
Text -- Numbers 23:3 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Num 23:3 - -- As in God's presence, as one that offers thyself as well as thy sacrifices to obtain his favour.
As in God's presence, as one that offers thyself as well as thy sacrifices to obtain his favour.

Wesley: Num 23:3 - -- To some solitary and convenient place, where I may prevail with God to appear to me.
To some solitary and convenient place, where I may prevail with God to appear to me.

Or, into the plain, as that word properly signifies.
As one in expectation of an important favor.

That is, makes known to me by word or sign.

JFB: Num 23:3 - -- Apart by himself, where he might practise rites and ceremonies, with a view to obtain a response of the oracle.
Apart by himself, where he might practise rites and ceremonies, with a view to obtain a response of the oracle.
Clarke -> Num 23:3
Clarke: Num 23:3 - -- Stand by thy burnt-offering - We have already seen that blessing and cursing in this way were considered as religious rites, and therefore must be a...
Stand by thy burnt-offering - We have already seen that blessing and cursing in this way were considered as religious rites, and therefore must be always preceded by sacrifice. See this exemplified in the case of Isaac, before he blessed Jacob and Esau, Genesis 27 (note), and the notes there. The venison that was brought to Isaac, of which he did eat, was properly the preparatory sacrifice.
Calvin -> Num 23:3
Calvin: Num 23:3 - -- 3.And Balaam said unto Balak In this respect, also, he imitates the true servants of God: for he seeks retirement, because God has almost always appe...
3.And Balaam said unto Balak In this respect, also, he imitates the true servants of God: for he seeks retirement, because God has almost always appeared unto His servants when they have been separated from the company of men. You would say that he was another Moses, when he exhorts the king to persevering prayer, and, in order that he may be more earnest in supplication, bids him remain perfectly still by the altars. Meanwhile he withdraws himself from the crowd, and the eyes of the witnesses, so that he may be more ready to receive the revelation. Since, however, there was no sincerity in him, we may probably conclude, that in vain ostentation he imitated the servants of God, that, like one of God’s councillors, he might bring forth the secrets from the shrines of heaven. I know not why some render the word
TSK -> Num 23:3
TSK: Num 23:3 - -- Stand : Num 23:15
burnt : Gen 8:20, Gen 22:2, Gen 22:7, Gen 22:8, Gen 22:13; Exo 18:12; Lev 1:1
peradventure : Num 23:15, Num 22:8, Num 22:9, Num 22:3...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Num 23:3
Barnes: Num 23:3 - -- Balaam apparently expected to mark some phenomenon in the sky or in nature, which he would be able, according to the rules of his art, to interpret ...
Balaam apparently expected to mark some phenomenon in the sky or in nature, which he would be able, according to the rules of his art, to interpret as a portent. It was for such "auguries"(not as the King James Version "enchantments"Num 23:23) that he now departed to watch; contrast Num 24:1.
An high place - Or, "A bare place on the hill,"as opposed to the high place with its grove of trees.
Poole -> Num 23:3
Poole: Num 23:3 - -- By thy burnt-offering as in God’ s presence, as one that offers thyself its well as thy sacrifices to obtain his favour. I will go to some sol...
By thy burnt-offering as in God’ s presence, as one that offers thyself its well as thy sacrifices to obtain his favour. I will go to some solitary and convenient place, where I may by my enchantments prevail with God to appear to me, and to answer thy and my desires in cursing this people.
Whatsoever he showeth me i.e. reveals to me, either by word or sign.
To an high place or, into the plain , as that word properly signifies, for he was now in a high place, Num 22:4 . But this is not material, it was doubtless some solitary place, where he might use some gestures and ceremonies which he would not have others see, and where he might more reasonably expect to meet with God; for both good and evil spirits most commonly appeared to persons in such places.
Gill -> Num 23:3
Gill: Num 23:3 - -- And Balaam said unto Balak, stand by thy burnt offering,.... By which it appears that the sacrifices offered were of this sort, and there might be one...
And Balaam said unto Balak, stand by thy burnt offering,.... By which it appears that the sacrifices offered were of this sort, and there might be one, which was more peculiarly the burnt offering of Balak; though he might be more or less with Balaam concerned in them all; at which he was directed to stand while it was burning, presenting that and himself to the Lord, that he would have respect to both:
and I will go; depart from thence, at some little distance, unto some private place:
peradventure the Lord will come to meet me; upon the offering of these sacrifices to him, though he could not be certain of it, he having lately shown some displeasure and resentment unto him; and this was also in the daytime, when it was in the night he usually came unto him:
and whatsoever he showeth me I will tell thee; the whole of it, truly as it is, whether agreeable or not:
and he went to an high place; but he was in one already, and therefore if this is the sense of the word, he must go to another, into a grove in one of the high places, where he might be retired, and so fit for a divine converse; and the Targum of Onkelos renders it alone: but rather the sense is, that he went into a plain, as De Dieu has shown from the use of the word in the Syriac language; he was upon a high place, and he went down from thence into the plain, perhaps into a cave at the bottom of the hill, a retired place, where he hoped the Lord would meet him, as he did.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
