<SPAN name="p184a"></SPAN>
<hr class="sect_35" />
<h3> CHAPTER <abbr title="3">III.</abbr><br/><br/> <span> <i>CONQUEST OF THE EAST OF JORDAN—BALAAM AND BALAK.</i><br/> <abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr> <abbr title="chapters 21 through 24">xxi.–xxiv.</abbr> <span class="nowrap">B.C. 1451.</span></span></h3>
<p class="chaphdbrk in_dropcap">
<span class="dropcap">T</span>HE country north of the present encampment of the Israelites from the Arnon to the Jabbok was at this time possessed by the Amorites. We have already met with this tribe on the western side of the Jordan
(<abbr title="Genesis">Gen.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 14">xiv.</abbr> 7, 13;
<abbr title="chapter 13">xiii.</abbr> 18;
<abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr> <span id="p184_124" class="nowrap"><abbr title="chapter 13">xiii.</abbr> 29<SPAN href="#fn_124" class="anchor">124</SPAN>).</span>
Tempted by the rich pasture lands east of this river a colony of them appears to have crossed, and having driven the Moabites with great slaughter and the loss of many captives from the country south of the Jabbok
(<abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 21">xxi.</abbr>
26<abbr title="through">–</abbr>29), to have made the wide chasm of the Arnon henceforth the boundary between them.</p>
<p>The Amorite king at this time was
<span class="smcap">Sihon</span>, and his capital was Heshbon, twenty miles east of the Jordan, on the parallel of the northern end of the Dead Sea. Thither the Israelitish leader sent messengers requesting a peaceful passage through his territory, and promising the same respect for his land and possessions, which had already been proposed to the Edomites. But<SPAN id="p185"> </SPAN>their request was rudely rejected. Sihon would not allow them even to pass through his borders, but assembled his forces, and prepared for battle. The Israelites did not decline the engagement, which took place at Jahaz, probably a short distance south of Heshbon, and resulted in the total defeat of the Amorites; Sihon himself, his sons, and all his people were smitten with the sword, his walled towns Ar and Heshbon, Nophah and Medeba were captured, and his numerous flocks and herds fell into the hands of the victors, who thus became masters of the entire country between the Arnon and the Jabbok
(<abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 21">xxi.</abbr>
27<abbr title="through">–</abbr>30).</p>
<p>Apparently about the same time that Sihon had expelled the Moabites from the rich territory south of the Jabbok, another Amorite chief seized the country extending from that river to the foot of Hermon, and known as the land of Bashan. His name was
<span class="smcap">Og</span>, one of the last of the giant-race of Rephaim. He ruled over sixty cities, and his stronghold was a remarkable oval district, about 22 miles from north to south by 14 from west to east, called by the Hebrews <i>Argob</i>, or the <i>stony</i>, afterwards by the Greeks <i>Trachonitis</i>, and now <i>Lejah</i>. This extraordinary region has been described as “an ocean of basaltic rocks and boulders, tossed about in the wildest confusion, and intermingled with fissures and crevices in every direction, and yet in spite of its ungainly and forbidding features thickly studded even now with deserted cities and villages, in all of which the dwellings are solidly built and of remote <span id="p185_125" class="nowrap">antiquity<SPAN href="#fn_125" class="anchor">125</SPAN>.”</span>
On a rocky promontory south-west of this marvellous region, “without water, without access, save over rocks and through defiles almost <span id="p185_126" class="nowrap">impracticable<SPAN href="#fn_126" class="anchor">126</SPAN>,”</span><SPAN id="p186"> </SPAN>was the city of Edrei (<i>strength</i>). Here, “as if in the Thermopylæ of his kingdom,” the giant king of Bashan and all his people resolved to encounter the advancing hosts of the Israelites, led, it seems probable, by two eminent chiefs of the tribe of Manasseh, Jair and Nobah.
