Balaam’s Star Prophecy to a King
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob had been promised through God’s blessings that many nations and kings would come from their descendants. Jacob, renamed Israel by God, divided the blessing among his sons, future fathers of the 12 tribes of Israel. Only one son, Judah, did he pass along the royalty blessing of a future kingdom.
Mt. Sinai had long since been left behind by the Hebrews having spent nearly the past 40 years wandering through portions of the Sinai, Negev and Arabian deserts. The Hebrews had been following pillars of cloud by day and fire by night on their trek to the place.[1]
Delayed by two generations as a consequence of the people doubting God right after they escaped Egypt, another promise remained fully in effect: to protect the Hebrew tribes from their enemies.[2]
While promises made at Mt Sinai laid foundational requirements for the Messiah at the place, no one particular prophecy directly pointed to the future Messiah. The first distinctive Messiah prophecy came from a very unlikely source…
Standing in the way of the Hebrews was yet another Gentile enemy, Moab, led by King Balak son of King Zippor. He ruled the Moabite kingdom located east of the Dead Sea in modern day Jordan.
Balak was painfully aware of how the Hebrews had vanquished the strongly defensed Amorites whose own army had previously defeated Moab and occupied many of its cities. History was poised to repeat itself for Moab, this time at the hands of the Hebrews.[3]
Dread spread throughout Moab for fear of the size and might of the Hebrew people backed by God. The King knew his military was no match thinking that only supernatural intervention from God could save his kingdom.
Rather than asking for God’s guidance and help, Balak tried a different strategy to use God. Balak decided to try to place a curse on the Hebrews and sent an envoy of Moabite leaders to buy the services of Balaam for that purpose.[4]
Balaam was a Gentile prophet outsider, neither a Hebrew prophet nor even familiar with them. Finding Balaam, the envoy asked him to take a night to consider the royal request. In real time, the encounter between Balak and Balaam was unknown to the Hebrews.
Praying for guidance that night, God told Balaam not to return to the Balak and not to place a curse on the Hebrews because they were “blessed.” The Moabite envoy went home telling the King that the prophet refused to return with them.
Undeterred, Balak upped the ante by sending a larger envoy with more distinguished leaders back to the prophet promising him great honors if he would return with them to place a curse on the Hebrews. In response, Balaam told the envoy that even if he was offered a palace full of silver and gold, he could not do more or less than God’s commandment.
Still, Balaam said he would give them an answer the next morning and that night he again sought God’s guidance. Against God’s instruction, the next day Balaam decided to meet the King, but their journey was blocked by an angel using a donkey. Confessing he had sinned, Balaam was allowed to continue with God’s strict instructions to say only what He instructed.
King Balak was irritated with Balaam and questioned why the prophet had resisted royal requests to come see him. Brushing off the question and getting right to the point, Balaam said,
Num 22:38 “I have come to you now, but do I have power to say just anything? The word God puts in my mouth, that is what I must say.”(NRSV)
Three times Balak took Balaam to a different high position on a mount to observe portions of the extensive size of the Hebrew people because they could not be seen entirely from one location. At each location, Balak offered a sacrifice.
After each sacrifice, the King asked the prophet to place a curse on the Hebrews. Each time, Balaam sought God’s message which came back offering blessings on the Hebrews rather than a curse.
After the third time, Balak was exasperated. Clapping his hands King Balak said, “I called you to curse my enemies, but behold, you have persisted in blessing them these three times!”[5]
Announcing he was going back home but before leaving, Balaam said he would foretell Moab’s future.[6] It was a dark prophecy for Moab in the form of an oracle prefaced with a royal prophecy about Israel’s bright future:
Num 24:17 “I see him, but not now; I behold him, but not near; A star shall come forth from Jacob, A scepter shall rise from Israel, And shall crush through the forehead of Moab, And tear down all the sons of Sheth.”(NASB)
According to the renowned Jewish sage, Rabbi Rashi, Balaam’s oracle is a Messiah prophecy. The Rabbi’s interpretation was tied to the blessing of Jacob’s grandfather Abraham which said, “kings will come forth from you.”[7]
“Scepter” is translated in the Bible from the Hebrew word shebet, the same word used in Jacob’s royalty blessing of his son, Judah, in Genesis 49:10. Rashi interpreted the term scepter as representing “a king who rules dominantly” from the future lineage of David.
Referring to the star, Rashi expounded that it represents one who “shoots out like an arrow” from Jacob and uproots the sons of Sheth or Seth, the son of Adam; in other words, symbolically uproots all of mankind.[8]
If the appearance of Jesus of Nazareth was to be a fulfillment of Balaam’s prophecy, a lot of pieces first had to come together to fulfill the promises made at Mt. Sinai. Hundreds of years into the future, prophets of the Bible would bring clarity to these promises that became requirements setting the stage for the Messiah to be born in the royal lineage of the House of David.
Promises made at Mt. Sinai were fulfilled over time, but one part of Balaam’s prophecy was yet to be fulfilled – “A star shall come forth from Jacob.” Was “his star” observed by the Magi signaling the birth of the “King of the Jews” a literal fulfillment of Balaam’s prophecy?
Updated November 19, 2023.
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REFERENCES:
[1] Numbers 14. “Sinai Peninsula;” “Negev;” and “King’s Highway.” Encyclopædia Britannica. 2014. http://www.britannica.com
[2] Deuteronomy 2-7; 23:23-31; Number 14:24, 26-35.
[3] Numbers 21-22. “Map of OldTestament Israel.” Bible-history.com. <http://www.bible-history.com/geography/ancient-israel/israel-old-testament.html> “Israel and Judah.” Free English Site. map. 2017. <http://www.freeenglishsite.com/LDS/other/Moab.htm>
[4] Numbers 22.
[5] NASB. Numbers 24:10. “What is the error of Balaam?” EndoftheMatter.com. image. 2022. <https://i0.wp.com/endofthematter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/BalaamintheBible-171300653-43bf701fd28844c6a5682acf05b9c83a.jpg?fit=1024%2C576&ssl=1>
[6] Numbers 24:20-24.
[7] Gensis 17:6, NASB.
[8] Rashi. The Complete Jewish Bible with Rashi Commentary Commentary for Numbers 24:17.