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Numbers 24:7

Context

24:7 He will pour the water out of his buckets, 1 

and their descendants will be like abundant 2  water; 3 

their king will be greater than Agag, 4 

and their kingdom will be exalted.

Numbers 24:1

Context
Balaam Prophesies Yet Again

24:1 5 When Balaam saw that it pleased the Lord to bless Israel, 6  he did not go as at the other times 7  to seek for omens, 8  but he set his face 9  toward the wilderness.

Numbers 15:8

Context
15:8 And when you prepare a young bull as a burnt offering or a sacrifice for discharging a vow or as a peace offering to the Lord,

Numbers 15:33

Context
15:33 Those who found him gathering wood brought him to Moses and Aaron and to the whole community.
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[24:7]  1 tc For this colon the LXX has “a man shall come out of his seed.” Cf. the Syriac Peshitta and Targum.

[24:7]  2 tn Heb “many.”

[24:7]  3 sn These two lines are difficult, but the general sense is that of irrigation buckets and a well-watered land. The point is that Israel will be prosperous and fruitful.

[24:7]  4 sn Many commentators see this as a reference to Agag of 1 Sam 15:32-33, the Amalekite king slain by Samuel, for that is the one we know. But that is by no means clear, for this text does not identify this Agag. If it is that king, then this poem, or this line in this poem, would have to be later, unless one were to try to argue for a specific prophecy. Whoever this Agag is, he is a symbol of power.

[24:1]  5 sn For a thorough study of the arrangement of this passage, see E. B. Smick, “A Study of the Structure of the Third Balaam Oracle,” The Law and the Prophets, 242-52. He sees the oracle as having an introductory strophe (vv. 3, 4), followed by two stanzas (vv. 5, 6) that introduce the body (vv. 7b-9b) before the final benediction (v. 9b).

[24:1]  6 tn Heb “it was good in the eyes of the Lord.”

[24:1]  7 tn Heb “as time after time.”

[24:1]  8 tn The word נְחָשִׁים (nÿkhashim) means “omens,” or possibly “auguries.” Balaam is not even making a pretense now of looking for such things, because they are not going to work. God has overruled them.

[24:1]  9 tn 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 presence and use that as the basis for his expressing of the oracle.



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