(<abbr title="Compare">Comp.</abbr>
<abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 32">xxxii.</abbr> 41, 42;
<abbr title="Deuteronomy">Deut.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 3">iii.</abbr> 14.) Like the Amorite chief of Heshbon, Og could not withstand the valour of the Israelites. He was utterly routed, and <i>his threescore cities fenced with high walls, gates and bars</i>, besides <i>unwalled towns a great many</i>, fell into their hands. A trophy of this victory, long preserved by the children of Ammon in the city of <span id="p186x"
title="‘Rabbath’ replaced with ‘Rabbah’" class="msg">Rabbah</span>,
was the huge iron <span id="p186_127" class="nowrap">bedstead<SPAN href="#fn_127" class="anchor">127</SPAN></span>
of the Amorite king, nine cubits long, by four wide; and long afterwards the subjugation of <i>Sihon king of the Amorites</i>, and <i>Og the king of Bashan, great kings, famous kings, mighty kings</i>, was deemed worthy of being ranked with the tokens and wonders wrought in the land of Egypt, and the overthrow of Pharaoh in the Red Sea
(<abbr title="Psalm 135">Ps. cxxxv.</abbr>
10<abbr title="through">–</abbr>12;
<abbr title="Psalm 136">cxxxvi.</abbr>
15<abbr title="through">–</abbr>21).</p>
<p>After these two decisive engagements, which made them masters of the entire country east of the Jordan, from the wide chasm of the Arnon to the foot of the snow-capped Hermon, the Israelites encamped in the plains of Shittim, or <i>the Meadow of the Acacias</i>, amidst “the long<SPAN id="p187"> </SPAN>belt of acacia-groves, which, on its eastern as well as its western side, line the upper terraces of the Jordan over against <span id="p187_128" class="nowrap">Jericho<SPAN href="#fn_128" class="anchor">128</SPAN>.”</span>
South of the Arnon was the little corner of territory occupied by Moab, who viewed with no little alarm the successes of the Israelites against such <i>mighty kings</i> as Sihon and Og. <i>This people</i>, said
<span class="smcap">Balak</span> the king of Moab to the elders of Midian, <i>lick up all that are round about us, as the ox licketh up the grass of the field</i>. Sensible of the uselessness of attacking a nation so manifestly under the protection of an Invisible Power, the two confederate tribes resolved before falling upon them to place them under an awful curse, which might have the effect of paralysing their <span id="p187_129" class="nowrap">arms<SPAN href="#fn_129" class="anchor">129</SPAN>.</span>
At this time no man was supposed to have greater power in this way than a famous Prophet named
<span class="smcap">Balaam</span>, the son of Beor. He lived far away from the present encampment of the Israelites at Pethor, beyond the Euphrates, in Aram among <i>the mountains of the East</i>, but his fame had spread across the Assyrian desert even to the shores of the Dead Sea. His gifts he exercised as a Prophet of the same God, who had wrought so many miracles in behalf of the Israelites. If, therefore, he could be persuaded to lay upon them his powerful ban, their further success the Moabites thought might be checked, and the children of Lot might not only recover the land of which they had been deprived by the Amorites, but possibly add to them the<SPAN id="p188"> </SPAN>fertile territory the Israelites had so lately won from Sihon and Og.</p>
<p>Accordingly, elders both of Moab and Midian, with the rewards of divination in their hands, were despatched eastward across the Assyrian desert to intreat the aid of the powerful Prophet. On reaching their destination and announcing the purport of their errand, Balaam, uncertain of the lawfulness of complying with it, requested them to lodge there that night, while he ascertained the will of Jehovah. The answer he obtained was unfavourable. <i>Thou shalt not go with them</i>; said God, <i>thou shalt not curse the people: for they are blessed</i>. On the morrow, therefore, he sent the messengers away, bidding them announce to their master that Jehovah forbade his accompanying them.</p>
