The Bible Recap - Day 022 (Genesis 30-31)
Episode Date: January 22, 2023SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Win a trip to Israel! - Listen To Way FM ... FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Luke 6:35 - Subscribe! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Yesterday, whom he left off, Jacob had just married two sisters, Leah and Rachel.
Do you impart to some deception from his father-in-law?
And Jacob's wife Leah had just had four sons.
Today we open with Rachel being envious of Leah had just had four sons. Today, we open with Rachel being
envious of Leah's ability to bear children.
She puts some weight on Jacob to get her pregnant,
but Jacob gets defensive and points out
that only God can give life.
We'll see that repeatedly in this chapter.
Rachel decided to follow the ways of her grandmother
and law slash great, great aunt Sarah
by offering her maid servant Bill Haught to her husband.
If you recall,
this did not go well for Sarah. Stick around to see if it solves all Rachel's problems.
Bilha had two children for Jacob and Rachel, but then Leah follows suit and gives her
made servant Silpa to Jacob and she has two more sons. So now the tally is Leah,
four, Leah by Silpa, two, and Rachel by Bilha, 2.
But this sibling rivalry is far from over.
Bitterness and jealousy have been growing in their hearts, and left unattended, a bitter
heart will often resort to manipulation and retaliation, which is what Leah does next.
Since Jacob probably spent most nights with Rachel, the wife he loved, Leah trades
Rachel some plants in exchange for a night with Jacob. Interestingly, this particular plant,
the Mandrake, was believed to promote fertility, but it's also used to treat stomach ulcers,
which I'm guessing they both had a lot of by this point. Do you see all the striving on both parts?
Do you see how it's never enough for either of them? Do you see how the striving on both parts? Do you see how it's never enough for either of them?
Do you see how the spirit of greed and comparison
and their scarcity mentality is driving all their actions?
This isn't love for God.
It isn't love for Jacob.
It doesn't even seem like love for their children.
It looks a lot more like fear and idolatry and self-promotion.
Leah got pregnant for the fifth time
and thought it was God's reward
for generously sharing her servant with Jacob.
But verse 17 tells us what actually happened.
God just heard her cries.
Leah didn't earn pregnancy
through holy actions and good behavior,
especially since coercing your husband into infidelity
is an exactly good behavior.
She controlled and manipulated, she misunderstands God's ways, and still, God heard her desires
and responded with a yes.
Then Leah had two more kids, a six-son and a daughter named Dina.
So now we're up to 11 children between one wife and two maid servants.
But then Rachel had a son, Joseph, bringing the total to 12.
You can imagine which of these children might have been Jacob's favorite and why.
Around the time Rachel gives birth to Joseph, Jacob also wraps up his 14 years of service
to his father-in-law, Leibin, so he asks for permission to leave. Remember, he needs to
go back to Canaan because that's the land God promised to him.
But Laban doesn't want him to leave because he finds out that he's being blessed by God
through Jacob's presence there.
Laban got that information from a wicked source, but it was accurate.
By the way, we don't really have any indication that Laban worshipped Yahweh even though he's
related to Abraham.
So, it's not surprising that he would seek out divination.
We don't have time to unpack divination today, but we'll cover it a bit more in the days ahead.
Jacob and Laban try to act like they're making a deal for Jacob to stay and keep tending his flocks, but they're both still up to their old tricks, not to mention some weird livestock
breeding techniques that Jacob borrowed from local magicians. Despite his sin, God does make him animal
rich, which was pretty rich back then. But the problem was, God didn't want him to stay
there and just keep getting wealthier. He wanted Jacob back in the land he promised
to give him. Jacob is eventually prompted in that direction via some rumors among Laban
sons, the disrespect of Laban, and a command from God. Jacob tells his wives why he's taking them away
from their family of origin, and they quickly see his point.
They realize what a trickster their dad is.
Honestly, everybody in this story
is kind of a manipulator of sorts.
And in one of the rare times when both sisters agree,
they say to Jacob, whatever God has said to you, do,
which is the best advice ever.
In Jacob's explanation of why they're leaving, he plays dumb about his own trickery, and
he credits God for accomplishing it.
Honestly, it feels wrong to me that he conflated his theft and God's blessing, but I just wanted
to highlight it because we'll come back to that in a bit.
It's been 20-ish years since Jacob left Canaan after the tricky pulled on his dad, but
now he packs up his wives and kids and sneaks off to Canaan, the land god promised to him
through his dad Isaac and his grandfather Abraham.
But as they're on the way out, Rachel steals some of Laban's household gods, which is most
likely a reference to idols of some sort.
And it's just more evidence for us that Laban doesn't worship Yahweh. We don't know why Rachel wants these household gods. Maybe she worships them too. Maybe she wants
to sell them. Maybe she wants her dad to stop worshipping them. It took Laban three days to realize
that roughly 20 people were missing from his territory, but then he pursued them. While he was on
his way after them, God appeared to him in a dream and warned him to basically
keep his mouth shut.
Don't say anything good or bad.
But when he finally caught up with him, he acts all nice at first, like, you guys that
didn't even get to say goodbye.
But then he cuts to the chase by pointing out that his household gods are missing.
Thus begins the search for the household gods, which Rachel hides under the camel saddle
and arouse about her period. Laban tries to save face by setting up a agreement between the two of them
at a place called Ms. Pa. And here we have a passage of scripture that is often taken out of context.
In fact, I gave this first to a college boyfriend when he was leaving for the summer having
zero idea what it implied. It says, the Lord watched between you and me when we
are out of each other's sight. Sounds sweet, right? Except knowing the history between Jacob and
Laban, it's actually more like Laban was saying, I don't trust you. So remember that even when I
can't see you, God sees you. See, you better not do anything sketchy. Needless to say, I did not marry that college boyfriend.
I blame it on the passage.
Jacob and Laban set up two separate witnesses for this treaty,
a stone pillar and a heap of stones.
Again, these tend to be pagan practices,
even though they're both invoking God's name.
But one interesting thing here, some theologians believe that
Jacob's singular pillar is intended to represent his worship of a monotheistic God, the One True God, Yahweh,
whereas Laban's pile of rocks is supposed to represent that he is polytheistic, which means he worships many gods, like the ones he used to have in his home before his daughter stole them.
After they make the agreement, Laban starts his journey back home. What was your God shot today?
I hinted at mine earlier.
It's something that showed up at least twice in our reading today.
Remember when Leah manipulated both Rachel and Jacob
so she could sleep with Jacob and then praised God for her pregnancy?
And remember how Jacob manipulated the breeding processes
and praised God for his abundance,
even while playing dumb about his actions
when he recounted the story to his wives. If you're like me, your sense of right and wrong might be kicking
in, your love of justice and your desire for the truth. But let's look past ourselves to see what
we can see about God here. He is kind to sinners. That's good news because that's all of us.
That's good news because that's all of us. Luke 635 says,
He is kind to the ungrateful and the evil.
You guys, that's me 10 times a day.
Does God hate sin and injustice and ingratitude?
Of course, absolutely.
But today, we see His mercy.
Today, we see His kindness and His provision
to the flawed kids He has adopted into His mercy. Today, we see His kindness and His provision to the flawed kids He has adopted into His
family.
I'm so glad I've been adopted by a kind father because he's where the joy is.
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