When Compromise Whispers Counsel

The Bible in a Year

“Behold, these caused the children of Israel, through the counsel of Balaam, to commit trespass against the Lord in the matter of Peor, and there was a plague among the congregation of the Lord.” — Numbers 31:16

As we move through the Book of Numbers in our year-long journey through Scripture, we encounter a sobering footnote to a familiar story. Balaam is remembered for his talking donkey and his reluctant blessings over Israel, yet here in Numbers 31 we discover something far more troubling—his counsel. Though he could not curse Israel directly, he found another way to harm them. Revelation 2:14 later confirms that Balaam taught Balak to put a stumbling block before the people of God. When open attack failed, subtle compromise succeeded.

Moses, understandably upset, confronts the soldiers for sparing the Midianite women. He connects their presence to the “matter of Peor,” referring back to Numbers 25, where Israel fell into idolatry and immorality. The Hebrew word for “trespass” here conveys unfaithfulness—ma‘al—a breach of covenant loyalty. Balaam’s counsel led Israel into spiritual adultery. He suggested that doctrine did not matter, that Israel could mingle worship with Midianite practices without consequence.

This is the first warning embedded in the text: creed matters. The sin at Peor was not merely cultural interaction; it was theological compromise. Israel participated in idol worship, denying in practice the uniqueness of Yahweh. Deuteronomy 6:4 declares, “Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one.” The unity and exclusivity of God’s covenant claim cannot be shared with Baal or any substitute. In our time, the temptation to minimize doctrinal clarity in the name of harmony is strong. Yet Scripture consistently warns that truth shapes life. As John Stott once observed, “We must allow the Word of God to confront us, disturb our security, undermine our complacency, and overthrow our patterns of thought and behavior.” Doctrine is not cold theory; it is the guardrail of fidelity.

The second layer of Balaam’s counsel involved companions. The Israelites became “chummy,” to borrow a familiar phrase, with the Midianites. This was not ordinary neighborly interaction but covenant entanglement. Paul echoes the principle centuries later in 1 Corinthians 15:33: “Do not be deceived: ‘Bad company corrupts good morals.’” Separation in Scripture is not about arrogance; it is about preservation of devotion. Balaam’s advice rejected the idea that proximity to idolatry and immorality would affect God’s people. But history—and personal experience—tells us otherwise. We are relational beings. What we tolerate in close fellowship often shapes what we accept in our own conduct.

That leads naturally to conduct. Numbers 31:16 speaks of “trespass,” and the narrative in Numbers 25 details immorality. The counsel lowered moral standards. What once would have been unthinkable became normalized. This is the steady drift of compromise. Sin rarely storms the gates; it seeps through neglected watchtowers. When moral boundaries soften, covenant identity erodes. Balaam did not need Israel to renounce Yahweh formally; he only needed them to blend loyalties.

In our contemporary context, the pressure to adjust biblical moral teaching to cultural preference is intense. Even within Christian circles, divorce, sexual ethics, and integrity are often reframed through the lens of personal fulfillment rather than covenant obedience. Yet the New Testament maintains continuity with the Old. Hebrews 13:4 declares, “Marriage is honorable among all, and the bed undefiled; but fornicators and adulterers God will judge.” The Bible’s call to holiness is not outdated rigidity but loving protection. God’s standards are not arbitrary restrictions; they are expressions of His character.

Finally, the text speaks of chastisement. “There was a plague among the congregation of the Lord.” Balaam’s counsel ignored divine judgment. In Numbers 25, twenty-four thousand died. The Hebrew term for plague carries the idea of a blow or stroke—divine intervention to halt destructive rebellion. Judgment in Scripture is never capricious. It is corrective and revealing. It exposes the seriousness of sin and the faithfulness of God to His covenant. To dismiss judgment is to misunderstand holiness.

