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22But God was angry because he was going, and the angel of the LORD took his stand in the way as an adversary[satan] against him. Now he was riding on his donkey and his two servants were with him.
why would I try to thrash at an angel when all I have to do is resist his temptations.
A perfect balance would require equal but opposite forces. That's kind of what Zoroastrianism is.
Etymology
Middle English, "the morning star, a fallen rebel archangel, the Devil," going back to Old English, borrowed from Latin Lūcifer "morning star," noun derivative of lūcifer "light-bringing, light-bearing," from lūc-, lūx "light" + -i- -i- + -fer -fer — more at light entry 1 Note: In patristic Latin Lūcifer was taken to be a name for the Devil of Christianity, based on the use of the word in the Vulgate rendering of Isaiah 14:12, where it translates Hebrew hêlēl, taken to mean "the shining one."
Word History
God was angry because he was going, and the angel of the LORD took his stand in the way as an enemy[satan]] against him.
rewordify.com...
The excavation revealed a multiple-chamber structure that had been destroyed by an earthquake during the Persian period, on the wall of which was written a story relating visions of Bal'am, son of Be'or, a "seer of the gods", who may be the same Balaam son of Be'or mentioned in Numbers 22–24 and in other passages of the Bible. The Deir Alla inscription's take on Bala'am differs from that given in the Book of Numbers. Bal'am's god is associated with the goddess Šagar-we-Ishtar. Deities with such names, "Šagar-and-Ishtar" (Or Aštar[4],) certainly are known to history, but quite separately. The enigmatic narrative also foregrounds the "Shaddayin" who establish a council. (שדין, deities).[5] It also features the word "Elohin", taken to mean "gods" in the plural rather than the Hebrew deity.
Though containing some features of Aramaic, such as the word bar "(son of [Beor])" rather than the Canaanite ben, it also has many elements of Canaanite languages, leading some to believe it was written in a dialect of Canaanite rather than an early form of Aramaic. The inscription has been dated to 880–770 BCE.[11] Klaus Beyer calls the language South Gileadite.[14] Holger Gzella reckons the mixture of Canaanite vocabulary and narration with a primarily Aramaic grammatical core reflect a translation of a Syria-Palestinian story into a literary Aramaic text.[15] Unknown script an
In the 1960s, in addition to hundreds of vessels like bowls and jars, seven clay tablets were found with an unknown script. They haven't been fully deciphered,[17] nor has their clay been tested to see if it's local to Deir Alla.[18] Cannabis has been found as hemp here and at another Iron Age cultic site, Tel Arad in the Negev, as burned incense or drug.[19]
Deir ‘Alla harbors habitation layers dating back to the Middle Bronze Age but is most famous for the Iron Age text relating to the biblical diviner Balaam, found written in beautiful Aramaic script on a plastered wall in one of the Iron Age buildings. During earlier seasons, the team was also exploring a temple with auxiliary buildings from the latest phase of the Late Bronze Age (ca. 1185-1140 BCE) with rich evidence for burning and destruction. Similar destruction was later attested in other parts of the settlement during subsequent seasons of excavations. It is these heavily burned layers that yielded the enigmatic clay tablets with a hitherto unknown script.
The Enigmatic Tablets from Late Bronze Age Deir ‘Alla - ASOR
so i have to disagree with your conclusion.
then there the thing about Deir Alla Inscription, no where in the wiki link you provided does it say it was Balaam house.
I am putting that one in the same category as the tale of Noah's Ark.
Scientists estimate that the sea was last filled about 5.3 million years ago (mya) in less than two years by the Zanclean flood. Water poured in from the Atlantic Ocean through a newly breached gateway now called the Strait of Gibraltar at an estimated rate of about three orders of magnitude (one thousand times) larger than the current flow of the Amazon River.
en.wikipedia.org...