How could you possibly know what was in Balaam’s heart? Now you’re just guessing. It’s just a supposition; it’s like saying that anyone with aberrant sexual appetites who befriends children of a certain age is trying to groom them. There’s a difference between a guess and an educated guess. The way you reach a conclusion based on an educated guess is you take all the information available to you, collate it, then determine what the likeliest scenario is likely to be.
So what information do we have available to us? First, Jude’s
assertion that there are those who run greedily in the error of Balaam for
profit, which presupposes that he did likewise, then we have Balaam’s own
reaction upon receiving tacit permission to go with the men who had come to
spirit him away.
Balaam didn’t ask the Lord for confirmation, ask if He was
sure, fleece God, repeat his question or anything of the like. Once God said he
could rise and go with them, he rose, saddled his donkey, and went with the
princes of Moab. There was no foot-dragging, no awe shucks, I need to pack, or
can we leave after lunch because I have to feed my lama, he got up and went.
Someone’s reaction to a situation, predicament, word from the
Lord, or prophecy betrays their heart's desire more assuredly than any words
that may flow from their lips. If every time God requires sacrificial action on
our part, we drag our feet and find an excuse to delay or not do it altogether,
but whenever the opportunity to flirt with the world arises, we’re akin to a
live-action road runner cartoon in the speed with which we run after it, our reaction
is betraying our true heart.
Balaam did not delay in going with the princes of Moab
because it was what he wanted to do all along; he was just afraid to do it as
long as God was against it. He should have known God was still against him
going, but his attention was focused on the things Balak would be willing to
part with to get his favor. Promises of great gifts from a king are nothing to
scoff at, but they pale to the promises of great gifts from the King.
It’s worth remaining obedient and forfeiting the promises of
kings in order to receive the promises of the King. Balaam had not learned that
particular lesson, and now it was about to draw him into a conversation with a
donkey.
Before we go further, I would be remiss if I didn’t point out
that certain events in the Bible, including the talking donkey, are the
exception rather than the rule. Throughout the whole Bible, there is only one
talking animal, namely Balaam’s donkey, so when I hear sister Florence insist
that she has conversations with every one of her seventeen cats and that they
all talk back - and that’s perfectly biblical because Balaam spoke to his
donkey - I have to throw a flag on the play.
It happened once under extraordinary circumstances. Having an
angel of the Lord blocking your path and opening your mouth so that you might
speak to a misguided prophet is very different from your cat alerting you
verbally that your milk might be going bad or that she prefers Fancy Feast over
Sheba.
Numbers 22:22-25, “Then God’s anger was aroused because he
went, and the Angel of the Lord took His stand in the way as an adversary
against him. And he was riding on his donkey, and his two servants were with
him. Now the donkey saw the Angel of the Lord standing in the way with His
drawn sword in His hand, and the donkey turned aside out of the way and went
into the field. So Balaam struck the donkey to turn her back onto the road.
Then the Angel of the Lord stood in a narrow path between the vineyards, with a
wall on this side and a wall on that side. And when the donkey saw the Angel of
the Lord, she pushed herself against the wall and crushed Balaam’s foot against
the wall; so he struck her again.”
It’s a sad day when a donkey has a better insight into the
supernatural than a prophet of the Lord. Yet, here we are, with the donkey
turning aside upon seeing the angel of the Lord with his sword drawn and Balaam
getting so angry as to strike his donkey and turn her back onto the road.
The donkey would have none of it, for while Balaam reasoned
his way into rebellion and ran greedily after profit, the donkey’s choice
remained binary. Either she tried to barrel through an angel with a drawn
sword, or she disobeyed her master, even going so far as risking his wrath.
If Balaam was indifferent about whether he should go to see
Balak, why the visceral reaction to his donkey turning aside and going into the
field? Why jump straight to striking it until it turned back onto the road?
All along the way, there are hints and moments where Balaam’s
character seeps through, and his true heart becomes visible. At one point, he
may have been a true and faithful servant who obeyed the Lord in all things but
had become a man who would beat his donkey because it tried to turn aside from
running into an angel.
Godly character comes through whether you’re riding a bus, riding a donkey, or flying from one continent to another. Godly character is not exclusive to when you are in church, trying to keep up with sister Doris and her organ playing, but something that defines you every day of your life, whether someone is watching or not.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
No comments:
Post a Comment