R. T. Kendall once wrote, “God’s discipline is proof of His love, not the absence of it.” Israel’s plague was not evidence that God had abandoned them; it was evidence that He refused to let corruption define them. The seriousness of chastisement underscores the seriousness of compromise.

As we reflect on Balaam’s counsel, I am compelled to ask myself: Where am I tempted to minimize doctrine for convenience? Where have I grown comfortable in companionships that subtly erode devotion? Have I softened moral standards in ways I once would have resisted? And do I take divine judgment seriously—not in fear, but in reverent awareness of God’s holiness?

The beauty of walking through the Bible in a year is that we encounter not only comforting promises but cautionary narratives. Numbers 31:16 is a warning flare in redemptive history. It reminds us that spiritual compromise often begins with counsel that sounds reasonable. Balaam never openly declared war on Israel; he simply advised accommodation.

Yet the gospel provides hope beyond warning. Christ is our faithful Mediator, the One Balaam’s compromise denied. He calls us not to isolation from the world but to holiness within it. As we continue this journey through Scripture, let us hold firmly to truth, guard our fellowship wisely, pursue moral integrity, and respond humbly to correction.

For further study on Balaam and the matter of Peor, you may find this overview from The Gospel Coalition helpful: https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/balaam-bible/

May today’s reading strengthen our resolve to remain faithful. The counsel we heed shapes the life we live.

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#balaam #BiblicalCompromise #DoctrineAndHoliness #Numbers3116 #TheBibleInAYear

Living Now for the Way You Want to Die

The Bible in a Year

“Let me die the death of the righteous, and let my last end be like his.” — Numbers 23:10

As we journey through Scripture together in this year-long reading plan, we eventually meet a curious and troubling figure: Balaam. In Numbers 23:10, he utters one of the most arresting statements in the Old Testament: “Let me die the death of the righteous, and let my last end be like his.” It is a beautiful request. It is thoughtful. It is even spiritually perceptive. Yet it comes from a man whose heart was divided.

Balaam was a prophet who knew how to speak truth. When constrained by God, he could bless instead of curse. He recognized the distinct calling of Israel and the favor of the LORD upon them. His statement about dying the death of the righteous reveals that he understood something critical: death is not the end of the story. Hebrews 9:27 reminds us, “It is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgment.” Balaam did not dodge the reality of death. In that sense, his request was intelligent. He faced what many prefer to ignore.

In our own time, we often sanitize death or push it to the margins of our thinking. We prepare for retirement, careers, vacations, and emergencies, yet rarely do we prepare our souls. The wisdom literature consistently urges us to number our days (Psalm 90:12). To consider death soberly is not morbid; it is wise. John Calvin once wrote, “We are not our own; therefore let us not set it as our goal to seek what is expedient for us.” To think about death rightly is to remember that our lives belong to God and that eternity outweighs temporal gain.

Yet Balaam’s request is not only intelligent; it is instructive. When he says, “Let me die the death of the righteous,” he acknowledges that not all deaths are the same. Physically, every human heart will one day stop beating. Spiritually, however, there is a world of difference between dying reconciled to God and dying in rebellion against Him. Jesus Himself said in John 8:24, “If you do not believe that I am He, you will die in your sins.” That is a sobering statement. The New Testament makes clear that righteousness is not self-generated morality but a gift secured in Christ. Paul writes in 2 Corinthians 5:21 that God made Christ “who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.”

The word “righteous” in Hebrew, צַדִּיק (tsaddiq), describes one who is just, upright, and aligned with God’s covenant standards. In the New Testament, the Greek δίκαιος (dikaios) carries the idea of being declared right before God. Balaam admired the end of such people. He saw that the righteous possess a hope that extends beyond the grave. But admiration is not transformation.

And here is where his request becomes incomplete. Balaam wanted to die like the righteous, but he did not choose to live like them. Numbers 31:8 records his end—he died among the enemies of Israel. The man who longed for a righteous death aligned himself with unrighteous gain. He loved reward more than obedience. As the apostle Peter later warns, Balaam “loved the wages of unrighteousness” (2 Peter 2:15). He desired heaven’s comfort without heaven’s King.

