The Bible Recap - Day 023 (Genesis 32-34) - Year 3
Episode Date: January 23, 2021SHOW 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 - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: -... Join PATREON to receive this month’s bonus content on how to study the Bible! 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!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Yesterday, Jacob and his family fled from Laban to head back toward Canaan, which is where
his brother Esau lives, the one who wanted to kill him.
Obviously, Jacob has no idea how things will go if and when he encounters Esau, which
would make most people a little bit nervous. By the way, Esau lives in an area called
Edom, which is why the descendants of Esau are called Edomites. We'll see that term
a lot in the future.
Jacob sent some messengers ahead of him to smooth things over if they encountered Esau,
and the messengers came back saying, he's coming and he's got 400 guys with him.
Uh-oh. So Jacob divided every one and everything in half so that if Esau attacked, he couldn't take it all.
He's strategic, he's maybe driven by fear, but there's also this really beautiful moment where
he's humbled and he praises God for his provision. He acknowledges his reality.
In 32.9, we see the first time Jacob addresses God by his name.
And in 32.10, he says,
I am not worthy of the least of all the deeds of steadfast love
and all the faithfulness that you've shown to your servant.
And in the midst of fearing the worst,
Jacob remembered God's words and appealed to him with
reminders of his specific promises to their family.
Then he sent a present ahead to Esau to appease him.
If someone sent me 550 farm animals in the mail, I would not view that as a gift, but
these are different times.
Then he sent his wives and kids ahead of him and spent the night alone.
During the night, he wrestled with God.
Doesn't most of your wrestling with God happen when you're alone and even at night?
Jacob is literally wrestling though.
He doesn't appear to be having a vision.
This doesn't appear to be a metaphor mainly because he leaves with an injury.
This instance is another theophany and appearance of God on earth.
And more specifically, since the Hebrew word here
is Elohim, that implies creator and judge,
I'm inclined to believe this is another encounter
with God the Father, like the encounter Abraham had
in chapter 18.
They wrestled all night, and as the sun is rising,
Jacob tells him that he won't let go until he blesses him.
The man replies,
What is your name?
Don't let this fool you.
God often asks questions he knows the answers to.
Those are literally the only kinds of questions God can ask that's one of the perks of being omniscient.
Omniscient means he knows everything.
Jacob tells him his name, and the man's response clues us into the fact that he's God. First, he affirms that Jacob had not only
wrestled with men, but that he'd also wrestled with God, and second, he changes
his name, which you may recall is a big God move. Sometimes when God is about to
reveal a new assignment or direction in someone's life, he renames them. Here,
he calls Jacob Israel. It's the first time
we see this word in Scripture. The name will eventually come to refer not only to this one man,
but also to all of his descendants as well. So Jacob left renamed and limping. This was Jacob's
moment of transformation, encountering God face to face like this, like his father and grandfather had.
Finally, his faith is starting to become his own.
Then Jacob's lash Israel continues on his journey.
He stacks up his people in order from least love to to most loved,
and they eventually run into Isah, who actually seems excited to see him.
They have a nice little chat,
and then it becomes hard to tell
if they're actually being humble and kind
or if they still don't trust each other.
But then it becomes clear where Jacob stands, at least.
He agrees to follow Esau,
but after Esau leaves and heads south,
Jacob goes west.
He was heading toward the land of Canaan,
where God had called him.
He bought some land,
and he erects something on it to commemorate the occasion, but for the first time, it isn't a pillar.
For the first time, it's an altar. Not a Canaanite memorial, not a pagan ritual, but an altar,
and he names it, L-Lohe Israel, which means God, the God of Israel, his name. He's honoring the God who drew
near to him, who wrestled with him, who injured him and protected him all at once, and alter. I love it.
I do not love what happens next in chapter 34. Here, Dina, the one daughter among the dozen
kids of Jacob, is the new girl in the new land that they've moved to, Shechem.
In Shechem, there's a guy named Shechem, and his dad is a man of status in the land.
Shechem falls in love with Dina, or at least Dina's appearance, and he rapes her.
After that, he wants to marry her, so he tries to get his dad to negotiate an arrangement with Jacob.
Jacob and his sons are outraged, and rightly so.
The text makes it clear that rape is taken seriously among their people.
But Jacob sits passively by while his sons make the plan.
They do it in much the same way Jacob always makes plans, which is to say, in a sneaky way. They plan to kill all the men of the land in retaliation for what Shechem did to Dina.
They tell them that they all have to be circumcised, a kind of forced, false conversion.
So Shechem and his dad agree on behalf of everyone in town. I can't imagine how the other
men of the land felt about this. Shechem is a man of status and caliber in town,
but his actions and attitude revealed that he has a grand sense of entitlement.
He may have had power, but in my opinion,
when it came down to it, he didn't have character.
On the third day, after all the men in the town were circumcised,
Simeon and Levi, who were two of Dynas' full brothers in their blended family,
entered the town, killed all the males, two of Dynas' full brothers in their blended family, entered the town,
killed all the males, and rescued Dyna.
Then they captured and plundered everything.
Jacob disapproved, but mostly because he was afraid of retaliation.
This is also a good place to mention that God Himself never endorsed their actions.
The Bible is just describing what happened.
And in fact, later in scripture,
we'll see more about God's response to their response to Shekham Sin. Sit tight.
What was your God shot today? I loved seeing how God changes hearts. Even though difficult
circumstances are often his tool of choice, but that's possibly because they seem to be the most
effective. He used a scary situation to humble Jacob when he was about to see Esau.
Then when Jacob was humbled in a loan, God drew near to him, wrestled with him,
renamed him, changed him.
Jacob went from being the man who erects pillars to the man who builds altars.
But rest assured, Jacob is still a work in progress.
He still lies and manipulates, and even his response to the slaughter of Shechem was
still self-focused.
But God never gives up on him, because God knows that he will complete the work he started
in him.
And I think Jacob is starting to feel the desire to grow in that direction of becoming the
new man with the new name, the man whose
actions reveal his trust in God, the man who knows that he's where the joy is.
Each month we offer special bonus content to those of you who are a part of our Patreon
family. For the month of January, we have a bonus episode on helpful tools for Bible
Study. We'll be sending that out to patrons who've joined at the bonus content tier or higher.
If that's you, just log into your Patreon account
to get your perks or if you've selected
to have it emailed to you, you can look for it there.
If you're part of our Patreon at a different tier
and you want access to this perk,
you can log into your account and adjust your membership
accordingly.
And if you're not part of our Patreon family yet,
this is a great time to jump in.
Check out today's show notes for a link to our Patreon so you don't miss out on this.
Or click the Patreon link on our website, thebibelrecap.com.
The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-group, discipleship and Bible study groups that meet
in homes and churches around the world each week.
you