<p>Undeterred by this failure, and possibly informed by his messengers that the Prophet <i>himself</i> did not seem unwilling to come, the king of Moab sent a second embassy consisting of princes <i>more and more honourable than the last</i>, to inform him that he would advance him to very great honour, and do whatever he commanded, if only he would come. Again, therefore, the toilsome Syrian desert was traversed, and the messengers preferred their request. But again they seemed to have come in vain. <i>If Balak would give me his house full of silver and gold</i>, said the Prophet, <i>I cannot go beyond the word of the Lord to do less or more</i>. But instead of at once sending the messengers away, he bade them lodge with him that night, while he consulted the Lord a second time. On this occasion the word of the Lord came to him, and bade him go, but authorized him to speak nothing more and nothing less than the very words that should be put into his mouth. Balaam accordingly set out on his journey, but he was not to accomplish it without receiving another and a more terrible warning against it and its object. As he rode<SPAN id="p189"> </SPAN>upon his ass, the <i>Angel of the Lord</i> stood in the way, with his sword drawn in his hand. As if in derision of his claims to be a powerful Seer, the beast alone discerned the celestial Adversary, and started aside out of the way into a field. On this, Balaam smote it, and turned it into a path running through some vineyards. But again the Angel confronted the wilful Prophet, and the frightened ass in its efforts to avoid him crushed his foot against the wall. Therefore Balaam struck it a second time, and now, as if in still deeper derision of one, who claimed to be able to reveal to kings and princes the will of the Invisible, the dumb beast, in the accents of a man <i>forbad the madness of the Prophet</i>
(<abbr title="Second Peter">2 Pet.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 2">ii.</abbr> 16). On this, Balaam’s eyes were at length opened, and as he bowed himself down before the Angel, he was sternly rebuked for his wilfulness, and proposed to turn back rather than displease the Lord. But since his mind was wholly bent on that course, he was a second time bidden to proceed, but a second time also warned against uttering any other words than those which a Divine Power should put into his mouth.</p>
<p>The journey was now resumed, and at length the watchmen of Balak announced to their master that the mighty Prophet was approaching. Therefore Balak went forth to meet him, and after a brief rebuke of his delay, conducted his visitor to Kirjath-Huzoth, <i>the Town of Streets</i>, a place in the furthest borders of his kingdom, and possibly of sacred or oracular <span id="p189_130" class="nowrap">reputation<SPAN href="#fn_130" class="anchor">130</SPAN>,</span>
where he entertained him at a great feast. On the next day he conducted him to the high places dedicated to Baal
(<abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 22">xxii.</abbr> 41) that rose above the encampment of the Israelites, whence he might gain a view of the utmost part of the people he had desired him to curse. There by the Prophet’s direction the king erected seven altars, and on each they offered together a bullock and a ram,<SPAN id="p190"> </SPAN>and while Balak with his attendant princes stood by his burnt-offering, Balaam went forth to <i>a high place</i>
(<abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 23">xxiii.</abbr> 3) to learn the Divine will. <i>And God met Balaam, and put a word in his mouth</i>, and returning to the expectant king, he declared that it was impossible for him to curse Jacob and defy Israel, that he could not <i>curse him whom God had not cursed, or defy him whom Jehovah had not defied</i>.</p>
<p>On hearing this response so entirely opposite to what he had expected, Balak was highly incensed, but thinking a change of view might have a different influence on the Prophet’s spirit, he brought him to <span id="p190_131" class="nowrap">Zophim<SPAN href="#fn_131" class="anchor">131</SPAN>,</span>
a <i>cultivated field of the Watchmen</i> high up on the range of Pisgah. Again the altars were built, and the victims slain; again the king stood by his burnt-sacrifice, and again Balaam went forth <i>to meet the Lord</i>. But still the answer was unfavourable. The steam of sacrifice could not bend the will of Jehovah; <i>He was not a man that He should lie</i>, or repent of His fixed purpose; what He had said He would do, what He had spoken He would perform; <i>in Jacob He had not beheld iniquity, neither had He seen perverseness in Israel; He had brought them out of Egypt</i>, and neither augury nor divination could prevail against them.</p>