This tension confronts us as we read the Bible in a year. It is possible to appreciate biblical truth, to speak about faith, even to feel stirred by godly examples—yet remain unchanged in our daily choices. A.W. Tozer once observed, “The true Christian ideal is not to be happy but to be holy.” Balaam wanted the happy ending without the holy journey.

So what does this mean for us today? It means that if we desire to die the death of the righteous, we must first be made righteous by Jesus Christ and then walk in that righteousness. Salvation is by grace alone through faith alone. But that faith produces a life increasingly shaped by obedience. We do not earn heaven by our works; yet a heart transformed by Christ will bear fruit.

In the flow of the Church year, whether we are in an ordinary week or approaching a holy season such as Lent, this theme is always relevant. Lent, in particular, calls us to examine not only how we wish to end our lives but how we are living them now. Repentance is not simply sorrow over sin; it is a reorientation of the heart.

As we continue through Scripture, Balaam’s story stands as both warning and invitation. It warns us not to separate destination from direction. It invites us to anchor our hope fully in Christ. The righteousness that secures a blessed end is not found in vague spiritual sentiment but in union with Jesus.

For further reflection on biblical righteousness and eternal hope, you may find this article from Ligonier Ministries helpful: https://www.ligonier.org/learn/articles/what-is-righteousness. It thoughtfully explains how righteousness is grounded in the work of Christ and applied to believers.

Today, as we read and reflect, let us not merely say, “I hope to die well.” Let us ask, “Am I living faithfully now?” Eternity is shaped not in our final hour, but in the daily pattern of trust, repentance, and obedience.

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#balaam #BibleInAYearDevotional #Numbers2310 #preparingForEternity #righteousnessInChrist
How Groningen university teaches Pavlov lifelessons for their Twinflaming Nazi experiment? Voice to skull microwave weapons. #v2k #voicetoskull #microwaveweapons #twinflaming #balaam #lilith #pavlov #groningenuniversity #destructionoflight #luciferexperiment #demmink #epstein #prometheus
55 Million timelines were destroyed over Balaam Pavlov's coloncancer-fetish so the fecesswinewhores could become somebody for somebody else for the time being. #balaam #groningenuniversity
Is my soulmate's real last name Pavlov?? Cause I'm being conditioned 'n shit. #pavlov #samyazathegreat #balaam #balem
Balaam suffered from leprosy?? No shit... #balaam #mctwinflame
Hmm Balaam that's also a nice name for the mcTwinflame... #balaam

Balaam said, “I have sinned,” but kept walking in the same direction.
Repentance isn’t saying the right words — it’s changing course.

#Balaam #BalaamIHaveSinned #Repentance #BibleTeaching

🕊️ Read the full blog: https://www.scottlapierre.org/balaam-i-have-sinned/

Balaam: Saying “I Have Sinned” Without Changing (Numbers 22)

In Numbers 22, Balaam said “I have sinned” but never changed. His story teaches about false repentance and genuine change through Christ.

Scott LaPierre

Monday Miscellany!

This week:
- #Paul and the #Gospel
- #Balak and #Balaam
- #Jesus ' death in #John
- the #Internet
- #Bible readings
- Persian jewelry
- Book reviews: the #HolySpirit, #Scythians

Please read, share, and subscribe!

https://open.substack.com/pub/deverbovitae/p/monday-miscellany-702?r=14n9qk&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=true

Monday Miscellany

19 May 2025

de Verbo vitae

Today's pick: Balaam and the Ass (1626) - Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn. #art #Rembrandt #Balaam

https://www.artbible.info/art/large/199.html

Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn: Balaam and the Ass

Picture and description of a work by Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn: Balaam and the Ass. Oil on panel (63 x 47 cm), dated 1626.

ArtBible.info