A friend of mine
mentioned the danger of reading too much into our circumstances. Life has not turned out for her as she had
hoped. A significant relationship had
broken down. Certain dreams have not come
to be. In the pain of this she had begun
to think that God was angry with her.
But thankfully she regained her belief that God is good towards her.
In the unusual story of
Balaam and his donkey we see God’s desire to bless a complaining and unfaithful
people. But what does His blessing look
like?
I think we can learn a
lot about the blessed life by pondering the blessing of Aaron at the beginning of
the book of Numbers (6:24-26). To be
blessed is to have Yahweh’s face turned towards you, so that he can be gracious
to you and give you peace. The blessed
life is experienced in the realisation that God no longer treats us as our sins
deserve, but according to His loving-kindness, and the fact that He is with us
even when life is difficult.
1.
God has the power over every blessing and
curse (1-6)
The people of Moab were
the descendants of Lot, who was Abraham’s nephew. Lot who had received extraordinary kindness
from God. Yet the Moabites had quickly
abandoned God. Now they worshipped their
own god, Chemosh. Despite their hatred
of Him, God was still kind to them. He
had told the Israelites not to harass them or contend with them in battle,
‘because I have given Ar to the people of Lot for a possession’ (Deut. 2:9).
However, their king,
Balak heard that the Israelites had just defeated the Amorites. He also knew that God had delivered these
people from slavery in Egypt. The
Moabites dreaded the Israelites, ‘because they are many’ (3) and ‘they cover
the face of the earth’ (5). God had
promised Abraham that his people would be as numerous as the stars in the sky
and the sand of the seashore. God has
been working to fulfil His promises.
God had also promised
Abraham that He would bless those who blessed him and curse those who cursed
him, and that through Abraham all the nations of the world would be blessed
(Gen. 12:3). So, what should Balak and
the Moabites have done? They should have
turned to the God of Israel and blessed God’s people. Then God would have blessed him and shown them
mercy. Instead, Balak seeks to curse the
people of God.
He sends messengers to
Balaam, asking Balaam to curse the people of Israel. Notice, that he credits Balaam with the
ultimate ability to bring blessing and curse.
‘I know that he whom you bless is blessed, and he whom you curse is
cursed’ (6). The people of the Ancient
Near East believed that there were many gods, and that those gods could be
manipulated through the practice of divination.
The truth is that there is only one true God, and He has the ultimate
power over every blessing and curse.
Some of you come from cultures where there is much more awareness of the dangers of witchcraft. Even in this country things like wicca are growing in popularity. What about things like voodoo? The Christian knows to stay away from such things. We are also comforted by the fact that our God has the power over every blessing and curse (23:23).
2.
God
blesses undeserving people (7-21)
Balak, the king of Moab, sent
the elders of Moab and the elders of Midian to Balaam ‘with fees for divination
in their hands’ (7). That is
significant. In the New Testament, the
apostle Peter tells us that was motivated by ‘the love of gain for wrongdoing’
(2 Peter 2:15). Don’t be taken in when
you hear Balaam talk of ‘the LORD my God’ (18).
Balaam is not a genuine follower of God.
People in the culture would have no problem claiming multiple gods as
their own. Balaam would happily curse
Gods people, if God had allowed him.
Look at God’s words to
Balaam: ‘you shall not curse the people because they are blessed’ (12). This story of Balaam was one of the key
reasons I wanted to preach on the book of Numbers. Here is our God continually seeking the good
of His unfaithful and complaining people.
He is the God who does not treat us according to what our sins deserve,
but according to His loving-kindness.
Balaam initially refuses
to go to Balak. But Balak, king of Moab,
sends more princes and elders, and presumably the offer of more money. Again, Balaam refuses to go with them. Yet, rather than sending them straight home Balaam
invites them to stay the night ‘so that I may know what more the LORD will say
to me’ (19). He was hoping that God
might change His mind, or that he might yet find some other way to get his
hands on Balak’s gold (Duguid). That
night God said, ‘go with them; but only do what I tell you’ (20). ‘So, Balaam rose in the morning and saddled
his donkey and went with the princes with of Moab’ (21).
3.
No power can stop God from blessing His
people (22-41)
As Balaam sets out God’s
anger is kindled against him. But why
would God be angry when He told Balaam to go with the Moabites? He is angry because He is the God who sees
the heart, and He knows that Balaam is simply motivated by the thought of
Balak’s gold. Balaam is quite happy to
curse the people God loves for profit.
But God will not let him!
Balaam’s donkey sees the
angel of the Lord standing in the road, with a drawn sword in his hand. Those of us who are animal lovers don’t like what
happens next: Balaam strikes his poor loyal donkey. Indeed, the angel of the Lord will rebuke
Balaam for this. ‘Whoever is righteous
has regard for the life of his beast, but the mercy of the wicked is cruel’ (Proverbs
12:10).
Eventually the Lord opened
the mouth of the donkey, but even more significantly the Lord opens the eyes of
Balaam to see the angel of the Lord standing in his way with his sword drawn. There is a spiritual reality that we do not
see. Think of Elisha who had his eyes
opened to see a mountain full of chariots of fire (2 Kings 6:17). The writer to the Hebrews tells us that
angels are ministering spirits sent to serve those who inherit salvation (Heb.
1:14).
The angel of the Lord
tells Balaam that the donkey had actually saved his life. Balak responds with a shallow
repentance. I say ‘shallow repentance’
because later in the book of Numbers Balaam is still acting against God’s
people. Again, God tells Balaam to go
with the men of Moab, but to ‘only speak the word that I tell you’ (35).
The chapter finishes with
Balak taking Balaam to a high place, where Baal was worshipped, and from where
they can see a fraction of God’s people.
Yet while Balak wants Balaam to curse these people, God will only allow Balaam
bless them. I find it quite moving to
picture Balak and Balaam looking down on these people, who are unaware of the
wicked schemes against them, and God is working for their good.
Conclusion
I began this talk by
telling you of a friend of mine who looked at her circumstances and began to
wonder if God was good to her. Be
careful of making conclusions from you circumstances. God’s word tells us that God is good even
when our circumstances are hard. The
truth is that if we have allowed ourselves to be swallowed up in the love of
Jesus then we can be sure that God is always seeking our ultimate good. It is who God is, as we have seen in this
strong story.
‘If you belong to Christ,
then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs of God’s promises’ (Gal. 3:29). Paul calls Jew and Gentile who follow Jesus
‘the Israel of God’ (Gal. 6:16). God’s
people are not a nation any more. God’s
people are all who are living in Jesus.
Balaam saw that it
pleased the LORD to bless Israel (24:1).
That means that it pleases God to bless you if you love Jesus and are
trusting what He has done for us on the cross.
That blessing does not mean that life will be easy. It won’t be easy. But God shines His face in loving light upon
you, He does not treat you as your sin deserves but treats us with grace, and
He wants to with an awareness of His shalom (peace and wholeness).
‘God is not man, that he
should lie, or a son of man, that he should change his mind. Has he said, and he will not do it? Or has he spoken, and will he not fulfil it’
(23:19). If you belong to Him then He HAs
chosen you, and He cannot un-chose you.
As we see Balaam’s inability to curse God’s people we remember ‘no weapon formed against us will stand’ (Is. 54:17). ‘For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, neither height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord’ (Rom. 8:38-39). For God speaks His words of blessing over us!