Numbers 23
Balaam constructs seven altars (in pairs: seven bulls and seven rams) and conducts divinations to obtain a curse against Israel, but when he opens his mouth, blessing emerges instead: 'How can I curse those whom God has not cursed? How can I denounce those whom the Lord has not denounced?' The first oracle establishes the fundamental principle: Israel's status is divinely determined and beyond human alteration, and the prophet who claims to curse Israel is resisting the Almighty's own will. Balak's response—'What have you done to me? I brought you to curse my enemies, but you have blessed them!'—reveals his expectation that a prophet is instrumentalizable, a hired hand whose powers serve the highest bidder, an assumption that Numbers 23 systematically deconstructs. The second oracle, spoken from Pisgah's height, reiterates the theme: 'God is not human, that he should lie, or a human being, that he should change his mind,' establishing the LORD's constancy and Israel's covenant status as immutable. Balaam's language shifts from description to celebration: he speaks of Israel's 'tents' and 'dwellings' as if admiring a military camp, and he acknowledges the people's divine election and covenantal blessing as fixed realities that transcend human negotiation. The oracles' rhetorical structure—each one beginning with Balaam's refusal of the assignment ('How can I...?') before pivoting to blessing—models the prophet's constraint: he cannot curse whom the LORD has blessed, and his speech must align with divine reality even when human pressure demands otherwise. Numbers 23's progression through two oracles establishes a pattern of escalating recognition: the first denies that curse is possible; the second celebrates Israel's covenantal uniqueness.