Balaam Wants to Disobey
			
			
			
   
			   
			
   
			
			
Introduction (Numbers 22:1–24:25):
Balaam’s story shows us the danger of having an outward appearance of obedience 
while harboring rebellion in the heart. True obedience must come from within.
The Appearance of Obedience
When Balak’s men first approached Balaam, he seemed to do the right thing. He 
told them he would ask the Lord and only speak what God revealed (Numbers 22:8). 
At first glance, his actions looked correct. He even told the princes of Balak 
“no” when God forbade him to curse Israel. Yet later we learn his heart was not 
with God (Numbers 31:16). His obedience was only outward. Jesus warned of such 
hypocrisy in Matthew 23, where religious leaders prayed long prayers to appear 
righteous while exploiting widows. Outward obedience without the heart is empty 
before God.
Words Without the Heart
When Balak increased the offer with promises of riches and honor, Balaam spoke 
noble words: “If Balak would give me his house full of silver and gold, I cannot 
go beyond the word of the Lord” (Numbers 22:18). Yet his heart was divided. 
Jesus said the mouth speaks out of the abundance of the heart (Matthew 12:34). A 
heart filled with deceit will eventually reveal itself (Mark 7:21–22). Nathaniel 
was commended because there was no guile in him (John 1:47). We too are called 
to speak without deceit, for a truthful tongue brings blessing (1 Peter 
3:10–11). Balaam’s story challenges us: do our words reflect a heart devoted to 
God, or do they mask a spirit of compromise?
Flirting with Sin
Although God revealed His will, Balaam continued to entertain Balak’s 
messengers. He lingered near temptation when he should have cut ties completely. 
Often, our problem is not in outright disobedience but in playing too close to 
sin. A young person may stay with the wrong crowd, thinking they won’t join in 
their actions. An adult may allow ungodly influences into the home through media 
while claiming they would never live that lifestyle. Balaam’s example warns us 
that when we “flirt” with disobedience, we are already rebelling in our hearts. 
Our attitude reveals itself in the little compromises long before open rebellion 
appears.
God Sees the Heart
Balaam’s rebellion was not hidden from God. 2 Peter 2:15 calls him out for 
forsaking the right way. Hebrews 4:13 reminds us that nothing is hidden from 
God’s sight. Outward words and actions cannot deceive Him. True obedience must 
be “from the heart” (Romans 6:17). Jesus condemned the Jews whose lips honored 
God but whose hearts were far away (Matthew 15:8–9). Their worship was vain 
because it lacked sincerity. Balaam teaches us that God does not accept 
lip-service. He demands complete obedience, rooted in a devoted heart.
Conclusion
Balaam appeared obedient but in reality was rebellious. God desires obedience 
from the heart, not the appearance of religion. Let us learn from Balaam’s 
failure and commit ourselves to sincerity in word, deed, and heart.
Balaam Wants to Disobey 
Sermon Outline:
Call to Action
Do not let your obedience be only in appearance. God sees beyond the words of 
your lips and the actions of your hands. He sees your heart. Root your obedience 
in love for Him. Cut ties with sin instead of flirting with it. Let your heart, 
words, and actions align together in complete devotion to the Lord.
Key Takeaways
	- 
	
Outward obedience can 
	hide inward rebellion (Numbers 22:8; 31:16).
 
	- 
	
Words must reflect a 
	sincere heart (Matthew 12:34; John 1:47).
 
	- 
	
Flirting with sin is 
	already disobedience (Mark 7:21–22).
 
	- 
	
God sees every heart and 
	judges accordingly (Hebrews 4:13).
 
	- 
	
True obedience is from 
	the heart (Romans 6:17; Matthew 15:8–9).
 
Scripture Reference List
	- 
	
Numbers 22:1–24:25 – 
	Balaam’s apparent obedience.
 
	- 
	
Numbers 31:16 – Balaam’s 
	true intentions revealed.
 
	- 
	
2 Peter 2:15 – Balaam 
	forsook the right way.
 
	- 
	
Matthew 23:14 – 
	Hypocrites exposed.
 
	- 
	
Matthew 12:34 – Words 
	flow from the heart.
 
	- 
	
Mark 7:21–22 – Deceit 
	among sins of the heart.
 
	- 
	
John 1:47 – Nathaniel 
	commended for no guile.
 
	- 
	
1 Peter 3:10–11 – 
	Blessings in truthful speech.
 
	- 
	
Hebrews 4:13 – God sees 
	all.
 
	- 
	
Romans 6:17 – Obedience 
	from the heart.
 
	- 
	
Matthew 15:8–9 – Worship 
	in vain without the heart.
 
Prepared by Mike Glenn