|
|
B'Midbar/Numbers 22:39 Bil'am went with Balak and they entered Kiryat Hutzot
Our text finds us part-way through the story of Balaam, the gentile
sorcerer or prophet (depending on your point of view), who was summoned by
Balak the king of Moab to curse the people of Israel as they sat just
outside his country. At the beginning of the story we read that "Moab
was in great fear because of the people, for they were numerous; and Moab
was in dread of the sons of Israel" (22:3, NASB); Moab and
Balak, its king, are afraid of the Israelites. As the plot unfolds,
"the elders of Moab and the elders of Midian departed with the fees for
divination in their hand; and they came to Bilaam" (22:7, NASB),
to summon Balaam to curse the threat on Moab's borders.
HaShem: literally, Hebrew for 'The Name' - an allusion used to avoid pronouncing the Tetragrammaton, the so-called 'ineffable' name of Gd
Why did Balak take Balaam to Kiryat Hutzot?
Rashi: Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchaki (1040-1105CE), French rabbi who wrote commentaries on the Torah, the Prophets and the Talmud, lived in Troyes where he founded a yeshiva in 1067; focuses on the plain meaning (p'shat) of the text, although sometimes quite cryptic in his brevity
Hirsch: Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch (1808-1888CE), German rabbi, author and educator; staunch opponent of the Reform movement in Germany and one of the fathers of Orthodox Judaism
as "a city full of
marketplaces" and comments that there were "many men, women and children in
its plazas," as if to invoke pity: “have mercy on these people, so that
they should not be uprooted.”
The first king of Israel - Sha'ul - fell into the same situation. Sent by HaShem to destroy the Amalekites, with specific instructions not to spare people or animals, he and the people did not kill the Amalekite king and kept the best of the sheep and cattle. When challenged about the "bleating of sheep and lowing of the oxen" (Samuel 15:14, NASB) by Samuel, Sha'ul turns round and uses the people as his excuse: "I did obey the voice of the L-rd ... but the people took some of the spoil, sheep and oxen ... to sacrifice to the L-rd your G-d at Gilgal" (15:20-21, NASB). Sha'ul used the people - as if even as king he could not control them - as the excuse for his own disobedience. Consequently, Sha'ul has the kingdom taken away from him; partly because of his disobedience to G-d's explicit instructions, but significantly because he was not honest and tried to blame other people for his own sin. Although King David committed both adultery and murder, he was still known as a man after G-d's heart because when confronted by his sin he confessed it and repented. David's son Solomon wrote, "He who conceals his sins will not succeed; he who confesses and abandons them will gain mercy" (Proverbs 28:13, CJB). We must be honest with G-d: we do sin and we must confess it to Him so that He can forgive us: "If we claim not to have sin, we are deceiving ourselves, and the truth is not in us" (1 John 1:8, CJB).
Balak used his people as an excuse for hiring Balaam to curse Israel so that he might remain king of Moab and retain his credibility and influence in the region; Sha'ul blamed the people for his weakness and failure to carry out G-d's commands. Let us not fall into the same trap and try to avoid responsibility for our own shortcomings but instead own up and seek G-d's forgiveness.
Further Study: Shemot 32:21-24; 2 Samuel 12:7-14; Luke 15:21-24
Application: Do you find yourself pointing the finger at others when things go wrong: "She gave me the apple and I ate" (B'resheet 3:12), or do you come clean before the L-rd when you have done or been involved in something that you know does not please G-d? Now would a good time to recognise and stand up to your own responsibility, so that G-d can forgive you!
© Jonathan Allen, 2007
| Messianic Trust Home Page | Weekly Email | More Weekly Drashot |
| Support the work of producing this weekly commentary | ||
| Last Week | Next Week | |
| Scripture Index | ||
| Last Year - 5766 | Next Year - 5768 | |
|
Your turn - what do you think of the ideas in this drash ? Like most print and online magazines, we reserve the right to edit or publish only those comments we feel are edifying in tone and content. |