian and
Chaldean empire was subdued by
the Medes and Persians, yet the
chief afflictions of that people
came from two hands, both beyond
the sea, and brought to them by
ships; first from the Greeks,
and then from the Romans. “It is
so well known as to require no
particular proof that the
Grecians, under Alexander,
subdued all these countries. The
Romans afterward” (who subdued
the whole Grecian empire)
“extended their conquests into
the same regions; and, as Dion
informs us, Assyria, properly so
called, was conquered by
Trajan.” And shall afflict Eber
— That is, the posterity of
Eber, the Hebrews, who were the
flower and chief of Eber’s
children. “The Hebrews were
afflicted, though not much, by
Alexander himself, yet by his
successors the Seleucidæ, and
particularly by Antiochus
Epiphanes, 1 Maccabees 1. They
were worse afflicted by the
Romans, who not only subdued and
oppressed them, but at last took
away their place and nation, and
sold and dispersed them over the
face of the earth.” So that,
although Balaam was commissioned
chiefly to bless and prophesy
good concerning Israel, yet he
here at last foretels that they
should be scourged for their
sins. He also shall perish for
ever — Not the Hebrews; they
shall have a better end: all
Israel shall be saved; but the
afflicter or scourge of Asshur
and Eber; namely, the Grecian
and Roman empire. Thus Balaam,
instead of cursing the church,
curses Amalek, the first, and
Rome, the last enemy of it. “It
appears, then,” adds the bishop,
“that Balaam was a prophet
divinely inspired, or he could
never have foretold so many
distant events, some of which
are fulfilling in the world at
this time. And what a singular
honour was it to the people of
Israel, that a prophet, called
from another country, and at the
same time a wicked man, should
bear testimony to their
righteousness and holiness! The
commendations of an enemy, among
enemies, are commendations
indeed. And Moses did justice to
himself as well as to his nation
in recording these transactions.
They are not only a material
part of his history, but
likewise a strong confirmation
of the truth of his religion.
Balaam’s bearing witness to
Moses, is somewhat like Judas’s
attesting the innocence of
Christ.” See Dissert. on
Prophecies, vol.1. p. 130, and
seq.
Verse 25
Numbers 24:25. Balaam went to
his place — To Mesopotamia;
though afterward he returned to
the Midianites, and gave them
that wicked counsel which was
put in practice, chap. 25. And
it appears, from Numbers 31:8,
that he was slain among the
Midianites. |