Text: Numbers 24:17
OT Text Referred to: Genesis 3:15
Source: G.K. Beale, A New Testament Biblical Theology (Baker, 2011); standard in protoevangelium scholarship (Hamilton, Alexander)
Reference Type: Allusion
Connection Method(s): Redemptive-Historical Progression
Anchor Text: Gen 3:15 — The Protoevangelium
Significance: Balaam's fourth oracle is the closest verbal echo of the protoevangelium in the entire Pentateuch. "A star will come forth from Jacob, and a scepter will arise from Israel. He will crush (וּמָחַץ, umachats) the skulls of Moab and strike down all the sons of Sheth" (Num 24:17) reactivates the head-crushing of Genesis 3:15, where the seed of the woman "will crush" (יְשׁוּפְךָ, yeshufeka) the serpent's head. Both texts envision a singular descendant — "her seed," then a star/scepter "from Jacob" — who delivers a decisive blow to the head/skull of the enemy. A pagan diviner, speaking under compulsion of the Spirit of God (Num 24:2), is made to trace the very seed-trajectory Eden announced: the woman's seed has now been located in the line of Jacob/Israel and given royal contour (a scepter). The escalation from the garden is real — the promised crusher is now identified as a coming king — yet the terminus is the same enemy and the same victory. Read with the New Testament, this oracle finds its end not in any merely human Moabite-crushing monarch but in the Star whom the magi followed (Matt 2:2) and the Lion of Judah who finally crushes the ancient serpent (Rev 12; 20:10). The telos is the desirability of this King: the seed-of-the-woman victory is good news precisely because it means the deceiver who ruined Eden does not have the last word — a Champion arises whose triumph is our joy.