
Text -- Numbers 24:1 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
In former times.

Wesley: Num 24:1 - -- Where Israel lay encamped, expecting what God of his own accord would suggest to him concerning this matter.
Where Israel lay encamped, expecting what God of his own accord would suggest to him concerning this matter.
JFB -> Num 24:1
JFB: Num 24:1 - -- That is, to use enchantments. His experience on the two former occasions [Num 23:3, Num 23:15] had taught him that these superstitious accompaniments ...
That is, to use enchantments. His experience on the two former occasions [Num 23:3, Num 23:15] had taught him that these superstitious accompaniments of his worship were useless, and therefore he now simply looked towards the camp of Israel, either with a secret design to curse them, or to await the divine afflatus.
Clarke -> Num 24:1
Clarke: Num 24:1 - -- He went not, as at other times, to seek for enchantments - We have already had occasion to observe that the proper meaning of the word נחש nacha...
He went not, as at other times, to seek for enchantments - We have already had occasion to observe that the proper meaning of the word
Calvin -> Num 24:1
Calvin: Num 24:1 - -- 1.And when Balaam saw that it pleased the Lord It is evident that Balaam, in order to gratify the wicked king for the sake of the reward, endeavored ...
1.And when Balaam saw that it pleased the Lord It is evident that Balaam, in order to gratify the wicked king for the sake of the reward, endeavored by various shifts and expedients to obtain an answer in accordance with his wishes. Thus do the wicked seek to propitiate God by delusive means, just as we soothe children by coaxing. And God for some time allowed him 163 to gloat upon his fallacious oracle. He now, however, lays closer constraint upon him, and, breaking off all delay, dictates an answer, which He compels him to deliver. For his obedience is not here praised as if, when he understood the will of God, he yielded voluntarily and abandoned his monstrous cupidity; but, because now there was no more room for subterfuge, he dared not stir his foot, as if God had put forth His hand to retain him in his place.
When it is said that “the Spirit of God was upon him,” 164 after he turned his eyes “toward the wilderness” and beheld the camp of Israel, how they were marshalled “according to their tribes,” we must understand it thus: not that he was influenced by a sincere feeling of good-will, so that the sight itself suggested grounds for blessing; but that he was induced by the inspiration of the same Spirit, who afterwards put forth His influence in the prophecy itself. It is said, then, that the Spirit of God was upon him, not as if it had begun to inspire him at that particular moment when he cast his eyes upon the camp of Israel; but because it prompted him to look in that direction, in order that the impulse of prophecy might be stronger in him, as respecting a thing actually before his eyes. But after the Spirit had thus affected his senses, or at any rate had prepared them to be fit instruments for the execution of his office, it then also directed his tongue to prophesy; but in an extraordinary manner, so that a divine majesty shone forth in the sudden change, as if he were transformed into a new man. In a word, “the Spirit of God was upon him,” shewing by manifest token that He was the author of his address, and that he did not speak of his own natural intelligence. To the same intent it is said that “he took up his parable,” because 165 the character of his address was marked with unusual grandeur and magnificent brilliancy.
TSK -> Num 24:1
TSK: Num 24:1 - -- saw : Num 22:13, Num 23:20, Num 31:16; 1Sa 24:20, 1Sa 26:2, 1Sa 26:25; Rev 2:14
at other times : Num 23:3, Num 23:15
to seek for enchantments : Heb. t...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Poole -> Num 24:1
Poole: Num 24:1 - -- To seek for enchantments i.e. to use enchantments, which he is said to have done, either because when he consulted and sacrificed to God, he did als...
To seek for enchantments i.e. to use enchantments, which he is said to have done, either because when he consulted and sacrificed to God, he did also use enchantments and consult with the devil, that if one would not, the other might help him; or because he consulted God in a magical and superstitious way, by using such postures or instruments or forms of words as enchanters used.
Toward the wilderness where Israel lay encamped, either with intent to curse Israel without God’ s leave; or rather, expecting what God of his own accord would suggest to him concerning this matter.
Haydock -> Num 24:1
Haydock: Num 24:1 - -- Divination. Septuagint, "to meet the birds." The augurs judged of future events by the flying, eating, and other appearances of birds. Hebrew, "en...
Divination. Septuagint, "to meet the birds." The augurs judged of future events by the flying, eating, and other appearances of birds. Hebrew, "enchantments." (Menochius) ---
Desert. The plains of Moab, where the Israelites were encamped. He found himself, as it were, involuntarily transported by the spirit of God, ver. 2. (Calmet) ---
Yet, for all that, he did not become more holy. Some work miracles, and are damned, Matthew vii. 22. (Worthington)
Gill -> Num 24:1
Gill: Num 24:1 - -- And when Balsam saw that it pleased the Lord to bless Israel,.... That it was good in his sight, what he approved of, and was well-pleasing to him, an...
And when Balsam saw that it pleased the Lord to bless Israel,.... That it was good in his sight, what he approved of, and was well-pleasing to him, and that it was his determined mind that Israel should be blessed, and not cursed, from which there was no turning him, by offering sacrifices to him, and much less by his sorceries and divinations:
he went not as at other times; or, "as at a time in a time" q, at two times, of which see Num 23:3, he abode in the place where the sacrifices were offered, and did not depart to another at some distance, as he had twice before done:
to seek for enchantments; which it seems he used before, for he not only offered sacrifices to the true God, which yet were attended with superstitious rites, but he made use of his divining art also; and not only went to meet with God, and hear what he would say to him, but consulted the devil also, being willing to have two strings to his bow, and that, if possible, he might carry his point, and get what his covetous and ambitious mind was desirous of: the words may be literally rendered, "to meet enchantments" r; but what should be meant by the phrase is not easy to say; I should rather choose to render them, "to meet serpents", and make use of them in his divinations, make observations on them, and predictions from them: one sort of divination is called "ophiomancy", or divining by serpents; so Calchas, on seeing a serpent devour eight sparrows with their dam, foretold the duration of the siege of Troy s:
but he set his face towards the wilderness: where the people of Israel lay encamped, not with an intention to bless them, though he saw it pleased the Lord, but to take an opportunity, if he could, without his leave, to curse them; and therefore he did not go out as he did before, to know his will, but stood by the sacrifice, with his face to the wilderness, where the people were, to take any advantage that offered.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Num 24:1 The idiom signifies that he had a determination and resolution to look out over where the Israelites were, so that he could appreciate more their pres...
Geneva Bible -> Num 24:1
Geneva Bible: Num 24:1 And when Balaam saw that it pleased the LORD to bless Israel, he went not, as at other times, to seek for enchantments, but he set his face toward the...