<p>More incensed than before, the king of Moab burst forth into bitter complaints against the Prophet, and though the latter reminded him that he could speak nothing but the word of Jehovah, yet he determined from one more point to show him the people, that peradventure he might thence effect the potent curse. He led him up, therefore, to a peak, where stood the sanctuary of Peor
(<abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 23">xxiii.</abbr> 28), looking toward Jeshimon or <i>the waste</i>, “probably the dreary barren waste of the hills lying immediately on the east of the Dead Sea.” There the seven altars were for the third time<SPAN id="p191"> </SPAN>built, and the victims for the third time slain. But Balaam was now convinced that Jehovah was pleased only to bless the people. Without resorting, therefore, any more to useless divinations, he lifted up his eyes, and looked down upon the tribes encamped in the acacia groves below him, with their <i>goodly tents spread out like the valleys</i>, or watercourses of the mountains, like the hanging gardens beside his own great river Euphrates, as <i>lign-aloes which the Lord had planted, as cedar trees beside the waters</i>
(<abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 24">xxiv.</abbr> 6). And as he stood, “with tranced yet open gaze” he saw the Vision of the Almighty, and “in outline dim and vast” beheld the future of the “desert-wearied tribes” that lay encamped before him “in sight of <span id="p191_132" class="nowrap">Canaan<SPAN href="#fn_132" class="anchor">132</SPAN>.”</span>
He beheld them <i>pouring water from their buckets, their seed in many waters, their king higher than any Amalekite Agag</i> ruling in the Arabian wilderness south of where he stood. He knew that God had <i>brought them forth out of Egypt</i>, and that their <i>strength was like that of the unicorn</i>. He foresaw them <i>couched as a lion, and lying down as a great lion, eating up the nations their enemies, breaking their bones, and piercing them through with the arrows</i> of their archers. <i>Blessed was he that blessed them, and cursed was he that cursed them</i>
(<abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 24">xxiv.</abbr>
1<abbr title="through">–</abbr>9).</p>
<p>Balak’s vexation was now increased tenfold. Smiting his hands together he upbraided the Prophet for his deceit, and in place of advancing him, as he had intended, to high honour, bade him flee for his life to his native land. Nor was the other loath to go. But before he went, for he felt himself still moved by the prophetic spirit, he would <i>advertise</i> the king of what this mysterious people <i>would do to his people in the latter days</i>
(<abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr>
<abbr title="chapter 24">xxiv.</abbr> 14). Again, therefore, he took<SPAN id="p192"> </SPAN>up his parable, <i>and saw, but not now,—he beheld but not nigh, a Star</i>, bright as any that spangled the Eastern sky, <i>coming out of Jacob, and a sceptre rising out of Israel, smiting through the princes of <span id="p192_133" class="nowrap">Moab<SPAN href="#fn_133" class="anchor">133</SPAN>,</span>
and destroying</i> all their wild warriors <i>the sons of <span id="p192_134" class="nowrap">tumult<SPAN href="#fn_134" class="anchor">134</SPAN></span></i>.
One by one he saw “the giant forms of empires on their way to ruin;” Edom and Seir becoming a possession for their enemies; Amalek, then <i>the first of the nations, in his latter end perishing for ever</i>; the Kenites, then <i>strong in their dwelling-place, and putting their nest in the</i> neighbouring <i>rocks</i> of En-gedi <i>wasted and made a prey</i>; nay even Israel <i>carried away captive by Asshur</i>. And yet once more he saw woe in store even for Asshur, even for his own native land. Far in the distant future he saw <i>ships</i> coming <i>from Chittim</i>, the island of Cyprus, <i>to afflict Asshur and to afflict Eber</i>, till the proud kingdoms of the Eastern world, and he who should <i>afflict</i> them <i>perished for <span id="p192_135" class="nowrap">ever<SPAN href="#fn_135" class="anchor">135</SPAN></span></i>.
And then the Vision closed. The “true Prophetic light died away,” and the king of Moab, baffled and disappointed, returned to his people.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />